The
Life of the Prophet
Muhammad
(Peace
and blessings of Allah be upon him)
بِ سۡ بِ ي بِ ٱ ٱ رَّ ل سۡ
مَ بِ ٱ رَّ ل بِ بِ ي
In the name of Allah,
the most Beneficent, the most Merciful
All Praise is due
to Allah, the Lord of the Worlds, the [One Who] Sustains the Heavens and
Earths,
Director of all
that is created, who sent the Messengers (may the peace and blessings of Allah
be
upon all of them)
to rational beings, to guide them and explain the religious laws to them with
clear
proofs and
undeniable arguments. I praise Him for all of His bounties. I ask Him to
increase His
Grace and
Generosity. I bear witness that there is none worthy of worship except Allah
alone, who
has no partner, the
One, Who Subdues, the Generous, the Forgiving. I bear witness that our leader
Muhammad is His
servant and Messenger, His beloved and dear one, the best of all creation. He
was honoured with the Glorious Qur’an that has been an enduring
miracle throughout the years.
He was also sent
with his guiding Sunnah that shows the way for those who seek guidance. Our
leader Muhammad has
been particularised with the characteristic of eloquent and pithy speech,
and simplicity and
ease in the religion. May the peace and blessings of Allah be upon him, the
other Prophets and
Messengers, all of their families and the rest of the righteous.
Copyright reserved @MUSLIM YOUTH FORUM 2015
How It All Began
Nearly
four thousand years ago, in the Sumerian town of Ur in the valley
of the river
Euphrates, lived a young man named Abraham. The people of
Ur had once
worshipped Allah but as time passed they forgot the true
religion and started
praying to idols, statues made of wood or clay and
sometimes even of
precious stones. Even as a small child Abraham could
not understand how
his people, and especially his father, could make
these images with
their own hands, call them gods, and then worship
them. He had always
refused to join his people when they paid respect to
these statues.
Instead he would leave the town and sit alone, thinking
about the heavens and
the world about him. He was sure his people were
doing wrong and so
alone he searched for the right way. One clear night
as he sat staring at
the sky he saw a beautiful shining star, so beautiful
that he cried out:
„This must be Allah!' He looked at it in awe for some
time, until suddenly
it began to fade and then it disappeared. He turned
away in
disappointment saying: I love not things that set. (Qur'an 6.77)
On another night
Abraham was again looking at the sky and he saw
the rising moon, so
big and bright that he felt he could almost touch it. He
thought to himself:
This is my Lord. (Qur'an 6.78) But it was not long
before the moon set
as well. Then he said, Unless my Lord guide me, I
surely shall become
one of the folk who are astray. (Qur'an 6.78)
Abraham then saw the
beauty and splendor of the sunrise and decided
that the sun must be
the biggest and most powerful thing in the universe.
But for the third
time he was wrong, for the sun set at the end of the day.
It was then that he
realized that Allah is the Most Powerful, the Creator of
the stars, the moon,
the sun, the earth and of all living things. Suddenly he
felt himself totally
at peace, because he knew that he had found the Truth.
When he said unto his
father and his folk: What do you worship? They
said: We worship
idols, and are ever devoted to them. He said: Do they
hear you when you
cry? Or do they benefit or harm you? They said: Nay,
but we found our
fathers acting in this manner.
He said: See now that
which you worship, You and your forefathers!
Lo! they are (all) an
enemy to me, except the Lord of the Worlds. Who
created me, and He
guides me, And Who feeds me and waters me. And
when I sicken, then
He heals me. And Who causes me to die, then gives
me lift (again) And
Who, I ardently hope, will forgive me my sin on the
Day of judgement.
(Qur'an 26.70-82)
The Life of the
Prophet Muhammad (Peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) 4
One day, while all
the townspeople were out, Abraham angrily
smashed all the idols
with his right hand except for one which was very
large. When the
people returned they were furious.
They remembered the
things Abraham had said about the idols. They
had him brought forth
before everyone and demanded, 'Is it you who did
this to our gods, 0
Abraham?' Abraham replied, But this their chief did it.
Ask them, if they are
able to speak.' The people exclaimed, 'You know
they do not speak.'
