Little is known of his life before his conversion to
Islam. Abu Dharr is said to have been a serious young man, an
ascetic and a
monotheist even before he converted. He was born to the
Ghifar clan, located to the south-west of Medina. Abu Dharr was apparently typical of the early converts to Islam, described by
Ibn Shihab al-Zuhri as "young men and weak people". They were a part of the Ghifar clan of the
Banu Bakr ibn Abd Manat tribe, part of the
Kinana tribes, which also included the
Quraysh tribe of
Muhammad. Popular accounts of Abu Dharr reported that his tribe lived by pillaging
caravans, but that he preferred to live a poor but honest life as a shepherd. Having heard the contention that a new
prophet had arisen in Mecca, Abu Dharr and his brother travelled to Mecca to find him. He converted instantly and rushed out to declare his new faith in front of the
Kaaba, which at that time was a
pagan temple. He was beaten for his religious beliefs. He did this three days in a row, after which the Islamic prophet Muhammad told him to return to his clan, where he taught his people about Islam. He and his tribe then joined Muhammad after the
Hijra, or migration to Medina in 622 CE. Muhammad once said that "the sky did not spread its canopy on any man who was more truthful than Abu Dharr." This seems to be a simplified account of stories reported in these
hadiths, , and . According to the early Islamic historian
Muhammad ibn Jarir al-Tabari, Abu Dharr claimed to have been the fourth or fifth convert to Islam. However, Saad bin Abi Waqqas made the same claim. While the exact order of conversion may never be established, there is no doubt that he was a very early convert. ==Military campaigns during Muhammad's era==