History is replete with stories of the bygone days when people and even civilizations were doomed for their arrogances, stubbornness and rejection of Divine message brought to them by the prophets. Some of the stories have also been mentioned in Al Qur'an to show to the disbelievers the reason why of the doom of the earlier disbelievers. We have already published a post "Why stories of the past are retold in Al-Qurʾān?" to remind people of the history of doomed people.
Today, we share a story mentioned in Al Qur'an about the people of Prophet Hūd (AS), which has been specially mentioned in Al Qur'an in Surah 46 Al Ahqaf - (The Wind-Curved Sand Hills). The mention of people of ʿĀd is also spread over many surahs of Al Qur'an, Let us read about their fate as derived from various surahs of Al Qur'an. The reading also includes a reconstructed video of these people, their strength and the ultimate doom given at the end of the post.
Who Were the People of ʿĀd?
The people of ʿĀd (عاد) are an ancient nation mentioned multiple times in the Qur’an as a powerful civilization that rejected the message of the prophet Hūd (هود). Their story is presented as a warning against arrogance, denial of God, oppression, and moral corruption.
The Qur’an describes ʿĀd as:
- A mighty and advanced people
- Physically powerful and influential
- Builders of enormous structures
- Inhabitants of a region with fertile lands and valleys
- Descendants after the people of Noah
- Destroyed by a devastating wind after rejecting Prophet Hūd
The Qur’an often refers to them as “ʿĀd, the people of Hūd”
Their Homeland
Although, no exact location of of the actual place of the abode of people of ʿĀd exists, many classical scholars placed them in the Southern Arabian Peninsula - Possibly areas of present-day Yemen or Oman.
The Qur’an does not give exact coordinates, but portrays the region as: Sandy, Vast, Wind-swept. The Qur’an associates them with Al-Ahqāf (“the sand dunes”): “And remember the brother of ʿĀd, when he warned his people in Al-Ahqāf…” — Qur’an 46:21
Their Strength and Civilization
One of the clearest descriptions comes in Surah Al-Fajr: “Have you not seen how your Lord dealt with ʿĀd — Iram of the pillars, whose like had never been created in the land?” — 89:6–8
This passage suggests:
- Monumental architecture
- Great engineering capability
- Exceptional power and dominance
Another verse says: “Do you build on every elevation a sign, amusing yourselves, and take for yourselves palaces and fortresses that you might abide eternally?” — 26:128–129
This indicates:
- Monumental constructions
- Pride in worldly achievement
- Delusion of permanence
- Prophet Hūd and His Message
Main themes of Hūd’s preaching
Allah sent Prophet Hūd to guide them and he tried to persuade
1. Worship Allah alone “O my people, worship Allah; you have no deity other than Him.” — 7:65
2. Avoid arrogance
ʿĀd became proud of their physical and political power boasting “Who is greater than us in strength?” — 41:15
The Qur’an responds: “Did they not consider that Allah who created them was greater than them in strength?” — 41:15
3. Stop oppression and tyranny
The Qur’an portrays them as harsh and domineering: “And when you strike, you strike as tyrants.” — 26:130
4. Seek forgiveness
Prophet Hūd told them: “Seek forgiveness from your Lord and repent to Him; He will send rain from the sky upon you in showers and increase you in strength.” — 11:52
How Did the People Respond?
But the people of ʿĀd considered them too powerful and strong. The find it below their power to listen to someone claiming to be a prophet. Their reaction was abrupt and taunting:
- Mockery: “Indeed, we see you in foolishness.” — 7:66
- Denial: “We do not say except that some of our gods have possessed you with evil.” — 11:54
- Blind attachment to tradition: “It is all the same to us whether you advise or are not of the advisers.” — 26:136
- Pride in power: “Who is mightier than us in strength?” — 41:15
The Punishment of ʿĀd
When they failed to listen to the prophet and mocked him - the Divine punishment came as a catastrophic windstorm.
- Description of the wind The Qur’an uses several terms:
- A screaming violent wind “A screaming, furious wind” — 54:19
- A barren wind: “In the barren wind” — 51:41
- Furious cold wind: “A furious wind during days of misfortune” — 41:16
- Duration of the Punishment: The Qur’an gives a striking detail: “He imposed it upon them for seven nights and eight days continuously.” — 69:7
- What Happened to Them?
- The wind utterly destroyed them: “It left nothing that it came upon except that it made it like disintegrated ruins.” — 51:42
- Another vivid image: “You would see the people therein fallen as though they were hollow trunks of palm trees.” — 69:7
Who Was Saved?
Only the Prophet Hūd AS and the the believers with him: “So We saved him and those with him by mercy from Us.” — 7:72
The People of Iram
Along with the people of "Ad, another people by the name of Iram is also mentioned in Al Qur'an. However, Qur’an mentions ʿĀd and Iram together, but they are not necessarily the exact same thing. Classical Islamic scholarship contains a few interpretations.
The key verse is: “Have you not seen how your Lord dealt with ʿĀd — Iram, possessor of lofty pillars…” — Qur’an 89:6–7
The Qur’an mentions: “Iram of the pillars” — 89:7
There are different scholarly interpretations:
- Interpretation 1 — A city A magnificent city with huge pillars or towers.
- Interpretation 2 — A tribe (may be a branch or elite clan of ʿĀd.)
- Interpretation 3 — Symbolic grandeur - Referring to their extraordinary civilization.