'Do you worship what you yourselves have carved
when Allah created
you and what you make?' Abraham continued, 'Do
you worship instead
of Allah that which cannot profit you at all, nor harm
you?' (Qur'an
37.95-6)(Qur'an 21.66)
Finally, Abraham
warned them, Serve Allah, and keep your duty unto
Him; that is better
for you if you did but know. You serve instead of
Allah only idols, and
you only invent a lie. Lo! those whom you serve
instead of Allah own
no provision for you. So seek your provision from
Allah, and serve Him,
and give thanks unto Him, (for) unto Him you will
be brought
back.(Qur'an 29. 16-17)
The people of Ur
decided to give Abraham the worst punishment they
could find: he was to
be burnt to death. On the chosen day all the people
gathered in the
centre of the city and even the King of Ur was there.
Abraham was then
placed inside a special building filled with wood. The
wood was lit. Soon
the fire became so strong that the people were pushed
back by the flames.
But Allah said: “O fire, be coolness and peace for
Abraham”. (Qur'an
21.69)
The people waited
until the fire had completely died down, and it was
then that they saw Abraham
still sitting there as though nothing had
happened! At that
moment they were utterly confused. They were not,
however, moved by the
miracle that had just happened before their very
eyes.
Still Abraham tried
to persuade his own dear father, who was named
Azar, not to worship
powerless, un-seeing, un-hearing statues. Abraham
explained that
special knowledge had come to him and implored his
father, 'So follow me
and I will lead you on the right path. 0 my father!
Don't serve the
Devil.' But Azar would not listen. He threatened his son
with stoning if he
continued to reject the gods of Ur. He ordered Abraham
to leave the city
with these words: 'Depart from me a long while.'
Abraham said, 'Peace
be upon you! I shall ask my Lord's forgiveness for
you. Surely He was
ever gracious to me.‟ (Qur'an 19.43-7)
The Life of the
Prophet Muhammad (Peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) 5
Imagine how terrible
it must have been for him to leave his home, his
family and all that
he knew, and set out across the wilderness into the
unknown. But at the
same time, how could he have remained among
people who did not
believe in Allah and who worshipped statues?
Abraham always had a
sense that Allah cared for him and he felt Allah
near him as he
traveled. At last, after a long hard journey, he arrived at a
place by the
Mediterranean Sea, not far from Egypt. There he married a
noble woman by the
name of Sarah and settled in the land of Palestine.
Many years passed but
Abraham and his wife were not blessed with any
children. In the hope
that there would be a child, and in keeping with
tradition, Sarah
suggested that Abraham should marry Hagar, her
Egyptian handmaid.
Soon after this took place, Hagar had a little boy
named Ishmael. Some
time later Allah promised Abraham another son,
but this time the
mother of the child would be his first wife, Sarah. This
second son would be
called Isaac. Allah also told Abraham that from his
two sons-Ishmael and
Isaac-two nations and three religions would be
founded and because
of this he must take Hagar and Ishmael away from
Palestine to a new
land. These events were an important part of Allah's
plan, for the
descendants of Ishmael would form a nation from which
would come a great
Prophet, who would guide the people in the way of
Allah. This was to be
Muhammad (pbuh), the Messenger of Allah (pbuh).
From the descendants
of Sarah's child, Isaac, would come Moses and
Jesus.
So it was that
Abraham, Hagar, and Ishmael left Palestine. They
traveled for many
days until finally they reached the arid valley of Bacca
later to be called
Mecca), which was on one of the great caravan routes.
There was no water in
the valley and although Hagar and Ishmael only
had a small supply of
water left, Abraham left them there knowing Allah
would take care of
them. Soon all the water was gone. The child began to
grow weak from
thirst. There were two hills nearby, one called Safa and
the other Marwah.
Hagar went up one hill and looked into the distance to
see if she could find
any water, but found none. So she went to the other
hill and did the
same. She did this seven times. Then sadly she returned to
her son, and to her
great surprise and joy she found a spring of water
bubbling out of the
earth near him. This spring, near which the mother
and child settled,
was later called Zamzam. The area around it became a
place of rest for the
caravans travelling across the desert and in time grew
into the famous
trading city of Mecca.
