became a Christian, and he obtained a good position at the Emperor's court . . . . Zaid remained
firm and did not enter either the Jewish or the Christian fold, but he left the religion of his
people, abstained from idolatry,1 from eating dead carcases and blood, and from the
sacrifices which were offered to the idols, and he forbade the slaughter of female infants who used
to be buried alive. He said, 'I worship the Lord of Abraham'; and2 he blamed his nation
for the faults they persisted in . . . . Asma, daughter of Abu Bakr, used to say, 'I saw Zaid when a
very old man3 leaning upon the central part of the Ka'abah outside and saying, 'O
Assembly of the Quraish, by Him in Whose hand is the soul of Zaid bin 'Amr, none of you has attained
to the Religion of Abraham but I myself."'
When we remember that, of these four Hanifs or 'Orthodox 4 believers,' two,
Waraqah and 'Uthman, were cousins 5 of Khadijah, Muhammad's