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Description
of Muhammad
Muhammad (pbuh) was born in Makka, Arabia, on Monday, 12
Rabi' Al-Awal (2 August A.D. 570). His mother, Aminah, was
the daughter of Wahb Ibn Abdu Manaf of the Zahrah family.
His father, 'Abdullah, was the son of Abdul Muttalib. His
genealogy has been traced to the noble house of Ishmael, the
son of Prophet Abraham in about the fortieth descend.
Muhammad's father died before his birth.
Before he was six years old his mother died, and the doubly
orphaned Muhammad was put under the charge of his
grandfather Abdul Muttalib who took the most tender care of
him. But the old chief died two years afterwards. On his
deathbed he confided to his son Abu Talib the charge of the
little orphan.
Journey to Busra - Christian Monk merits Muhammad
When Muhammad was twelve years old, he accompanied his uncle
Abu Talib on a mercantile journey to Syria, and they
proceeded as far as Busra. The journey lasted for some
months. It was at Busra that the Christian monk Bahira met
Muhammad. He is related to have said to Abu Talib: 'Return
with this boy and guard him against the hatred of the Jews,
for a great career awaits your nephew."
Muhammad's honest and honorable character
After this journey, the youth of Muhammad seems to have been
passed uneventfully, but all authorities agree in ascribing
to him such correctness of manners and purity of morals as
were rare among the people of Makka. The fair character and
the honorable bearing of the unobtrusive youth won the
approbation of the citizens of Makka, and by common consent
he received the title of "Al-Ameen," The Faithful.
In his early
years, Muhammad was not free from the cares of life. He had
to watch the flocks of his uncle, who, like the rest of the
Bani Hashim, had lost the greater part of his wealth.
Solitary lifestyle of Muhammad's youth
From youth to manhood he led an almost solitary life. The
lawlessness rife among the Makkans, the sudden outbursts of
causeless and bloody quarrels among the tribes frequenting
the Fair of Okadh (The Arabian Olympia), and the immorality
and skepticism of the Quraish, naturally caused feelings of
pity and sorrow in the heart of the sensitive youth. Such
scenes of social misery and religious degradation were
characteristic of a depraved age.
Muhammad's marriage to Khadijah
When Muhammad was twenty five years old, he traveled once
more to Syria as a factor of a noble and rich Quraishi widow
named Khadijah; and, having proved himself faithful in the
commercial interests of that lady, he was soon rewarded with
her hand in marriage. This marriage proved fortunate and
singularly happy. Khadijah was much the senior of her
husband, but in spite of the disparity of age between them,
the most tender devotion on both sides existed. This
marriage gave him the loving heart of a woman who was ever
ready to console him in his despair and to keep alive within
him the feeble, flickering flame of hope when no man
believed in him and the world appeared gloomy in his eyes.
Troubled, lawless times for the Makkans
Until he reached thirty years of age, Muhammad was almost a
stranger to the outside world. Since the death of his
grandfather, authority in Makka was divided among the ten
senators who constituted the governing body of the Arabian
Commonwealth. There was no such accord among them as to
ensure the safety of individual rights and property. Though
family relations afforded some degree of protection to
citizens, yet strangers were frequently exposed to
persecution and oppression. In many cases they were robbed,
not only of their goods, but even of their wives and
daughters. At the instigation of the faithful Muhammad, an
old league called the Federation of Fudul, i.e., favors was
revived with the object of repressing lawlessness and
defending every weak individual - whether Makkan or
stranger, free or slave - against any wrong or oppression to
which he might be the victim within the territories of Makka.
When Muhammad reached thirty-five years, he settled by his
judgment a grave dispute, which threatened to plunge the
whole of Arabia into a fresh series of her oft-recurring
wars. In rebuilding the Sacred House of the Ka'ba in A.D.
605, the question arose as to who should have the honor of
raising the black stone, the most holy relic of that House,
into its proper place. Each tribe claimed that honor. The
senior citizen advised the disputants to accept for their
arbitrator the first man to enter from a certain gate. The
proposal was agreed upon, and the first man who entered the
gate was Muhammad "Al-Ameen." His advice satisfied all the
contending parties. He ordered the stone to be placed on a
piece of cloth and each tribe to share the honor of lifting
it up by taking hold of a part of the cloth. The stone was
thus deposited in its place, and the rebuilding of the House
was completed without further interruption.
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Muhammad
thwarts intentions of the Romans to control Makka
It is related that, about this time, a certain Usman, Ibn
Huwairith, supported by Byzantine gold, made an attempt to
convert the territory of Hijaz into a Roman dependency, but
the attempt failed, chiefly through the instrumentality of
Muhammad.
Kindness and generosity shown to the people
These are nearly all the public acts related by historians
in which Muhammad took part in the first fifteen years of
his marriage to Khadijah. As for his private life he is
described to have been ever helpful to the needy and the
helpless. His uncle Abu Talib had fallen into distress
through his endeavors to maintain the old position of his
family. Muhammad, being rather rich at this time by his
alliance with Khadijah, tried to discharge part of the debt
of gratitude and obligation which he owed to his uncle by
undertaking the bringing up and education of his son 'Ali. A
year later he adopted 'Akil, another of his uncle's sons.
Khadijah bore Muhammad three sons and four daughters. All
the males died in childhood, but in loving his daughters and
'Ali he found much consolation.
About this time, Muhammad set a good example of kindness,
which created a salutary effect upon his people. His wife
Khadijah had made him a present of young slave named Zaid
Ibn Haritha, who had been brought as a captive to Makka and
sold to Khadijah. When Haritha heard that Muhammad possessed
Zaid, he came to Makka and offered a large sum for his
ransom. Whereupon Muhammd said: "Let Zaid come here, and if
he chooses to go with you, take him without ransom; but if
it be his choice to stay with me, why should I not keep
him?' Zaid, being brought into Muhammad's presence, declared
that he would stay with his master, who treated him as if he
was his only son. Muhammad no sooner heard this than he took
Zaid by the hand and led him to the black stone of Ka'ba,
where he publicly adopted him as his son, to which the
father acquiesced and returned home well satisfied.
Henceforward Zaid was called the son of Muhammad.
Muhammad was now approaching his fortieth year, and his mind
was ever-engaged in profound contemplation and reflection.
Before him lay his country, bleeding and torn by fratricidal
wars and intolerable dissensions; his people, sunk in
barbarism, addicted to the observation of rites and
superstitions, were, with all their desert virtues, lawless
and cruel. His two visits to Syria had opened to him a scene
of unutterable moral and social desolation, rival creeds and
sects tearing each other to pieces, carrying their hatred to
the valleys and deserts of Hijaz, and rending the townships
of Arabia with their quarrels and bitterness.
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Allah's Divine Inspiration touches Muhammad
For years after his marriage, Muhammad had been accustomed
to secluding himself in a cave in Mount Hira, a few miles
from Makka. To this cave he used to go for prayer and
meditation, sometimes alone and sometime with his family.
There, he often spent the whole nights in deep thought and
profound communion with the Unseen yet All-Knowing Allah of
the Universe. It was during one of those retirements and in
the still hours of the night, when no human sympathy was
near, that an angel came to him to tell
him that he was the Messenger of Allah sent to reclaim a
fallen people to the knowledge and service of their Lord.
Renowned compilers of authentic traditions of Islam agree on
the following account of the first revelations received by
the Prophet.
Muhammad would seclude himself in the cave of Mount Hira and
worship for three days and nights. He would, whenever he
wished, return to his family at Makka and then go back
again, taking with him the necessities of life. Thus he
continued to return to Khadijah from time to time until one
day the revelation came down to him and the Angel Gabriel (Jibreel)
appeared to him and said:
"Read!"
But as Muhammad was illiterate, having never received any
formal education in reading or writing, he said to the
Angel:
"I am not a reader"
The angel took hold of him and squeezed him as much as he
could bear and then said again:
"Read!"
Muhammad replied "I am not a reader"
The angel again seized him and said:
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Al-Quran, Chapter 96
Al-Alaq, Verse1-4 |
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In
the Name of Allah, The Benevolent, The Merciful |
Proclaim! (or read!) in the name of thy Lord and Cherisher, Who
created-
Created man, out of a (mere) clot of congealed blood:
Proclaim! And thy Lord is Most Bountiful,-
He Who taught (the use of) the pen,- |
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Then the
Prophet repeated the words with a trembling heart. He
returned to Khadijah from Mount Hira and said: "Wrap me up!
Wrap me up!" She wrapped him in a garment until his fear was
dispelled. He told Khadijah what had occurred and that he
was becoming either a soothsayer or one smitten with
madness. She replied: "Allah forbid! He will surely not let
such a thing happen, for you speak the truth, you are
faithful in trust, you bear the afflictions of the people,
you spend in good works what you gain in trade, you are
hospitable and you assist your fellow men. Have you seen
anything terrible?" Muhammad replied: "Yes," and told her
what he had seen. Whereupon, Khadijah said: "Rejoice, O dear
husband and be cheerful. He is Whose hands stands Khadijah's
life bears witness to the truth of this fact, that you will
be the prophet to this people."
Khadijah consults cousin knowledgeable of Scriptures;
confirmation of Prophet
After this experience Khadijah went to her cousin Waraqa Ibn
Naufal, who was old and blind and who knew the Scriptures of
the Jews and Christians, and is stated to have translated
them into Arabic. When she told him of what she had heard,
he cried out: "Holy! Holy! Verily, this is the Namus (The
Holy Spirit) who came to Moses. He will be the prophet of
his people. Tell him this and bid him to be brave at heart."