From time to time
Abraham traveled from Palestine to visit his family
and he saw Ishmael
grow into a strong young man. It was during one of
these visits that
Allah commanded them to rebuild the Ka'bah-the very
first place where
people had worshipped Allah. They were told exactly
where and how to
build it. It was to be erected by the well of Zamzam
and built in the
shape of a cube. In its eastern corner was to be placed a
black stone that had
fallen to earth from heaven. An angel brought the
stone to them from
the nearby hill of Abu Qubays. Abraham and Ishmael
worked hard to
rebuild the Ka'bah and as they did so they prayed to Allah
to send a Prophet
from among their descendants. And when Abraham and
Ishmael were raising
the foundations of the House, (Abraham prayed):
'Our Lord! Receive
this from us; Thou, only Thou, art the All-hearing, the
All-knowing; Our
Lord! And make us submissive unto Thee and of our
seed a nation
submissive unto Thee, and show us our ways of worship,
and turn toward us.
Lo! Thou, only Thou, art the Relenting, the Merciful.
Our Lord! And raise
up in their midst a messenger from among them who
shall recite unto
them Thy revelations, and shall instruct them in the
Scripture and in
wisdom and shall make them grow. Lo! Thou, only
Thou, art the Mighty,
Wise. (Qur'an 2.127-9) When the Ka'bah was
completed, Allah
commanded Abraham to call mankind to pilgrimage to
His Holy House.
Abraham wondered how anyone could hear his call.
Allah said, 'You call
and I will bring them.' This was how the pilgrimage
to the Ka'bah in
Mecca was established and when Muslims make the
pilgrimage today they
continue to answer the age-old call of Abraham.
The Children of Ishmael
Over
the years Ishmael's children themselves had children. His
descendants increased
and formed tribes which spread out all over
Arabia. One of these
tribes was called Quraysh. Its people never moved
away from Mecca and
always lived near the Ka'bah. One of the duties of
the leader of Quraysh
was to look after those who came on pilgrimage to
the Ka'bah. The,
pilgrims would come from all over Arabia and it was a
great honor to
provide them with food and water.
As time passed,
however, the Arabs stopped worshipping Allah
directly and started
bringing idols back with them from the different
countries they
visited. These idols were placed at the Ka'bah, which was
no longer regarded as
the Sanctuary of Allah, as Abraham had intended it.
It was, however,
still respected by the Arabs. Around this time the well of
Zamzam disappeared
beneath the sand. Also at this time, Qusayy, one of
the leaders of
Quraysh, became ruler over Mecca. He held the keys of the
temple and had the
right to give water to the pilgrims, to feed them, to
take charge of
meetings, and to hand out war banners before battle. It was
also in his house
that Quraysh settled their affairs. After Qusayy's death,
his son 'Abdu Manaf,
who had become famous during his father's
lifetime, took over
the leadership of Quraysh. After him came his son
Hashim. It is said
that Hashim was the first to begin the two great caravan
journeys of Quraysh,
one in the summer to Syria and the north, and one in
the winter to Yemen
and the south. As a result, Mecca grew rich and
became a large and
important centre of trade.
One summer Hashim
went north to buy goods to sell in Yemen. On
his way he stopped in
Yathrib to trade in the market and there he saw a
beautiful woman. She
was Salma', the daughter of 'Amr ibn Zeid, who
was from a much
respected family. Hashim proposed marriage to her and
was accepted because
he was an honorable and distinguished man.
In time, Salma' gave
birth to a beautiful son and as some of his hair
was white they called
him Shaybah, which in Arabic means grey-haired'.
Mother and son stayed
in the cooler, healthier climate of Yathrib,
while Hashim returned
to Mecca, but he would visit them each time he
took his caravan to
the north. During one of these journeys, however,
Hashim became ill and
died. Shaybah, a handsome, intelligent boy, grew
up in his uncle's
house in Yathrib. He was proud of being the son of
Hashim ibn 'Abdi
Manaf, the head of Quraysh, guardian of the Ka'bah
and protector of the
pilgrims, even though he had not known his father,
who had died while
Shaybah was very young.
At Hashim's death his
brother al-Muttalib took over his duties and
responsibilities. He
traveled to Yathrib to see his nephew, Shaybah, and
decided that as the
boy would one day inherit his father's place, the time
had come for him to
live in Mecca. It was hard for Salma', Shaybah's
mother, to let her
son go with his uncle but she finally realized that it was
for the best.
