Is it true that the pebbles and crumbs in the mosque are a symbol of the dowry of the hoor al-‘iyn?. 
Praise be to Allaah.
Firstly:
There is no saheeh hadeeth
 that defines the mahr of the hoor al-‘iyn. Everything that has been narrated
 concerning that is either very weak (da’eef jiddan) or fabricated (mawdoo’),
 A summary of what has been narrated concerning that from six of the Sahaabah
 follows: 
1-
It was narrated in a
 marfoo’ report from Ibn ‘Umar (may Allaah be pleased with him) that he said:
 “How many of the hoor al-‘iyn have a mahr that is no more than a handful of
 wheat or dates.” 
This was narrated by
 al-‘Aqeeli (1/42) and from him by Ibn al-Jawzi in al-Mawdoo’aat
 (3/253) and Ibn Hibbaan in al-Majrooheen (1/98). Ibn al-Jawzi said:
 The one who is accused is Abaan. Abu Haatim Ibn Hibbaan said: Abaan ibn
 al-Muhbir narrated from trustworthy narrators things that are not their
 ahaadeeth, so as to confuse even those who have great knowledge. It is not
 permissible to narrate from him except by way of giving an example of a
 false hadeeth. He is the one who narrated this hadeeth from Naafi’ and it is
 baatil (false). al-Daaraqutni said: Abaan is matrook (i.e., his hadeeth is
 to be ignored). End quote. 
Ibn Abi Haatim said in
 al-‘Ilal (no. 641): My father said: This is a baatil hadeeth. This Abaan
 is majhool (unknown) and da’eef al-hadeeth. End quote. 
Shaykh al-Albaani said in
 al-Silsilah al-Da’eefah (no. 571): It is mawdoo’ (fabricated). 
2-
He also narrated a hadeeth
 from Abu Hurayrah: “The mahr of the hoor al-‘iyn is a handful dates and a
 piece of bread.” 
This was narrated by Ibn
 ‘Adiyy in al-Kaamil (5/25) and by Ibn al-Jawzi in al-Mawdoo’aat
 (3/253). He said: The one who is accused is ‘Umar ibn Subh. Ibn Hibbaan
 said: He used to fabricate ahaadeeth from trustworthy narrators. It is not
 permissible to write down his hadeeth except by way of highlighting its
 strangeness. End quote. 
3-
Another hadeeth which is
 well known among people but is not saheeh is that which is attributed to
 Anas: “Sweeping the mosque is the mahr of al-hoor al-‘iyn.” 
This was narrated by
 al-Daylami in Musnad Firdaws (no. 4896) and Ibn al-Jawzi in
 al-Mawdoo’aat (3/253). He said: Its isnaad contains narrators who are
 majhool (unknown), and ‘Abd al-Waahid is not thiqah (trustworthy). This was
 also stated by Yahya. Al-Bukhaari, al-Fallaas and al-Nasaa’i said: He is
 matrook al-hadeeth (i.e., his hadeeth is to be rejected). End quote. Shaykh
 al-Albaani judged it to be fabricated in al-Silsilah al-Da’eefah (no.
 4147). 
4-
It is narrated from ‘Ali
 ibn Abi Taalib (may Allaah be pleased with him) that the Prophet  (peace
 and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said to him: “O ‘Ali, give the hoor
 al-‘iyn their mahrs: remove harmful things from the road, and take rubbish
 out of the mosque, for that is the mahr of al-hoor al-‘iyn.” 
This was narrated by
 al-Daylami in Musnad al-Firdaws (no. 8335) and Ibn Shaheen in
 al-Targheeb fi Fadaa’il al-A’maal (no. 535). In Kanz al-‘Ummaal
 (16/229) it is attributed to Ibn al-Najjaar. The isnaad of Ibn Shaheen
 includes al-Ma’aafa ibn Mutahhar and Muwarra’ ibn Jubayr, but I could not
 find any biography for them, except a few words by Ibn Makula in
 al-Ikmaal (7/263). 
5-
It was also narrated from
 Abu Umaamah that the Messenger of Allaah  (peace and blessings of Allaah
 be upon him) said: “Handfuls of dates for the poor are the mahrs of al-hoor
 al-‘iyn.” 
This was narrated by
 al-Daylami in al-Firdaws (no. 4645 and Ibn al-Jawzi in
 al-Mawdoo’aat (3/253). In Jaami’ al-Ahaadeeth (no. 15093),
 al-Suyooti attributed it to al-Daaraqutni in al-Afraad. 
Ibn al-Jawzi said: It was
 narrated only by Talhah ibn al-Wadeen. Al-Sa’di said: al-Wadeen is a weak
 narrator. al-Nasaa’i said: Talhah is matrook (i.e., to be rejected). Ibn
 Hibbaan said: It is not permissible to narrate from him. End quote. 