When the two men met subsequently in the street, the blind
old student of the Jewish and Christian Scriptures spoke of
his faith and trust: "I swear by Him in Who hand Waraqa's
life is, Allah has chosen you to be the prophet of this
people. They will call you a liar, they will persecute you,
they will banish you, and they will fight against you. Oh,
that I could live to those days. I would fight for these."
And he kissed him on the forehead.
Muhammad's Visions and struggle to fight depression
The first vision was followed by a considerable period,
during which Muhammad suffered much mental depression. Only
Almighty Allah knows what Muhammad must have been thinking
and feeling at that time. He may have been worried about his
visions, uncertain as to how the majority of the Makkans
would treat Allah's blessing, since their own interests were
at stake. The Makkans, at that time, relied heavily on trade
that revolved around the polytheistic and pagan rituals of
false idols and statues and other things
that they worshipped. One can't contemplate his future and
responsibilities to the people of the world, as well as the
challenges that Allah Almighty had chosen him for.
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Prophet rises to start his mission for Allah
The angel spoke to the grieved heart of hope and trust and
of the bright future when he would see the people of the
earth crowding into the one true faith. His destiny was
unfolded to him, when, wrapped in profound meditation,
melancholy and sad, he felt himself called by a voice from
heaven to arise and preach.
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Al-Quran, Chapter 74
Al-Muddathir, Verse 1-3 |
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In
the Name of Allah, The Benevolent, The Merciful |
O
thou wrapped up (in the mantle)!
Arise and deliver thy warning!
And thy Lord do thou magnify! |
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He arose and
engaged himself in the work to which he was called. Khadijah
was the first to accept his mission. She was to believe in
the revelations, to abandon the idolatry of her people and
to join him in purity of heart and in offering up prayers to
Allah the Almighty.
The Companions
At the beginning of his mission, Muhammad - hereinafter
called the Prophet - opened his soul only to those who were
attached to him and tried to free them from the gross
practices of their forefathers. After Khadijah, his cousin'
Ali was the next companion. The Prophet used often to go
into the desert around Makka with his wife and young cousin
that they might together offer their heart felt thanks to
the Lord of all nations for His manifold blessings. Once
they were surprised by Abu Talib, the father of 'Ali. He
said to the Prophet: "O son of my brother, what is this
religion you are following?" "It is the religion of Allah of
His Angels, of His Messengers and of our ancestor Abraham,"
answered the Prophet. "Allah has sent me to His servants, to
direct them towards the truth, and you, O my uncle, are the
most worthy of all. It is meet that I should thus call upon
you and it is meet that you should accept the truth and help
in spreading it."
Abu Talib replied: "Son of my brother, I cannot abjure the
religion of my fathers; but by the Supreme Lord, while I am
alive, none shall dare to injure you." Then turning towards
'Ali, the venerable chief asked what religion was his. Ali
answered: "O father, I believe in Allah and His Prophet and
go with him." Abu Talib replied: "Well my son, he will not
call you to anything except what is good, therefore you are
free to go with him."
After 'Ali, Muhammad's adopted son Zaid became a convert to
the new faith. He was followed by Abu Bakr, a leading member
of the Quraish tribe and an honest, wealthy merchant who
enjoyed great consideration among his compatriots. He was
but two years younger than the Prophet. His adoption of the
new faith was of great moral effect. Soon after, five
notables presented themselves before the Prophet and
accepted Islam. Several converts also came from lower
classes of the Arabs to adopt the new religion.
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Proliferation of Islamic knowledge by our Prophet
For three weary long years, the Prophet labored very quietly
to deliver his people from the worship of idols. Polytheism
was deeply rooted among the people. It offered attractions,
which the new faith in its purity did not possess. The
Quraish had personal material interests in the old worship,
and their prestige was dependent upon its maintenance. The
Prophet had to contend with the idolatrous worship of its
followers and to oppose the ruling oligarchy, which governed
its destinies.
After three years of constant but quiet struggle, only
thirty followers were secured. An important change now
occurred in the relations of the Prophet with the citizens
of Makka. His compatriots had begun to doubt his sanity,
thinking him crazy or possessed by an evil spirit. Hitherto
he preached quietly and unobtrusively. He now decided to
appeal publicly to the Makkans, requesting them to abandon
their idolatry. For this he arranged a gathering on a
neighboring hill and there spoke to them of their folly in
the sight of Allah in worshipping pieces of stone which they
called their gods. He invited them to abandon their old
impious worship and adopt the faith of love, truth and
purity. He warned them of the fate that had overtaken past
races who had not heeded the preaching of former prophets.
But the gathering departed without listening to the warning
given them by the Prophet.
Having thus failed to induce his fellow citizens to listen
to him, he turned his attention to the strangers arriving in
the city on commerce or pilgrimage. But the Quraish made
attempts to frustrate his efforts. They hastened themselves
to meet the strangers first on different routes, to warn
them against holding any communication with the Prophet,
whom they represented as a dangerous magician. When the
pilgrims or traders returned to their homes, they carried
with them the news of the advent of the bold preacher
who was inviting the Arabs loudly - at the risk of his own
life - to abandon the worship of their dear idols.
Persecution perpetrated by the Makkan Tribe of Quraish
Now the Prophet and his followers became subject to some
persecution and indignity. The hostile Quraish prevented the
Prophet from offering his prayers at the Sacred House of the
Ka'ba; they pursued him wherever he went; they covered him
and his disciples with dirt and filth when engaged in their
devotions; they scattered thorns in the places which he
frequented for devotion and meditation. Amidst all these
trials the Prophet did not waiver. He was full of confidence
in his mission, even when on several occasions he was put in
imminent danger of losing his life.
At this time Hamza, the youngest son of Abdul Muttalib,
adopted Islam. Hamza was a man of distinguished bravery, an
intrepid warrior, generous and true, whose heroism earned
for him the title of the "Lion of Allah." He became a
devoted adherent of Islam and ever lost his life in the
cause.
The Prophet continued preaching to the Arabs in a most
gentle and reasonable manner. He called the people, so
accustomed to iniquity and wrong doings, to abandon their
abominations. In burning words which excited the hearts of
his hearers, he warned them of the punishment which Allah
had inflicted upon the ancient tribes of 'Ad and Thamud who
had obstinately disobeyed the teachings of Allah's
messengers to them. He adjured them by the wonderful sights
of nature, by the noon day brightness, by the night when it
spreads its veil, by the day when it appears in glory to
listen to his warning before a similar destruction befell
them. He spoke to them of the Day of Reckoning, when their
deeds in this world will be weighed before the Eternal
Judge, when the children who had been buried alive will be
asked for what crime they were put to death.
Almighty Allah said:
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Al-Quran, Chapter 50
Qaf, Verse 2-14 |
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In
the Name of Allah, The Benevolent, The Merciful |
But
they wonder that there has come to them a Warner from among
themselves. So the Unbelievers say: "This is a wonderful thing!
"What! When we die and become dust, (shall we live again?) That is a
(sort of) return far (from our understanding)."
We already know how much of them the earth takes away: With Us is a
record guarding (the full account).
But they deny the Truth when it comes to them: so they are in a
confused state.
Do they not look at the sky above them?- How We have made it and
adorned it, and there are no flaws in it?
And the earth- We have spread it out, and set thereon mountains
standing firm, and produced therein every kind of beautiful growth
(in pairs)-
To be observed and commemorated by every devotee turning (to Allah).
And We send down from the sky rain charted with blessing, and We
produce therewith gardens and Grain for harvests;
And tall (and stately) palm-trees, with shoots of fruit-stalks,
piled one over another;-
As sustenance for (Allah's) Servants;- and We give (new) life
therewith to land that is dead: Thus will be the Resurrection.
Before them was denied (the Hereafter) by the People of Noah, the
Companions of the Rass, the Thamud,
The 'Ad, Pharaoh, the brethren of Lut,
The Companions of the Wood, and the People of Tubba'; each one (of
them) rejected the messengers, and My warning was duly fulfilled (in
them). |
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Almighty Allah
also declared:
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Al-Quran, Chapter 6
Al-An'am, Verse 1-6 |
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In
the Name of Allah, The Benevolent, The Merciful |
Praise be Allah, Who created the heavens and the earth, and made the
darkness and the light. Yet those who reject Faith hold (others) as
equal, with their Guardian-Lord.
He it is created you from clay, and then decreed a stated term (for
you). And there is in His presence another determined term; yet ye
doubt within yourselves!
And He is Allah in the heavens and on earth. He knoweth what ye
hide, and what ye reveal, and He knoweth the (recompense) which ye
earn (by your deeds).
But never did a single one of the signs of their Lord reach them,
but they turned away therefrom.
And now they reject the truth when it reaches them: but soon shall
they learn the reality of what they used to mock at.
See they not how many of those before them We did destroy?-
generations We had established on the earth, in strength such as We
have not given to you - for whom We poured out rain from the skies
in abundance, and gave (fertile) streams flowing beneath their
(feet): yet for their sins We destroyed them, and raised in their
wake fresh generations (to succeed them). |
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As the number
of believers increased and the cause of the Prophet was
strengthened by the conversions of many powerful citizens,
the Prophet's preaching alarmed the Quraish. Their power and
prestige were at stake. They were the custodians of the
idols, which the Prophet had threatened to destroy; they
were the ministers of the worship, which he denounced; in
fact their existence and living wholly depended upon the
maintenance of the old institutions. The Prophet taught that
in the sight of his Lord all human beings were equal, the
only distinction recognized among them being the weight of
their piety.