The Qur’an itself does not elaborate further.
Moral and Spiritual Lessons in the Qur’an
The story is repeated many times because it carries enduring lessons.
1. Power does not prevent destruction
- ʿĀd believed strength made them invincible.
- The Qur’an repeatedly shows: Human civilizations rise and fall - Arrogance leads to ruin.
2. Arrogance blinds people
- Their greatest flaw was not ignorance alone, but pride.
- “They were arrogant upon the earth without right.” — 41:15
3. Prophets call to reform, not personal gain Prophet Hūd told his people, as did all prophets: “I ask of you no payment for it.” — 26:127
4. Nature itself can become punishment
- Wind — normally beneficial — became destructive.
- This reflects a Qur’anic pattern: (1) Water destroyed Noah’s people, (2) Wind destroyed ʿĀd, and (3) Earthquake destroyed Thamūd
Relationship Between ʿĀd and Thamūd
Although, ʿĀd and Thamūd are two people in different timeframe in history, they had very close similarities.
- Therefore, Qur’an often pairs ʿĀd and Thamūd as examples of destroyed civilizations.
- Differences
- Prophets: Hūd to ʿĀd, Prophet Ṣāliḥ to Thamūd
- Timeframe in History: ʿĀd an earlier nation - Thamūd a later nation
- Major Strengths: ʿĀd were known for their physical strength - Thamūd were famous for rock carving.
- Destruction: ʿĀd were destroyed by strong winds lasting seven days - Thamūd were destroyed by blast/earthquake.
The Qur’an focuses more on moral lessons than historical detail
Unlike history books, Al Qur'an focuses more on moral lessons from the tales of doomed people so that coming generations focus on why previous nations failed and were destroyed. Herein under are the key Qur’anic Themes About ʿĀd and the why of their destructions. Throughout Al Qur'an, it has consistently been emphasized the causes of the doom of the People of ʿĀd. For a connected reading, these passages are especially comprehensive:
- 7:65–72 — Hūd’s dialogue with ʿĀd
- 11:50–60 — Detailed narrative and warning
- 26:123–140 — Their behavior and architecture
- 41:15–16 — Their arrogance and punishment
- 46:21–26 — Al-Ahqāf and destruction
- 69:4–8 — Seven nights and eight days
- 89:6–8 — Iram of the pillars
Concise Summary
The people of ʿĀd were a powerful ancient nation blessed with strength, prosperity, and monumental civilization. Allah sent Prophet Hūd to call them toward monotheism, humility, justice, and repentance. Instead, they mocked him, became arrogant, and trusted in their worldly power. They famously declared, “Who is greater than us in strength?” Allah destroyed them with a relentless windstorm lasting seven nights and eight days, leaving them as a warning for later generations. The Qur’an repeatedly cites their story as evidence that no civilization — regardless of power — can survive arrogance, oppression, and rejection of truth.
You may like to watch a simulated video about the people of ʿĀd and their terrible doom:
Let those who today boast of their strength due to arrogance and defiance of Divine commandments, such stories be an eye opener - for no one never knows when the Divine wrath befalls on them for defying what God has presecribed for them.
May Allāh (سبحانه و تعالى) help us understand Qur'ān and follow the Sunnah of Prophet Muhammad ﷺ, which is embodiment of commandments of Allah contained in the Qur'ān. May Allah help us to be like the ones He loves and let our lives be lived helping others and not making others' lives miserable or unlivable. May all our wrong doings, whether intentional or unintentional, be forgiven before the angel of death knocks on our door.
وَمَا عَلَيۡنَاۤ اِلَّا الۡبَلٰغُ الۡمُبِيۡنُ
(36:17) and our duty is no more than to clearly convey the Message.”
That is Our duty is only to convey to you the message that Allah has entrusted us with. Then it is for you to accept it or reject it. We have not been made responsible for making you accept it forcibly, and if you do not accept it, we shall not be seized in consequence of your disbelief, you will yourselves be answerable for your actions on Day of Resurrection.
May Allah forgive me if my posts ever imply a piety far greater than I possess. I am most in need of guidance.
Reading the Qur'ān should be a daily obligation of a Muslim - Reading it with translation will make it meaningful. But reading its Exegesis / Tafsir will make you understand it fully. It will also help the Muslims to have grasp over social issues and their answers discussed in the Qur'an and other matter related to inter faith so that they are able to discuss issues with non-Muslims with authority based on refences from Qur'an.
Note: When we mention God in our posts, we mean One True God, we call Allah in Islam, with no associates. Allah is the Sole Creator of all things, and that Allah is all-powerful and all-knowing. Allah has no offspring, no race, no gender, no body, and is unaffected by the characteristics of human life.
For more Q&A about Understanding Islam, please refer to our reference page: Understanding Islam - Frequently asked Q&A. You may also refer to our refference page: Scholars' Viewpoint on important issue related to Islam to know more about Islam.
If you like Islam: My Ultimate Decision, and to keep yourself updated on all our latest posts to know more about Islam, follow us on Facebook. You may also refer to our Facebook Group Islam: The Ultimate Truth for more on Islam and Da'wah.
Please share this page to your friends and family members through Facebook, WhatsApp or any means on Social Media so that they can also be benefited by it and better understand Islam and the Holy Qur'an - Insha Allah (Allah Willing) you shall be blessed with the best of both worlds.




0 comments:
Post a Comment