Al-Albaani judged it to be
 fabricated in al-Silsilah al-Da’eefah (no. 6197). 
6-
A hadeeth about the mahr of
 al-hoor al-‘iyn was narrated from Abu Qursaafah, whose name was Jandarah:
 “Taking rubbish out of the mosque is the mahr of al-hoor al-‘iyn.” 
This was narrated by
 al-Tabaraani (3/19), Ibn ‘Asaakir in Tareekh Dimashq (5/110), Abu
 Bakr al-Shaafa’i in al-Fawaa’id (2/23/2) and Ibn Mandah in
 al-Ma’rifah (2/259, no. 6340). In al-Durr al-Manthoor (4/144),
 al-Suyooti attributed it to Abu Bakr al-Shaafa’i in his Rubaa’iyaat.
 Al-Bayhaqi said in Majma’ al-Zawaa’id (2/113): Its isnaad includes
 majhool (unknown) narrators. End quote. Shaykh al-Albaani said in
 al-Silsilah al-Da’eefah (no. 1675): This isnaad is “dark” (i.e., it has
 many unknown narrators), other than Abu Qursaafah they have no mention in
 any of the books of men’s biographies, apart from Muhammad ibn al-Hasan ibn
 Qutaybah, who is proven to be a hafiz and trustworthy. End quote. 
To sum up, there is no
 saheeh hadeeth which defines the mahr of al-hoor al-‘iyn, hence Ibn al-Jawzi
 (may Allaah have mercy on him) said in al-Mawdoo’aat (3/254): 
This hadeeth is not saheeh
 in any of its isnaads. End quote. 
Secondly:
The true mahr of al-hoor
 al-‘iyn is every good deed that brings one closer to Allaah, and is the
 cause of entering Paradise. 
Al-Qurtubi (may Allaah have
 mercy on him) said in al-Tadhkirah fi Ahwaal al-Mawtaa wa Umoor
 al-Aakhirah (p. 556): 
Chapter on what is narrated
 about righteous deeds being the mahr of al-hoor al-‘iyn. 
In this chapter he narrated
 some of the ahaadeeth quoted above, then he said: 
Muhammad ibn al-Nu’maan
 al-Muqari said: 
I was sitting with al-Jala
 al-Muqari in Makkah in al-Masjid al-Haraam, when a tall, lean-bodied old man
 dressed in rags passed by. Al-Jala got up and stood with him for a while,
 then came back to us and said: Do you know who this old man is? We said: No.
 He said: He bought from Allaah a hoor al-‘iyn for four thousand khatmahs
 (readings of the entire Qur’aan) and when he had completed it, he saw her in
 a dream, wearing her jewellery and finery. He said: Who are you? She said: I
 am al-hoor whom you bought from Allaah with four thousand khatmahs; this is
 the price, what will I get from you? He said: One thousand khatmahs. Al-Jala
 said: He is still working on that. 
It was narrated from
 Sahnoon that he said: There was a man in Egypt called Sa’eed, and he had a
 mother who was a devoted worshipper. When he got up at night to pray qiyaam,
 his mother would pray behind him, and if he grew sleepy his mother would
 call out to him: O Sa’eed! There is no sleep for the one who fears Hell and
 wants to marry the beautiful hoor al-‘iyn. So he would get up out of alarm.
It was narrated from
 Thaabit that he said: My father was one of those who prayed qiyaam to Allaah
 in the depths of the night. He said: Last night I saw in my dream a woman
 who did not resemble the women of this world. I said to her: Who are you?
 She said: A hoor al-‘iyn, a female slave of Allaah. I said to her: Give
 yourself to me in marriage. She said: Propose to me through your Lord and
 give me a mahr. I said: What is your mahr? She said: Lengthy tahajjud. 
Maalik ibn Dinar said: I
 had sections of the Quraan that I would read every night. I fell asleep one
 night and in my dream I saw a beautiful girl, with a piece of vellum in her
 hand. She said: Can you read? I said: Yes. She gave me the piece of vellum
 and on it was written these lines of poetry:
 You are wasting your time
 in sleeping rather than seeking high goals
And seeking beautiful hoor
 al-‘iyn in Paradise.
There in Paradise you will
 have an eternal life and no death
And you will have delight
 with the beautiful hoor ‘iyn in splendid pavilions.
Wake up from your sleep,
 for what is better than sleeping is spending the night reciting the
 Qur’aan. 
End quote.
Something similar was said
 by Ibn Rajab in his essay Ikhtiyaar al-Oola (p. 12) and in
 Lataa’if al-Ma’aarif (p. 159). 
See also question no.
 10053 about al-hoor al’-iyn.  
With regard to cleaning the
 mosque, it is something that is recommended, and there is a great deal of
 evidence which encourages that and speaks of its virtue. This has been
 discussed on our website in the answer to question no.
 20160. 
And Allaah knows best.

 
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