Allah the Exalted said:
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Al-Quran, Chapter 49
Al-Hujurat, Verse 13 |
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In
the Name of Allah, The Benevolent, The Merciful |
O
mankind! We created you from a single (pair) of a male and a female,
and made you into nations and tribes, that ye may know each other
(not that ye may despise (each other). Verily the most honoured of
you in the sight of Allah is (he who is) the most righteous of you.
And Allah has full knowledge and is well acquainted (with all
things). |
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The Quraish
would have none of this leveling of distinctions, as it
reflected upon their long inherited privileges. Accordingly,
they organized a system of persecution in order to suppress
the movement before it became firmly established. They
decided that each family should take upon itself the task of
stamping out the new faith on the spot. Each household
tortured its own members or adherents or slaves who were
supposed to have connected themselves with the new religion.
With the exception of the Prophet, who
was protected by Abu Talib and his kinsmen, and Abu Bakr,
and a few others who were either distinguished by their rank
or possessed some influence among the Quraish, all other
converts were subjected to different sorts of torture. Some
of them were thrown into prison, starved, and then flogged.
The hill of Ramada and the place called Bata thus became
scenes of cruel torture.
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Quraish fear spread of Islam - Try in vain to blackmail
Prophet
One day the Quraish tried to induce the Prophet to
discontinue his teachings of the new religion, which had
sown discord among their people. 'Utba Ibn Rabi'a, was
delegated to see the Prophet and speak to him. 'Utba said:
"O son of my brother, you are distinguished by your
qualities; yet you have sown discord among our people and
cast dissension in our families; you denounced our gods and
goddesses and you charge our ancestors with impiety. Now we
are come to make a proposition to you, and I ask you to
think well before you reject it." "I am listening to you, O
father of Walid," said the Prophet. "O son of my brother, if
by this affair you intend to acquire riches, honors, and
dignity, we are willing to collect for you a fortune larger
than is possessed by any one of us; we shall make you our
chief and will do nothing without you. If you desire
dominion, we shall make you our king; and if the demon which
possesses you cannot be subdued, we will bring you doctors
and give them riches until they cure you." When 'Utba had
finished his discourse, the Prophet said: "Now listen to me,
O father of Walid." "I listen." He replied. The Prophet,
recited to him the first thirteen verses of Surah Fussilat,
as follows:
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Al-Quran, Chapter 41
Ha-Mim, Verse 1-13 |
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In
the Name of Allah, The Benevolent, The Merciful |
Ha,
Mim.
A Revelation from (Allah), Most Gracious, Most Merciful;-
A Book, whereof the verses are explained in detail;- a Qur'an in
Arabic, for people who understand;-
Giving good news and admonition: yet most of them turn away, and so
they hear not.
They say: "Our hearts are under veils, (concealed) from that to
which thou dost invite us, and in our ears in a deafness, and
between us and thee is a screen: so do thou (what thou wilt); for
us, we shall do (what we will!)"
Say thou: "I am but a man like you: It is revealed to me by
Inspiration, that your Allah is one Allah: so stand true to Him, and
ask for His Forgiveness." And woe to those who join gods with
Allah,-
Those who practice not regular Charity, and who even deny the
Hereafter.
For those who believe and work deeds of righteousness is a reward
that will never fail.
Say: Is it that ye deny Him Who created the earth in two Days? And
do ye join equals with Him? He is the Lord of (all) the Worlds.
He set on the (earth), mountains standing firm, high above it, and
bestowed blessings on the earth, and measure therein all things to
give them nourishment in due proportion, in four Days, in accordance
with (the needs of) those who seek (Sustenance).
Moreover He comprehended in His design the sky, and it had been (as)
smoke: He said to it and to the earth: "Come ye together, willingly
or unwillingly." They said: "We do come (together), in willing
obedience."
So He completed them as seven firmaments in two Days, and He
assigned to each heaven its duty and command. And We adorned the
lower heaven with lights, and (provided it) with guard. Such is the
Decree of (Him) the Exalted in Might, Full of Knowledge.
But if they turn away, say thou: "I have warned you of a stunning
Punishment (as of thunder and lightning) like that which (overtook)
the 'Ad and the Thamud!" |
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When the
Prophet had finished his recitation, he said to 'Utba: "This
is my reply to your proposition; now take what course you
find best."
Quraish increase Persecution - First Hijra of 615 C.E. to
Abyssinia
Persecution by the Quraish grew fiercer every day and the
sufferings of the Prophet's disciples became unbearable. He
had heard of the righteousness, tolerance, and hospitality
of the neighboring Christian king of Abyssinia. He
recommended such of his companions who were without
protection to seek refuge in the kingdom of that pious king,
Al-Najashi (Negus). Some fifteen of the unprotected
adherents of Islam promptly availed themselves of the advice
and sailed to Abyssinia. Here they met with a very kind
reception from the Negus. This is called the first hijrah
(migration) in the history of Islam and occurred in the
fifth year of the Prophet Muhammad's mission, A.D. 615.
These emigrants were soon followed by many of their fellow
sufferers, until the number reached eighty-three men and
eighteen women.
The hostile Quraish, furious at the escape of their victims,
sent deputes to the king of Abyssinia to request him to
deliver up the refugees, that they might be put to death for
adjuring their old religion and embracing a new one. The
king summoned the poor fugitives and inquired of them what
was the religion, which they had adopted in preference to
their old faith. Ja'far, son of Abu Talib and brother of
'Ali, acted as spokesman for the exiles. He spoke thus: "O
king, we were plunged in the depth of ignorance and
barbarism, we adored idols, we lived in unchastity, and we
ate dead bodies, and we spoke abomination, we disregarded
every feeling of humanity and sense of duty towards our
neighbors, and we knew no law but that of the strong, when
Allah raised among us a man, of whose birth, truthfulness,
honesty, and purity we were aware. He called us to profess
the Unity of Allah and taught us to associate nothing with
Him; he forbade us the worship of idols and enjoined us to
speak the truth, to be faithful to our trusts, to be
merciful, and to regard the rights of neighbors; he forbade
us to speak evil of the worship of Allah and not to return
to the worship of idols of woos and stone and to abstain
from evil, to offer prayers, to give alms, to observe the
fast. We have believed in him, we have accepted his
teachings and his injunctions to worship Allah alone and to
associate nothing with Him. Hence our people have persecuted
us, trying to make us forego the worship of Allah and return
to the worship of idols of wood and stone and other
abominations. They have tortured us and injured us until,
finding no safety among them, we have come to your kingdom
trusting you will give us protection against their
persecution."
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Al-Najashi (Negus), King of Abyssinia protects Muslims
After hearing the above speech, the hospitable king ordered
the deputies to return to their people in safety and not to
interfere with their fugitives. Thus the emigrants passed
the period of exile in peace and comfort.
While the followers of the Prophet sought safety in foreign
lands against the persecution of their people, he continued
his warnings to the Quraish more strenuously than ever.
Again they came to him with offers of riches and honor,
which he firmly and utterly refused. But they mocked at him
and urged him for miracles to prove his mission. He used to
answer: "Allah has not sent me to work wonders; He has sent
me to preach to you."
Thus disclaiming all power of wonder working, the Prophet
ever rested the truth of his divine mission upon his wise
teachings. He addressed himself to the inner consciousness
of man, to his common sense and to his own better judgment:
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Al-Quran, Chapter 41
Ha-Mim, Verse 6 |
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|
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|
In
the Name of Allah, The Benevolent, The Merciful |
Say
thou: "I am but a man like you: It is revealed to me by Inspiration,
that your Allah is one Allah: so stand true to Him, and ask for His
Forgiveness." And woe to those who join gods with Allah,- |
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Despite all the
exhortation of the Prophet, the Quraish persisted in asking
him for a sign. They insisted that unless some sign be sent
down to him from his Lord, they would not believe. The
disbelievers used to ask: "Why has Muhammad not been sent
with miracles like previous prophets?" The Prophet replied:
"Because miracles had proved inadequate to convince. Noah
was sent with signs, and with what effect? Where was the
lost tribe of Thamud? They had refused to receive the
preaching of the Prophet Salih, unless he showed them a sign
and caused the rock to bring forth a living camel. He did
what they asked. In scorn they cut the camel's feet and then
daring the prophet to fulfill his threats of judgment, were
found dead in their beds the next morning, stricken by the
angel of the Lord."
The Holy Qur'an is a Miracle
There are some seventeen places in the Quran, in which the
Prophet Muhammad is challenged to work a sign, and he
answered them all to the same or similar effect: Allah has
the power of working miracles, and has not been believed;
there were greater miracles in nature than any which could
be wrought outside of it; and the Quran itself was a great,
everlasting miracle. The Quran, the Prophet used to assert
to the disbelievers, is a book of blessings which is a
warning for the whole world; it is a complete guidance and
explains everything necessary; it is a reminder of what is
imprinted on human nature and is free from every discrepancy
and from error and falsehood. It is a book of true guidance
and a light to all.
