The companions of the Prophet Muḥammad ﷺ — the Ṣaḥābah رضوان الله عليهم — were the first Muslims, the eyewitnesses to the prophetic mission, and the primary transmitters of everything that makes Sunni Islām what it is. Their relationship with the Ahl al-Bayt is therefore not a secondary matter — it is the original Sunni relationship with the Prophet’s family ﷺ, lived out before any sectarian divisions existed. What the companions said and did regarding the Ahl al-Bayt is the foundation of all subsequent Sunni practice.
Sayyiduna Abū Bakr al-Ṣiddīq رضي الله عنه
Sayyiduna Abū Bakr رضي الله عنه — the closest companion of the Prophet ﷺ, the first Caliph — demonstrated love for the Ahl al-Bayt in both word and action. He instructed the community: “Honour Muḥammad ﷺ by honouring his family.” He showed particular reverence toward Sayyidah Fāṭimah رضي الله عنها — visiting her, honouring her, and acknowledging her grief after the Prophet’s death ﷺ. He held Sayyiduna al-Ḥasan and Sayyiduna al-Ḥusayn رضوان الله عليهما with deep affection and would carry them on his shoulders in imitation of the Prophet’s ﷺ own practice.
Sayyiduna ʿUmar ibn al-Khaṭṭāb رضي الله عنه
Sayyiduna ʿUmar رضي الله عنه — the second Caliph, known for his justice and gravity — also expressed his reverence for the Prophet’s family in recorded words and deeds. He gave the family of the Prophet ﷺ priority in the distribution of provisions during his caliphate. He visited Sayyidah Fāṭimah رضي الله عنها during her illness. He deferred to Sayyiduna ʿAlī رضي الله عنه in matters of religious learning. His famous statement — preserved in classical sources — was clear: the family of the Prophet ﷺ deserved special honour because of their relationship with him.
Sayyiduna Anas ibn Mālik رضي الله عنه
Sayyiduna Anas رضي الله عنه served the Prophet ﷺ for ten years and was one of the most prolific transmitters of ḥadīth. His narrations about the Ahl al-Bayt are among the most tender and detailed in the classical collections. It was he who narrated the question of Sayyidah Fāṭimah رضي الله عنها after the burial: “How did you bear to throw soil over the Messenger of Allāh ﷺ?” His narrations preserve the emotional reality of the prophetic household with an intimacy available only to those who lived within its daily life.
The Pattern Across the First Generation
The consistent pattern across the first generation of Muslims is one of comprehensive love — for the companions and for the Prophet’s family simultaneously, without tension and without choosing between them. This is the original Sunni practice, lived before any political divisions made it complicated. A return to the sources — to the words and deeds of the Ṣaḥābah رضوان الله عليهم themselves — reveals a community in which love for the Ahl al-Bayt was as natural and uncontroversial as love for the Qurʼān.
How did the companions express their love for the Ahl al-Bayt?
Through honouring them in governance, visiting them in hardship, speaking of them with reverence, transmitting narrations about their virtues, and treating them as the Prophet ﷺ instructed — as those who carry his light and his love into the world. Their practice is the model for every subsequent Sunni generation.
Did the early companions distinguish between loving the Ahl al-Bayt and honouring the companions?
No. They experienced no such tension — they were the companions and they loved the Ahl al-Bayt simultaneously, as part of the same prophetic devotion. The false choice between the two is a later political invention, not a feature of the original Sunni community.
Why does the companions’ love for the Ahl al-Bayt matter for Sunni Muslims today?
Because the companions are the original Sunni Muslims — the generation whose practice defines what authentic Sunni Islām looks like. If they loved the Ahl al-Bayt without qualification or apology, then every subsequent Sunni Muslim is called to the same love. Their testimony is the foundation on which all Sunni practice rests.