Bilal was a black slave belonging to Umayyah ibn
Khalaf. He was tall, thin and slightly hump-backed. Thick
grayish hair crowned his head. He moved about silently -
speaking only in reply. He was born to two slave parents,
making him a slave. He used to travel to ash-Sham for
Umayyah's trading caravan, braving the bitter cold of winter
and the extreme heat of summer. His only recompense was a
handful of dates each day that he ate to strengthen his body.
At his master's house he would serve the guests while going
hungry. He was overworked and mistreated as were Umayyah's
other slaves.
Bilal would often hear about Mohammed, and Islam,
through the alarming discussions between his master and guests.
Soon he felt drawn to this religion. He would listen to Abu
Bakr calling to Islam, and slowly his heart was filled with
imaan (faith). He went with Abu Bakr to the Prophet
and declared his submission to Islam. This was a
daring move from a slave who belonged to a staunch enemy of
Mohammed . He was the seventh person to accept Islam. Abu Bakr
and others of the same tribal status, were spared from harm by
the Quraysh. However, the wrath of the disbelievers fell upon
the Muslims who had no tribe to defend them. Umayyah ibn
Khalaf used to force Bilal to go outside during the hottest
part of the day wearing a suit of armor where he would then
be thrown face down in the sand and leave him to bake in the
sun. He would not return except to turn him on his back. He
would have a gigantic rock placed on his chest and then say,
"You will stay here until you die or deny Mohammed and
worship Al-Laat and al-Uzzah." Bilal used to endure this only
by saying, "One, One." Abu Bakr passed by one day while they
were torturing him. He said to Umayyah, "Have you no fear of
Allah that you
treat this poor man like this?" Umayyah replied, "You are the
one who corrupted him, so you save him from his plight!" Abu
Bakr replied, "Then sell him to me, you can state your price."
Umayah who was not to let a good deal pass by, sold Bilal, he
added, "I would have sold him to you even if you had offered
me but an ounce of gold." Abu Bakr answered, "I would have
bought him even if you asked a hundred ounces." Abu Bakr and
Bilal went to the Prophet with the
good news. There he announced, "I am setting Bilal free, O
Messenger of Allah." This
greatly pleased the Prophet not to
mention Bilal himself.
When the Muslims were settled in Medina, Islam
became firmly established - salah, Zakat and fasting were
instituted. In the beginning, Muslims gathered for salah at
the appointed times without being summoned. Later the Prophet thought
about using a trumpet like that the Jews used to summon to
salah. He disliked the idea and ordered a clapper to be made
to be beaten at salah times.
Then Abdullah ibn Zayd came to him and said, "O
Messenger of Allah, I had a
dream last night. A man wearing two green garments came to me
holding a bell, so I offered to buy it. When he asked me what
I wanted it for, I told him that it was to summon people to
salah, whereupon he offered to show me a better way. It was to
say four times: 'Allahu Akbar',
then to say twice:
'Ash-hadu allaa ilaaha illa
Allah', then twice: 'ash-hadu anna Mohammed ar
rasoolullah', then twice:
'hayya
'alas-salah', then twice:
'hayya 'alal-falah',
then
'Allahu
Akbar, Allahu Akbar, laa ilaaha illa
Allah."
"It
is a true vision insha Allah," said the
Prophet adding, "Go
and teach it to Bilal for he has a more beautiful and far
reaching voice." For the first time Medina resonated with the
adhaan as Bilal was saying it. It was only fitting that the
one who uttered the word of Tawheed under the harshest of
torture should utter it during the adhaan. When Umar heard the
adhaan he rushed to the Prophet and said, "By the One Who has
sent you with the Truth I had the same dream about it!"
"Revelation has already preceded you," replied the Prophet.
Badr was a day etched in Bilal's memory. Quraysh
was inflicted a heavy defeat and many were taken prisoner.
Among them was Umayyah. When Bilal saw him, the memories of
what he, and other Muslims, has endured in Makkah came rushing
back to him. He exclaimed, "The arch-enemy of Allah
- Umayyah ibn Khalaf! May I not live if he
lives!" Now Umayyah was Abdur-Rahman ibn Auf's prisoner, and
this fact dissuaded Bilal from attacking Umayyah himself. But,
because Bilal kept crying these words, one of the sahabah
killed Umayyah with his sword.
The
Prophet entered the
conquest of Makkah not as a proud conqueror, but as a humble
servant of Allah. He bowed
his so low that it almost touched his mount. After he ordered
that all idols be destroyed, he stood at the door of the
Ka'bah and said, "There is no god but Allah alone. He
has no associate..., O Quraysh, Allah has taken
you from the haughtiness of jahillyiah and its veneration of
ancestors. Man springs from Adam and Adam sprang from dust,"
then he recited verses from the Qur'an until he said,
Surah
49.Al-Hujraat (The Private
Apartments), verse 13
"Verily the most noble of you in Allah's sight is the
most pious."
He
ordered Bilal to make the adhaan on the rooftop of the Kab'ah.
Hearing his voice, a disbeliever exclaimed, "Look at this
black man!" His friend replied, "When Allah hates
someone he turns him to the worst." History however attests
that Bilal occupied a distinguished position among the
Prophet's companions. Umar would often say, "Abu Bakr is our
master and ne freed our master." Meaning Bilal. But Bilal
would say, "I am only a man who used to be a
slave."
Bilal was muathin (the caller to salah) during
the time of the Prophet. After he
would make adhaan, he would stand at the Prophet's door and
say, "Hayya 'alas-salah, hayya 'alal-falah, the salah O
Messenger of Allah." The sweet
days with the Prophet soon came
to an end. Everyone in Medina wept over the death of the
dearest man ever on the earth. Bilal was asked to make adhaan
before the burial of the Prophet. He started the call,
"Allahu
Akbar...", but when he came to the name of
the Prophet he was
sobbing so heavily, he could not continue. He said, "By Allah
I will not
say the adhaan anymore."
Bilal asked the khilafah, Abu Bakr, to allow him
to go to ash-Sham for jihaad, he spent the rest of his life
there. He made adhaan only twice since then. The first was
when Umar came to ash-Sham. The second was when he visited the
tomb of the Prophet in Madinah.
Upon hearing his voice, people started to cry for it reminded
them of the days of the Prophet.
On
his death bed, Bilal's last words were, "Tomorrow you will
meet you loved ones, Mohammed and his companions." He
died in Alippo at the age of sixty four. His memory is still
alive with us today whenever we hear the adhaan.
(source 'al-Jumu'ah'
Magazine writen by Alia
Amer)