As to the sacred idols, so much honored and esteemed by the
pagan Arabs, the Prophet openly recited:
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Al-Quran, Chapter 53
An-Najm, Verse 23 |
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|
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|
In
the Name of Allah, The Benevolent, The Merciful |
These
are nothing but names which ye have devised,- ye and your fathers,-
for which Allah has sent down no authority (whatever). They follow
nothing but conjecture and what their own souls desire!- Even though
there has already come to them Guidance from their Lord! |
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When the
Prophet thus spoke reproachfully of the sacred gods of the
Quraish, the latter redoubled their persecution. But the
Prophet, nevertheless, continued his preaching undaunted but
the hostility of his enemies or by their bitter persecution
of him. And despite all opposition and increased
persecution, the new faith gained ground. The national fair
at Okadh near Makka attracted many desert Bedouins and
trading citizen of distant towns. These listened to the
teachings of the Prophet, to his admonitions, and to his
denunciations of their sacred idols and of their
superstitions. They carried back all that they had heard to
their distant homes, and thus the advent of the Prophet was
made know to almost all parts of the peninsula.
Makkans plea to Abu Talib to stop The Prophet
The Makkans, however, were evermore furious at the Prophet's
increasing preaching against their religion. They asked his
uncle Abu Talib to stop him, but he could not do anything.
At length, as the Prophet persisted in his ardent
denunciations against their ungodliness and impiety, they
turned him out from the Ka'ba where he used to sit and
preach, and subsequently went in a body to Abu Talib. They
urged the venerable chief to prevent his nephew from abusing
their gods any longer or uttering any ill words against
their ancestors. They warned Abu Talib that if he would not
do that, he would be excluded from the communion of his
people and driven to side with Muhammad; the matter would
then be settled by fight until one of the two parties were
exterminated.
Abu Talib neither wished to separate himself from his
people, nor forsake his nephew for the idolaters to revenge
themselves upon. He spoke to the Prophet very softly and
begged him to abandon his affair. To this suggestion the
Prophet firmly replied: "O my uncle, if they placed the sun
in my right hand and the moon in my left hand to cause me to
renounce my task, verily I would not desist therefrom until
Allah made manifest His cause or I perished in the attempt."
The Prophet, overcome by the thought that his uncle and
protector was willing to desert him, turned to depart. But
Abu Talib called him loudly to come back, and he came. "Say
whatever you please; for by the Lord I shall not desert you
ever."
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Abu Talib protects his Nephew, The Prophet
The Quraish again attempted in vain to cause Abu Talib to
abandon his nephew. The venerable chief declared his
intention to protect his nephew against any menace or
violence. He appealed to the sense of honor of the two
families of the Bani Hashim and the Bani Muttalib, both
families being kinsmen of the Prophet, to protect their
member from falling a victim to the hatred of rival parties.
All the members of the two families nobly responded to the
appeal of Abu Talib except Abu Lahab, one of the Prophet's
uncles, who took part with the persecutors.
Umar Al-Khattab submits to Islam
During this period, 'Umar Al-Khattab adopted Islam. In him
the new faith gained a valuable adherent and an important
factor in the future development and propagation of Islam.
Hitherto he had been a violent opposer of the Prophet and a
bitter enemy of Islam. His conversion is said to have been
worked by the miraculous effect on his mind of a Surah of
the Quran which his sister was reading in her house, where
he had gone with the intention of killing her for adopting
Islam. Thus the party of the Prophet had been strengthened
by the conversation by his uncle Hamza, a man of great valor
and merit; and of Abu Bakr and 'Umar, both men of great
energy and reputation. The Muslims now ventured to perform
their devotions in public.
Quraish divided into two factions
Alarmed at the bold part which the Prophet and his followers
were now able to assume, and roused by the return of the
deputies from Abyssinia and the announcement of their
unsuccessful mission, the Quraish determined to check by a
decisive blow any further progress of Islam. Towards this
end, in the seventh year of the mission, they made a solemn
covenant against the descendants of Hashim and Muttalib,
engaging themselves to contract no marriage with any of them
and to have no communication with them. Upon this, the
Quraish became divided into two factions, and the two
families of Hashim and Muttalib all repaired Abu Talib as
their chief.
Abu Lahab's hatred of Islam
Abu Lahab, the Prophet's uncle, however, out of his
inveterate hatred of his nephew and his doctrine, went over
to the opposite party, whose chief was Abu Sufyan Ibn Harb,
of the family of Umayya. The persecuted party, Muslims as
well as idolaters betook themselves to a defile on the
eastern skirts of Makka. They lived in this defensive
position for three years. The provisions, which they had
carried with them, were soon exhausted. They would have
probably perished entirely had it not been for the sympathy
and occasional help received from less bigoted compatriots.
Reconcilliation of the Quraish
Towards the beginning of the tenth year of the mission,
reconciliation was concluded between the Quraish and the two
families of Hashim and Abdul Muttalib through the
intermediation of Hisham, Ibn Umar, and Zobeir, Ibn Abu
Umayya. Thus, the alliance against the two families was
abolished, and they were able to return to Makka.
During the period the Prophet and his kinspeople passed in
their defensive position, Islam made no progress outside;
but in the sacred months, when violence was considered
sacrilege, the Prophet used to come out of his temporary
prison to preach Islam to the pilgrims.
Death of Abu Talib and Khadijah
In the following year, both Abu Talib and Khadijah died.
Thus the Prophet lost Abu Talib the kind guardian of his
youth who had hitherto protected him against his enemies,
and in Khadijah his most encouraging companion. She was ever
his angel of hope and consolation. The Prophet, weighed down
by the loss of his amiable protector and his beloved wife,
without hope of turning the Quraish from idolatry, with a
saddened heart, yet full of trust, resolved to exercise his
ministry in some of her field. He chose Taif, a town about
sixty miles east of Makka, where he went accompanied by a
faithful servant Zaid.
The tribe of Thakif, who were the inhabitants of Taif,
received Muhammad very coldly. However, he stayed there for
one month. Though the more considerate and better sort of
men treated him with a little respect, the slaves and common
people refused to listen to his teachings; they were
outrageously indignant at his invitation to abandon the gods
they worshipped with such freedom of morals and lightness of
heart. At length they rose against him, and bringing him to
the wall of the city, obliged him to depart and return to
Makka.
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People of Yathrib (Madina) accept the Prophet
The repulse greatly discouraged his followers; however, the
Prophet boldly continued to preach to the public assemblies
at the pilgrimage and gained several new converts, among
whom were six of the city of Yahtrib (later called Madina),
of the Jewish tribe of Khazraj. When these Yathribites
returned home, they spread the news among their people that
a prophet had arisen among the Arabs who was to call them to
Allah and put an end to their inquiries.
Miraj (Ascension to the Heavens) on a creature called
Buraq
In the twelfth year of his mission, the Prophet made his
night journey from Makka to Jerusalem, and thence to heaven.
His journey, known in history as Miraj (Ascension) was a
real bodily one and not only a vision. It was at this time
that Allah ordered the Muslims to pray the five daily
prayers.
Almighty Allah had said:
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Al-Quran, Chapter 17
Al-Israa, Verse 1 |
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|
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|
In
the Name of Allah, The Benevolent, The Merciful |
Glory
to (Allah) Who did take His servant for a Journey by night from the
Sacred Mosque to the farthest Mosque, whose precincts We did bless,-
in order that We might show him some of Our Signs: for He is the One
Who heareth and seeth (all things). |
 |
Abbas Ibn Malik
reported that Malik Ibn Sasaa said that Allah's Messenger
described to them his Night Journey saying: "While I was
lying in Al-Hatim or Al-Hijr, suddenly someone came to me
and cut my body open from here to here." I asked Al-Jarud,
who was by my side, "What does he mean?" He said: "It means
from his throat to his pubic area," or said, "From the top
of the chest." The Prophet further said, "He then took out
my heart. Then a gold tray of Belief was brought to me and
my heart was washed and was filled (with Belief) and then
returned to its original place. Then a white animal which
was smaller than a mule and bigger than a donkey was brought
to me." (On this Al-Jarud asked: "Was it in the Buraq, O Abu
Hamza?" I (Anas) replied in the affirmative. The Prophet
said: "The animal's step (was so huge that it) reached the
farthest point within the reach of the animals' sight - I
was carried on it.
Miraj - Muhammad's encounter with Adam (Hadith)
Gabriel set out with me till we reached the nearest heaven.
"When he asked for the gate to be opened, it was asked, 'Who
is it?' Gabriel answered, 'Gabriel.' It was asked, 'Who is
accompanying you?' Gabriel replied, 'Muhammad.' It was
asked, 'Has Muhammad been called?' Gabriel replied in the
affirmative. Then it was said. 'He is welcomed. What an
excellent visit his is!' The gate was opened, and when I
went over the first heaven, I saw Adam there. Gabriel said
to me: 'This is your father, Adam; pay him your greetings.'
So I greeted him and he returned the greetings to me and
said: 'You are welcomed, O pious son and pious Prophet.'
Miraj - Muhammad's encounter with John and Jesus (Hadith)
Then Gabriel ascended with me till we reached the second
heaven. Gabriel asked for the gate to be opened. It was
asked: 'Who is it?' Gabriel answered: 'Gabriel.' It was
asked: 'Who is accompanying you?' Gabriel replied,
'Muhammad.' It was asked: 'Has he been called?' Gabriel
answered in the affirmative. Then it was said: 'He is
welcomed. What an excellent visit his is!' The gate was
opened. "When I went over the second heaven, here I saw John
(Yahya) and Jesus (Isa), who were cousins of each other.
Gabriel said to me: "These are John and Jesus; pay them your
greetings.' So I greeted them and both of them returned my
greetings to me and said, 'You are welcomed, O pious brother
and pious Prophet.'
Miraj - Muhammad's encounter with Joseph (Hadith)
Then Gabriel ascended with me to the third heaven and asked
for its gate to be opened. It was asked 'Who is it?' And
Gabriel replied: 'Gabriel.' It was asked, 'Who is
accompanying you?' Gabriel replied, 'Muhammad.' It was
asked, 'Has he been called?' Gabriel replied in the
affirmative. Then it was said: 'He is welcomed, what an
excellent visit his is!' The gate was opened, and when I
went over the third heaven there I saw Joseph (Yusuf),
Gabriel said to me: 'This is Joseph, pay him your
greetings.' So I greeted him and he returned the greetings
to me and said: 'You are welcomed, O pious brother and pious
Prophet.'
Miraj - Muhammad's encounter with Enoch (Hadith)
Then Gabriel ascended with me to the fourth heaven and asked
for its gate to be opened. It was asked 'Who is it?' Gabriel
replied, 'Gabriel' It was asked: 'Who is accompanying you?'
Gabriel replied: 'Muhammad.' It was asked: 'Has he been
called?' Gabriel replied in the affirmative. Then it was
said: 'He is welcomed, what an excellent visit his is!' "The
gate was opened, and when I went over the fourth heaven,
there I saw Enoch (Idris), Gabriel said to me: 'This is
Enoch; pay him your greetings.' So I greeted him and he
returned the greetings to me and said: 'You are welcomed O
pious brother and pious Prophet.'
Miraj - Muhammad's encounter with Aaron (Hadith)
Then Gabriel ascended with me to the fifth heaven and asked
for its gate to be opened. It was asked: 'Who is it?'
Gabriel replied: 'Gabriel.' It was asked: 'Who is
accompanying you?' Gabriel replied 'Muhammad.' It was asked:
'Has he been called?' Gabriel replied in the affirmative.
Then it was said: 'He is welcomed, what an excellent visit
his is!' So when I went over the fifth heaven, there I saw
Aaron (Harun), Gabriel said to me: "This is Aaron; pay your
greetings.' So I greeted him and he returned the greetings
to me and said: "You are welcomed, O pious brother and pious
Prophet."
Miraj - Muhammad's encounter with Moses (Hadith)
Then Gabriel ascended with me to the sixth heaven and asked
for its gate to be opened. It was asked: 'Who is it?'
Gabriel replied: 'Gabriel.' It was asked: 'Who is
accompanying you?' Gabriel replied: 'Muhammad.' It was said:
'Has he been called?' Gabriel replied in the affirmative. It
was said: 'He is welcomed. What an excellent visit his is!'
"When I went over the sixth heaven, there I saw Moses (Musa).
Gabriel said to me: "This is Moses; pay him your greeting.
So I greeted him and he returned the greetings to me and
said: "You are welcomed, O pious brother and pious Prophet."
When I left him (Moses) he wept. Someone asked him: 'What
makes you weep?' Moses said: 'I weep because after me there
has been sent (as Prophet) a young man whose followers will
enter Paradise in greater numbers than my followers.'
Miraj - Muhammad's encounter with Abraham (Hadith)
Then Gabriel ascended with me to the seventh heaven and
asked for its gate to be opened. It was asked: 'Who is it?'
Gabriel replied: 'Gabriel.' It was asked: 'Who is
accompanying you?' Gabriel replied: 'Muhammad.' It was
asked: 'Has he been called?' Gabriel replied in the
affirmative. Then it said: 'He is welcomed. What an
excellent visit his is!' "So when I went (over the seventh
heaven), there I saw Abraham (Ibrahim). Gabriel said
to me: 'This is your father; pay your greetings to him.' So
I greeted him and he returned the greetings to me and said:
'You are welcomed, O pious son and pious Prophet.'
Then I was made to ascend to Sidrat-ul-Muntaha (the Lote
Tree of the utmost boundary). Behold! Its fruits were like
the jars of Hajr (a place near Madina) and its leaves were
as big as the ears of elephants. Gabriel said: "This is the
Lote Tree of the utmost and boundary.' Behold! There ran
four rivers, two were hidden and two were visible, I asked:
'What are these two kinds of rivers, O Gabriel?' He replied:
'As for the hidden rivers, they are two rivers in Paradise
and the visible rivers are the Nile and the Euphrates.'
Moses advises Muhammad to plea to Allah to lessen prayers
"Then Al-Bayt-al-Ma'mur (the Sacred House) was shown to me
and a container full of wine and another full of milk and a
third full of honey were brought to me. I took the milk.
Gabriel remarked: 'This is the Islamic religion which you
and your followers are following.' Then the prayers were
enjoined on me: they were fifty prayers a day. When I
returned, I passed by Moses, who asked me; 'What have you
been ordered to do?' I replied: 'I have been ordered to
offer fifty prayers a day.' Moses said: 'Your followers
cannot bear fifty prayers a day, and by Allah I have tested
people before you, and I have tried my level best with Bani
Israel in vain. Go back to your Lord and ask for reduction
to lessen your followers'' burden.' So I went back, and
Allah reduced ten prayers for me. Then again I came to
Moses, but he repeated the same as he had said before. Then
again I went back to Allah, and He reduced ten more prayers.
When I came to Moses he said the same. I went back to Allah,
and He ordered me to observe ten prayers a day. When I came
back to Moses, he repeated the same advice, so I went back
to Allah and was ordered to observe five prayers a day.
"When I came back to Moses, he said: 'What have you been
ordered?' I replied: 'I have been ordered to observe five
prayers a day.' He said: 'Your followers cannot bear five
prayers a day, and no doubt, I have experienced the people
before you, and I have tried my level best with Bani Israel,
so go back to your Lord and ask for reduction to lesson your
followers' burden.' I said: 'I have requested so much of my
Lord that I feel ashamed, but I am satisfied now and
surrender to Allah's Order.' When I left, I heard a voice
saying: 'I have passed My order and have lessened the burden
of My worshippers.'"
Women's' Oath - People of Yathrib (Madina) submit to
Islam
In this year, twelve men of Yathrib, of whom ten were of the
Jewish tribe of Khazraj and the other two of Aws, came to
Makkan and took an oath of fidelity to the Prophet at Al-Aqaba,
a hill on the north of that city. This oath was called the
Women's' Oath, not that any women were present at this time,
but because a man was not thereby obliged to take up arms in
defense of the Prophet or his religion, it being the same
oath that was afterwards exacted of the women. This oath was
as follows: "We will not associate anything with Allah; we
will not steal nor commit adultery or fornication, nor kill
our children (as the pagan Arabs used to do when they
apprehended that they would not be able to maintain them),
nor forge calumnies; we will obey the Prophet in everything
that is reasonable, and we will be faithful to him in well
and sorrow." When they had solemnly engaged to do all this,
the Prophet sent one of his disciples, Mus'ab Ibn Umair,
home with them to teach them the fundamental doctrines and
ceremonies of the religion. Mus'ab, having arrived at
Yathrib by the assistance of those who had been formerly
converted, gained several new converts, particularly Usaid
Ibn Khudair, a chief of man of the city, and Sa'd Ibn Mu'adh,
prince of the tribe of Aws. Islam spread so fast that there
was a scarce a house that did not have some Muslims in it.
The next year, being the thirteenth of the mission (A.D.
622) Mus'ab returned from Yathrib accompanied by
seventy-three men and two women of that city who had adopted
Islam, besides others who were as yet unbelievers. On their
arrival, these Yathribites immediately sent to the Prophet
and invited him to their city. The Prophet was now in great
need of such assistance, for his opponents had by this time
grown so powerful in Makka that he could not stay there much
longer without imminent danger. He therefore accepted their
proposal and met them one night by appointment at Al-Aqaba
attended by his uncle Al-Abbas, who, though he was not then
a convert, wished his nephew well.
Al-Abbas made a speech to those of Yathrib wherein he told
them that, as the Prophet Muhammad was obliged to quit his
native city and seek shelter elsewhere, and they had offered
him their protection, they would do well not to deceive him;
and that if they were not firmly resolved to defend and not
to betray him, they had better declare their minds and let
him provide for his safety in some other manner. Upon their
professing their sincerity, the Prophet swore to be faithful
to them, on condition that they should worship none but
Allah observe the precepts of Islam, obey the Prophet in all
that was right, and protect him against all insults as
heartily as they would their wives and families. They then
asked him what would be their return, if they should happen
to be killed in the cause of Allah; he answered: "Paradise,"
whereupon they pledged their faith to him and his cause.
The Hijra - People of Yathrib (Madina) welcome Muslims
The Prophet then selected twelve men out of their number to
act as his delegates. Thus was concluded the second covenant
of Al-Aqaba. The Yathribites returned home leaving the
Prophet to arrange for the journey to their city. The
Prophet directed his followers to seek immediate safety at
Yathrib, which they accordingly did. About one hundred
families silently disappeared from Makka and proceeded to
Yathrib, where they were received with enthusiasm and much
hospitality. Finally, all the disciples had gone to Yathrib.
The Prophet alone remained at Makka, keeping with him only
his young cousin, 'Ali, and his devoted friend Abu Bakr.
The Makkans plot to Kill Allah's Prophet
The Makkans, fearing the consequence of this new alliance,
began to think seriously of preventing Muhammad from
escaping to Yathrib. They met in all haste. After several
milder expedients had been rejected, they decided that he
should be killed. They agreed that one man should be chosen
out of every tribe and that each man should strike a blow at
him with his sword so that responsibility of the guilt would
rest equally on all tribes. The Bani Hashim, Muhammad's own
tribe, were more inferior and therefore would not be able to
revenge their kinsman's death.
A number of noble youths were selected for the bloody deed.
As the night advanced, the assassins posted themselves round
the Prophet's dwelling. They watched all night long, waiting
to murder Muhammad when he should leave his house at the
early dawn. By some means the Prophet had warned of the
danger, and he directed 'Ali to lie down in his place and
wrap himself up in his green clock, which he did. The
Prophet miraculously escaped through the window and he
repaired to the house of Abu Bakr, unperceived by the
conspirators who had already assembled at the Prophet's
door. They, in the meantime, looking through a crevice and
seeing 'Ali, whom they mistook for Muhammad himself, asleep,
continued watching there until morning. When 'Ali arose,
they found themselves deceived. The fury of the Quraish was
now unbounded. The news that the would be assassins had
returned unsuccessful and that
Muhammad had escaped aroused their whole energy. A price of
a hundred camels was set upon Muhammad's head.
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A narration 'Aisha Bint Abu Bakr (Prophet's wife)
Narrated 'Aisha Bint Abu Bakr (the wife of the Prophet): "I
never remembered my parents believing in any religion other
than the true religion (Islam), and (I don't remember) a
single day passing without our being visited by Allah's
Messenger in the morning and in the evening. When the
Muslims were put to test (troubled by the pagans), Abu Bakr
set out migrating to the land of Abyssinia (Ethiopia), and
when he reached Bark-al-Ghimad, Ibn Ad-Daghina, the chief of
the tribe of Qara, met him and said, 'O Abu Bakr! Where are
you going?' Abu Bakr replied: 'My people have turned me out
(of my country), so I want to wander on the earth and
worship my Lord.' Ibn Ad-Dhagina said: 'O Abu Bakr! A man
like you should not leave his homeland, nor should he be
driven out, because you help the destitute, earn their
living, and you keep good relations with your kith and kin,
help the weak and the poor, entertain guests generously, and
help the calamity-stricken persons. Therefore, I am your
protector. Go back and worship your Lord in your town.'
"So Abu Bakr returned and Ibn Ad-Daghina accompanied him. In
the evening Ibn Ad-Dhagina visited the nobles of Quraish and
said to them. 'A man like Abu Bakr should not leave his
homeland, nor should he be driven out. Do you (Quraish)
drive out a man who helps the destitute, earns their living,
keeps good relations with his kith and kin, helps the weak
and poor, entertains guests generously and helps the
calamity-stricken people?' So the people of Quraish could
not refuse Ibn Ad-Dhagina's protection, and they said to Ibn
Ad-Daghina: 'Let Abu Bakr worship his Lord in his house. He
can pray and recite there whatever he likes, but he should
not hurt us with it, and should not do it publicly, because
we are afraid that he may affect our women and children."
Ibn Ad-Dhagina told Abu Bakr all of that. Abu Bakr stayed in
that state, worshipping his Lord in his house. He did not
pray publicly, nor did he recite Quran outside his
house.
Abu Bakr builds Mosque
"Then a thought occurred to Abu Bakr to build a mosque in
front of his house, and there he used to pray and recite the
Quran. The women and children of the pagans began to gather
around him in great number. They used to wonder at him and
look at him. Abu Bakr was a man who used to weep too much,
and he could not help weeping or reciting the Quran. That
situation scared the nobles of the pagans of Quraish, so
they sent for Ibn Ad-Daghina. When he came to them, they
said: 'We accepted your protection of Abu
Bakr on condition that he should worship his Lord in his
house, but he has violated the conditions and he has built a
mosque in front of his house where he prays and recites the
Quran publicly. We are now afraid that he may affect our
women and children unfavourably. So, prevent him from that.
If he likes to confine the worship of his Lord to his house,
he may do so, but if he insists on doing that openly, ask
him to release you from your obligation to protect him, for
we dislike to break our pact with you, but we deny
Abu Bakr the right to announce his act publicly.'
Ibn Ad-Dhagina went to Abu Bakr and said: 'O Abu Bakr! You
know well what contract I have made on your behalf; now, you
are either to abide by it, or else release me from my
obligation of protecting you, because I do not want the
Arabs to hear that my people have dishonored a contract I
have made on behalf of another man.' Abu Bakr replied: 'I
release you from your pact to protect me and am pleased with
the protection from Allah.'
Aisha's narration's continues: "At that time the Prophet was
in Makka, and he said to the Muslims: 'In a dream I have
been shown your migration place, a land of date palm trees,
between two mountains, the two stony tracts.' So, some
people migrated to Madina, and most of those people who had
previously migrated to the land of Ethiopia, returned to
Madina. Abu Bakr also prepared to leave for Madina, but
Allah's Messenger said to him: 'Wait for awhile, because I
hope that I will be allowed to migrate also.' Abu Bakr
replied: 'Do you indeed expect this? Let my father be
sacrificed for you!' The Prophet said: 'Yes.' So Abu Bakr
did not migrate for the sake of Allah's Messenger in order
to accompany him. He fed two she camels he possessed with
the leaves of As-Samur tree that fell on being struck by a
stick for four months.
"One day, while we were sitting in Abu Bakr's house at noon,
someone said to Abu Bakr: 'This is Allah's Messenger with
his head covered coming at a time at which he never used to
visit us before.' Abu Bakr said: 'May my parents be
sacrificed for him. By Allah he has not come at this hour
except for a great necessity.' So Allah's Messenger came and
asked permission to enter, and he was allowed to enter. When
he entered, he said to Abu Bakr: "Tell everyone who is
present with you to go away.' Abu Bakr replied: 'There are
none but your family, May my father be sacrificed for you, O
Allah's Messenger!' The Prophet said: 'I have been given
permission to migrate.' Abu Bakr said: 'Shall I accompany
you? May my father be sacrificed for you, O Allah's
Messenger!' Allah's Messenger said: 'Yes.' Abu Bakr said, 'O
Allah's Messenger! May my father be sacrificed for you, take
one of these two she-camels of mine.' Allah's Messenger
replied: 'I will accept it with payment.' So we prepared the
baggage quickly and put some journey food in a leather bag
for them. Asma, Abu Bakr's daughter, cut a piece from her
waist belt and tied the mouth of the leather bag with it,
and for that reason she was named 'Dhat-un-Nitaqain' (the
owner of two belts).
"Then Allah's Messenger and Abu Bakr reached a cave on the
mountain of Thaur and stayed there for three nights.
Abdullah Ibn Abi Bakr who was an intelligent and sagacious
youth, used to stay with them overnight. He used to leave
them before daybreak so that in the morning he would be with
Quraish as if he had spent the night in Makka. He would keep
in mind any plot made against them and when it became dark
he would go and inform them of it. 'Amir Ibn Fuhaira, the
freed slave of Abu Bakr, used to bring the milch sheep (of
his master, Abu Bakr) to them a little while after nightfall
in order to rest the sheep there. So they always had fresh
milk at night, the milk of their sheep, and the milk which
they warmed by throwing heated stones in it. 'Amir Ibn
Fuhaira would then call the herd away when it was still dark
(before daybreak). He did the same in each of those three
nights. Allah's Messenger and Abu Bakr had
hired a man from the tribe of Bani Ad-Dail from the family
of Bani Abd Ibn Adi as an expert guide, and he was in
alliance with the family of Al-As Ibn Wail As-Sahmi and he
was in the religion of the infidels of Quraish. The Prophet
and Abu Bakr trusted him and gave him their two she-camels
and took his promise to bring their two she-camels to the
cave of the mountain of Thaur in the morning after three
nights later. And when they set out, Amir Ibn Futhaira and
the guide went along with them and the guide led them, along
the seashore." (Sahih Al-Bukhari).
The nephew of Suraqa Ibn Ju'sham said that his father
informed him that he heard Suraqa Ibn Jusham saying: "The
messengers of the pagans of Quraish came to us declaring
that they had assigned for the persons who would kill or
arrest Allah's Messenger and Abu Bakr, a reward equal to
their bloodmoney. While I was sitting in one of the
gatherings of my tribe, Bani Mudlij, a man from them came to
us and stood up while we were sitting and said: 'O Suraqa!
No , I have just seen some people far away on the seashore,
and I think they are Muhammad and his companions.' I, too,
realized that it must have been they. But I said: 'No, it is
not they, but you have seen so-and-so and so-and-so, whom we
saw set out.' I stayed in the gathering for a while and then
got up and left for my home, and ordered my slave-girl to
get my horse, which was behind a hillock, and keep it ready
for me.
"Then I took my spear and left by the back door of my house
dragging the lower end of the spear on the ground and
keeping it low. Then I reached my horse, mounted it and made
it gallop. When I approached them (Muhammad and Abu Bakr),
my horse stumbled and I fell down from it. Then I stood up,
gold hold of my quiver and took out the divining arrows and
drew lots as to whether I should harm them or not, and the
lot which I disliked came out. But I remounted my horse and
let it gallop, giving no importance to the
divining arrows. When I heard the recitation of the Qur'an
by Allah's Messenger who did not look hither and thither
while Abu Bakr was doing it often, suddenly the forelegs of
my horse sank into the ground up to the knees, and I fell
down from it. Then I rebuked it, and it got up but could
hardly take out its forelegs from the ground, and when it
stood up straight again, its forelegs caused dust to rise up
in the sky like smoke. Then again I drew lots with the
divining arrows, and the lot which I disliked came out. So I
called upon them to feel secure. They stopped, and I
remounted my horse and went to them. When I saw how I had
been hampered from harming them, it came to my mind that the
cause of Allah's Messenger (Islam) would become victorious.
So I said to them: 'Your people have assigned a reward equal
to bloodmoney for your head.' Then I told them all the plans
the people of Makka had made concerning them. Then I offered
them some journey food and goods, but they refused to take
anything and did not ask for anything, but the Prophet said:
'Do not tell others about us.' Then I requested him to write
for me a statement of security and peace. He ordered 'Amir
Ibn Fuhaira, who wrote it for me on a parchment, and then
Allah's Messenger proceeded on his way." (Sahih Al-Bukhari)
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Holy Prophet travels to Madina (Hijra)
"Narrated 'Urwa Ibn Az-Zubair: "Allah's Messenger met Az
Zubair in a caravan of Muslim merchants who were returning
from Sham. Az -Zubair provided Allah's Messenger and Abu
Bakr with white clothes to wear. When the Muslims of Madina
heard the new of the departure of Allah's Messenger from
Makka (towards Madina), they started going to the Harra
every morning. They would wait for him till the heat of the
noon forced them to return. One day, after waiting for a
long while, they returned home, and when they went into
their houses, a Jew climbed up to the roof of one of the
forts of his people to look for something, and he saw
Allah's Messenger and his companions, dressed in white
clothes, emerging out of the desert mirage.
The Jew could not help shouting at the top of his voice: 'O
you Arabs! Here is your great man whom you have been waiting
for!' So all the Muslims rushed to their arms and received
Allah's Messenger on the summit of Harra. The Prophet turned
with them to the right and alighted at the quarters of Bani
Amr Ibn Auf, and this was on Monday in the month of Rabi ul
Awal. Abu Bakr stood up, receiving the people, while Allah's
Messenger sat down and kept silent. Some of the Ansar who
came and had not seen Allah's Messenger before began
greeting Abu Bakr, but when the sunshine fell on Allah's
Messenger and Abu Bakr came forward and shaded him with his
sheet, only then the people came to know Allah's Messenger.
Allah's Messenger stayed with Bani Amr Ibn Auf for ten
nights and established the mosque (Mosque of Quba) which was
founded on piety. Allah's Messenger prayed in it and then
mounted his she-camel and proceeded on, accompanied by the
people till his she-camel knelt down at the place of the
Mosque of Allah's Messenger at Madina. Some Muslims used to
pray there in those days, and that place was a yard for
drying dates belonging to Suhail and Sahl, the orphan boys
who were under the guardianship of Asad In Zurara. When his
she-camel knelt down, Allah's Messenger said: 'This place,
Allah willing, will be our abiding place.' Allah's Messenger
then called the two boys and told them to suggest a price
for that yard so that he might take it as a mosque. The two
boys said: 'No, but we will give it as a gift, O Allah's
Messenger!' Allah's Messenger then built a mosque there. The
Prophet himself started carrying unburned bricks for its
building and while doing so, he was saying: 'This load is
better than the load of Khaibar, for it
is more pious in the Sight of Allah and purer and better
rewardable.' He was also saying: 'O Allah! The actual reward
is the reward in the Hereafter, so bestow Your Mercy on the
Ansar and the Emigrants.' Thus the Prophet recited (by way
of proverb) the poem of some Muslim poet whose name is
unknown to me." (Ibn Shibab said, 'In the hadiths, it does
not occur that Allah's Messenger recited a complete poetic
verse other than this one.') (Sahih Al-Bukhari)
Hijra - Islamic Calendar marks this date
Thus was accomplished the hijra, or the flight of Muhammad
as called in European annals, from which the Islamic "Hijri"
calendar dates.
Note: The Hijri Calendar was established after that date,
638 C.E. (Christian Era)and the date of Hijra was chosen as
a suitable, non-pompous reference point for the beginning of
the calendar.
Yathrib renamed Al-Madina, Al-Munawara - "The Illuminated
City"
When the Prophet Muhammad and his companions settled at
Yathrib, this city changed its name, and henceforth was
called, Al-Madina, Al-Munawara, the Illuminated City, or
more shortly, Madina, the City. It is situated about
eleven-day's journey to the north of Makka. At that time it
was ruled by two Kahtanite tribes, Aws and Khazraj. These
two tribes, however, were constantly quarreling among
themselves. It was only about that time when the Prophet
announced his mission at Makka that these tribes, after long
years
of continuous warfare, entered on a period of comparative
peace. When the Prophet settled at Madina, the tribes of Aws
and Khazraj forgot entirely their old feuds and were united
together in the bond of Islam. Their old divisions were soon
effaced and the Ansar", the Helpers of the Prophet, became
the common designation of all Medinites who had helped the
Prophet in his cause. Those who emigrated with him from
Makka received the title of "Muhajereen" or the Emigrants.
The Prophet, in order to unite both classes in closer bonds,
established between them a brotherhood, which linked them
together as children of the same parents, with the Prophet
as their guardian.
Allah's Apostle Settles in Madina
The first step the Prophet took, after his settlement at
Madina, was to built a mosque for the worship of Allah
according to principles of Islam. Also, houses for the
accommodation of the emigrants were soon erected.
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Muhammad's Charter - Jews and Muslims unite to defend
against enemies
Madina and its suburb were at this time inhabited by three
distinct parties, the Emigrants, the Helpers, and the Jews.
In order to weld them together into an orderly federation,
the Prophet granted a charter to the people, clearly
defining their rights and obligations. This charter
represented the framework of the first commonwealth
organized by the Prophet. It started thus:
"In the name of he Most Merciful and Compassionate Lord,
this charter is given by Muhammad, the Messenger of Allah to
all believers, whether of Quraish or Madina, and all
individuals of whatever origin who have made common cause
with them, who shall all constitute one nation."
The following are some extracts from the charter:
"The state of peace and war shall be common to all Muslims;
no one among them shall have the right of concluding peace
with, or declaring war against, the enemies of his
co-religionists. The Jews who attach themselves to our
commonwealth shall be protected from all insults and
vexations; they shall have an equal right with our people to
our assistance and good offices. The Jews of the various
branches and all others doiciled in Madina shall form with
the Muslims one composite nation; they shall practice their
religion as freely as the Muslims. The allies of the Jews
shall enjoy the same security and freedom. The guilty shall
be pursued and punished. The Jews shall join the Muslims in
defending Madina all enemies.
The interior of Madina shall be a sacred place for all who
accept this charter. All true Muslims shall hold in
abhorrence every man guilty of crime, injustice or disorder;
no one shall uphold the culpable, though he be his nearest
kin."
After dealing with the interior management of the State, the
charter concluded as follows:
"All future disputes arising among those who accept this
charter shall be referred, under Allah to the Prophet."
Thus this charter put an end to the state of anarchy that
prevailed among the Arabs. It constituted the Prophet
Muhammad as chief magistrate of the nation.
Charter faces Mutiny (Inside enemies) - The Hypocrites
and Unsatisfied Jews
The party of the Ansars, or Helpers, included some lukewarm
converts who retained an ill-concealed predilection for
idolatry. These were headed by Abdullah Ibn Ubai, a man with
some claims to distinction. They ostensibly joined Islam,
but in secret were disaffected. They often were a source of
considerable danger to the newborn commonwealth and required
unceasing watchfulness on the part of the Prophet. Towards
them he always showed the greatest patience and forbearance,
hoping in the end to win them
over to the faith, which expectations were fully justified
by the result. While the death of Abdullah Ibn Ubai, his
party which were known as the party of the "Munafiqeen" (the
Hypocrites) disappeared.
The Jews who constituted the third party of the Medinites
were, however, the most serious element of danger. No
kindness or generous treatment on the part of the Prophet
would seem to satisfy them. They soon broke off and ranged
themselves with the enemies of the new faith. They did not
hesitate to declare openly that they preferred idolatry,
with its attendant evils, to the faith of Islam. Thus, the
Prophet had to keep an eye on his enemies outside Madina, on
the one hand, and those within the city on the other.
The Makkans who had sworn Muhammad's death were well
acquainted, thanks to the party of the Hypocrites and of the
Jews at Madina, with the real forces of the Muslims. They
also knew that the Jews had accepted Muhammad's alliance
only from motives of temporary expedience and that they
would break away from him to join the idolaters as soon as
the latter showed themselves in the vicinity of Madina. The
safety of the state required the proscription of the
traitors who were secretly giving information to the common
enemy. About six men were executed for high treason of this
nature.
Madina under Sabotage style attacks on Food, Cattle
etc...
Towards the second year of the hijrah, the idolaters of
Makka began a series of hostile acts against the Muslims of
Madina. They sent men in parties to commit depredations on
the fruit trees of the Muslims of Madina and to carry away
their flocks. Now came the moment of severest trial to
Islam. It became the duty of the Prophet to take serious
measures to guard against any plot rising from within or a
sudden attack from without.
Battle of Badr - Makkan Troop formations approaching
Madina
Allah's Prophet put Madina in a state of military
discipline. He had to send frequent reconnoitering parties
to guard against any sudden onslaught. No sooner did the
Prophet organize hi state than a large well-equipped army of
the Makkans was afield. A force constituting of one thousand
men marched under Abu Jahl, a great enemy of Islam, towards
Madina to attack the city. The Muslims received timely
notice of their enemies' intention. A body of three hundred
adherents, of whom two thirds were citizens of Madina, was
gathered to forestall the idolaters by occupying the valley
of Badr, situated near the sea between Makka and Madina.
When the Prophet saw the army of the infidels approaching
the valley, he prayed that the little band of Muslims might
not be destroyed.
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Victory - Battle Badr is Won
The army of the Makkans advanced into the open space which
separated the Muslims from the idolaters. According to Arab
usage, the battle was began by simple combats. The
engagement that became general. The result of the battle was
that the Makkans were driven back with great loss, despite
the fact that they out-numbered the Muslims. Several of
their chiefs were slain, including Abu Jahl.
Allah's Apostle sets rules for treatment of POWs
A large number of idolaters remained prisoners in the hands
of the Muslims. They were, contrary to all usage and
traditions of the Arabs, treated with the greatest humanity.
The Prophet gave strict orders that sympathy should be shown
to them in their misfortune and that they should be treated
with kindness. These instructions were faithfully obeyed by
the Muslims to whose care the prisoners were confided.
Dealing with this event, Sir William Muir, in his book Life
of Muhammad, quotes one of the prisoners saying: "Blessing
be on the men of Madina; they made us ride, while they
themselves walked; they gave us wheaten bread to eat, when
there was little of it, contenting themselves with dates."
Almighty Allah said:
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Al-Quran, Chapter 3
Al'i-Imran, Verse 123-127 |
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|
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In
the Name of Allah, The Benevolent, The Merciful |
Allah
had helped you at Badr, when ye were a contemptible little force;
then fear Allah; thus May ye show your gratitude.
Remember thou saidst to the Faithful: "Is it not enough for you that
Allah should help you with three thousand angels (Specially) sent
down?
"Yea, - if ye remain firm, and act aright, even if the enemy should
rush here on you in hot haste, your Lord would help you with five
thousand angels Making a terrific onslaught.
Allah made it but a message of hope for you, and an assurance to
your hearts: (in any case) there is no help except from Allah. The
Exalted, the Wise:
That He might cut off a fringe of the Unbelievers or expose them to
infamy, and they should then be turned back, frustrated of their
purpose. |
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The remarkable
circumstances, which led to the victory of Badr, and
results, which followed from it, made a deep impression on
the minds of the Muslims; the angels of the heaven had
battled on their side against their enemies. The division of
the spoils created some dissension between the Muslim
warriors. For the moment, the Prophet divided it equally
among all. Subsequently, a Qur'an revelation laid down a
rule for future division of the spoils. According to this
rule, a fifth was reserved for the public treasury for the
support of the poor and indigent, while the distribution of
the remaining four fifths was left to the discretion of the
Chief of the State.
Makkans Avenge Loss in Badr - Battle of Uhud
The next battle between the Quraish and the Muslims was the
battle of Uhud, a hill about four miles to the north of
Madina. The idolaters, in order to avenge their loss at Badr,
made tremendous preparations for a new attack upon the
Muslims. They collected an army of three thousand strong
men, of whom seven hundred were armed with coats of mail,
and two hundred horses. These forces advanced under the
conduct of Abu Sufyan and encamped at a village six miles
from Madina, where they gave themselves up to spoiling the
fields and flocks of the Medinites.
The Prophet being much inferior to his enemies in number, at
first determined to keep himself within the town and to
receive them there; but afterwards, the advice of some of
his companions prevailing he marched out against them at the
head of one thousand men, of whom one hundred were armed
with coats of mail; but he had no more than one horse,
besides his own, in his whole army. With these forces he
halted at Mount Uhud. He was soon abandoned by Abdullah Ibn
Ubai, the leader of the Hypocrites, with three hundred of
his followers. Thus, the small force of the Prophet was
reduced to seven hundred.
At Mount Uhud the Muslim troops passed the night, and in the
morning, after offering their prayers, they advanced into
the plain. The Prophet contrived to have the hill at his
back, and, the better to secure his men from being
surrounded, he placed fifty archers on the height in the
rear, behind the troops, and gave them strict orders not to
leave their posts whatever might happen. When they came to
engage, the Prophet had superiority at first. But afterward,
his archers left their position for the sake of plunder,
thus allowing the enemy to attack the Muslims in the fear
and surround them. The Prophet lost the day and very nearly
lost his life. He was struck down by a shower of stones and
wounded in the face by two arrows, and one of his front
teeth was broken. Of the Muslims, seventy men were killed,
among whom was the Prophet's uncle Hamza. Of the infidels,
twenty-two men were lost.
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Exhausted Quraish leave Madina victorious
The Quraish were too exhausted to follow up their advantage,
either by attacking Madina or by driving the Muslims from
the heights of Uhud. They retreated from the Medinite
territories after barbarously mutilating the corpses of
their dead enemies.
Almighty Allah said:
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Al-Quran, Chapter 3
Al'i-Imran, Verse 139-143 |
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|
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In
the Name of Allah, The Benevolent, The Merciful |
So
lose not heart, nor fall into despair: For ye must gain mastery if
ye are true in Faith.
If a wound hath touched you, be sure a similar wound hath touched
the others. Such days (of varying fortunes) We give to men and men
by turns: that Allah may know those that believe, and that He may
take to Himself from your ranks Martyr-witnesses (to Truth). And
Allah loveth not those that do wrong.
Allah's object also is to purge those that are true in Faith and to
deprive of blessing Those that resist Faith.
Did ye think that ye would enter Heaven without Allah testing those
of you who fought hard (In His Cause) and remained steadfast?
Ye did indeed wish for death before ye met him: Now ye have seen him
with your own eyes, (And ye flinch!) |
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Allah the
Exalted also said:
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Al-Quran, Chapter 3
Al'i-Imran, Verse 151-154 |
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|
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In
the Name of Allah, The Benevolent, The Merciful |
Soon
shall We cast terror into the hearts of the Unbelievers, for that
they joined companions with Allah, for which He had sent no
authority: their abode will be the Fire: And evil is the home of the
wrong-doers!
Allah did indeed fulfill His promise to you when ye with His
permission Were about to annihilate your enemy,-until ye flinched
and fell to disputing about the order, and disobeyed it after He
brought you in sight (of the booty) which ye covet. Among you are
some that hanker after this world and some that desire the
Hereafter. Then did He divert you from your foes in order to test
you but He forgave you: For Allah is full of grace to those who
believe.
Behold! ye were climbing up the high ground, without even casting a
side glance at any one, and the Messenger in your rear was calling
you back. There did Allah give you one distress after another by way
of requital, to teach you not to grieve for (the booty) that had
escaped you and for (the ill) that had befallen you. For Allah is
well aware of all that ye do.
After (the excitement) of the distress, He sent down calm on a band
of you overcome with slumber, while another band was stirred to
anxiety by their own feelings, Moved by wrong suspicions of
Allah-suspicions due to ignorance. They said: "What affair is this
of ours?" Say thou: "Indeed, this affair is wholly Allah's." They
hide in their minds what they dare not reveal to thee. They say (to
themselves): "If we had had anything to do with this affair, We
should not have been in the slaughter here." Say: "Even if you had
remained in your homes, those for whom death was decreed would
certainly have gone forth to the place of their death"; but (all
this was) that Allah might test what is in your breasts and purge
what is in your hearts. For Allah knoweth well the secrets of your
hearts. |
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Narrated Al-Baraa'
Ibn Azib: "The Prophet appointed Abdullah Ibn Jubair as the
commander of the infantry men (archers) who were fifty on
the day (of the battle) of Uhud. He instructed them: 'Stick
to your place, and don't leave it even if you see birds
snatching us, till I send for you; and if you see that we
have defeated the infidels and made them flee, even then you
should not leave your place till I send for you.' Then the
infidels were defeated. By Allah I saw the women fleeing
lifting up their clothes revealing their leg bangles and
their legs. So, the companions of Abdullah Ibn Jubair said:
"The booty! O people, the booty! Your companions have become
victorious, what are you waiting for now?" Abdullah Ibn
Jubair said: "Have you forgotten what Allah's Messenger said
to you?" They replied: "By Allah! We will go to the people
(the enemy) and collect our share from the war booty." But
when they went to them, they were forced to turn back
defeated. At that time Allah's Messenger to their rear was
calling them back. Only twelve men remained with the
Prophet, and the infidels martyred seventy men from us.
"The Prophet and his companions caused the Pagans to lose
one hundred and forty men, seventy of whom were captured and
seventy were killed. Then Abu Sufyan asked three times: 'Is
Muhammad present among these people?' The Prophet ordered
his companions not to answer him. Then he asked three times:
'Is Ibn Abu Quhafa present amongst these people?' He asked
again three times: 'Is Ibn Al Khattab present among these
people?' He then returned to his companions and said: 'As
for these (men), they have been killed.' 'Umar could not
control himself and said to Abu Sufyan: ' You told a lie, by
Allah! O enemy of Allah! All those you have mentioned are
alive, and the thing which will make you unhappy is still
there.' Abu Sufyan said: 'Our victory today compensates for
yours in the Battle of Badr, and in war (the victory) is
always undecided and is shared in turns by the belligerents.
You will find some of your killed men mutilated, but I did
not urge my men to do so, yet I do not feel sorry for their
deed.' After that he started reciting cheerfully: 'O Hubal,
be superior!' On that the Prophet said (to his companions):
'Why don't you answer hiback?' They said: 'O Allah's
Messenger! What shall we say?' He said: 'Say, Allah is
Higher and more Sublime.' Then Abu Sufyan said: 'We have the
idol of Al-Uzza, and you have no 'Uzza.' The Prophet said
(to his companions): 'Why don't you answer him back?' They
asked: 'O Allah's Messenger! What shall we say?' He said:
'Say Allah is our Helper and you have no helper.'" (Sahih Al
Bukhari)
The moral effect of this disastrous battle was such as to
encourage some neighboring nomad tribes to make forays upon
the Medinte territories, but most of thes |