Al-Muttalib returned to Mecca, entering the city at noon on
his camel with
Shaybah behind him. When the people of Mecca saw the
boy they thought he
was a slave and, pointing at him, called out „Abd al-
Muttalib', 'Abd'
being the Arabic for 'slave'.
Al-Muttalib told them
that Shaybah was not a slave but his nephew
who had come to live
with them. From that day on, however, Shaybah
was always
affectionately called Abd al-Muttalib. On the death of al-
Muttalib, who died in
Yemen where he had gone to trade, 'Abd al-
Muttalib took his
place. He became the most respected member of his
family, loved and
admired by all. He was, however, unlike those Arabs
who had given up the
teachings of Abraham.
The Promise At Zamzam
The
well of Zamzam, which disappeared when the Arabs placed idols at
the Ka'bah, remained
buried under the sand. Thus, for many years the
people of Quraysh had
to fetch their water from far away. One day 'Abd
al-Muttalib was very
tired from doing this and fell asleep next to the
Ka‟bah. He had a
dream in which he was told to dig up Zamzam. When
he woke up he was
puzzled because he did not know what Zamzam was,
the well having
disappeared many years before he was born. The next day
he had the same
dream, but this time he was told where to find the well.
'Abd al-Muttalib had
one son at that time, and together they began to
dig. The work was so
difficult that „Abd al-Muttalib made an oath to
Allah that if one day
he were to have ten sons to help him and stand by
him, in return he
would sacrifice one of them in Allah's honor. After
working for three
days they finally found the well of Zamzam. Pilgrims
have been drinking
from it ever since. The years passed by and 'Abd al-
Muttalib did have ten
sons. They grew into fine, strong men and the time
came for him to keep
his promise to Allah. He told his sons about the
promise and they
agreed that he had to sacrifice one of them To see
which one it would
be, they decided to draw lots, which was the custom
of Quraysh when
deciding important matters. 'Abd al-Muttalib told each
son to get an arrow
and write his own name upon it and then to bring it to
him. This they did,
after which he took them to the Ka'bah where there
was a man whose
special task it was to cast arrows and pick one from
among them. This man
solemnly proceeded to do this. On the arrow he
chose was written the
name of 'Abd Allah, the youngest and favorite son
of 'Abd al-Muttalib.
Even so, the father took his son near the Ka'bah and
prepared to sacrifice
him.
Many of the Quraysh
leaders were present and they became very angry
because 'Abd Allah
was very young and much loved by everyone. They
tried to think of a
way to save his life. Someone suggested that the advice
of a wise old woman
who lived in Yathrib should be sought, and so 'Abd
al-Muttalib took his
son and went to see if she could decide what to do.
Some of the Meccans
went with them and when they got there the woman
asked, 'What is the
price of a man's life?' They told her, 'Ten camels', for
at that time if one
man killed another, his family would have to give ten
camels to the dead man's
family in order to keep the peace among them.
So the woman told
them to go back to the Ka‟bah and draw lots between
'Abd Allah and ten
camels. If the camels were chosen, they were to be
killed and the meat
given to the poor. If 'Abd Allah was picked then ten
more camels were to
be added and the lots drawn again and again until
they finally fell on
the camels.
„Abd al-Muttalib
returned to the Ka‟bah with his son and the people
of Mecca. There they
started to draw lots between „Abd Allah and the
camels, starting with
ten camels. „Abd al-Muttalib prayed to Allah to
spare his son and
everyone waited in silence for the result. The choice fell
on „Abd Allah, so his
father added ten more camels. Again the choice fell
on „Abd Allah, so
they did the same thing again and again, adding ten
camels each time.
Finally they reached one hundred camels, and only
then did the lot fall
on the camels. „Abd Allah was saved and everyone
was very happy. 'Abd
al-Muttalib however, wanted to make sure that this
was the true result
so he repeated the draw three times and each time it
fell on the camels.
He then gave thanks to Allah that He had spared „Abd
Allah's life. The
camels were sacrificed and there was enough food for
the entire city, even
the animals and birds. 'Abd Allah grew up to be a
handsome young man
and his father eventually chose Aminah, the
daughter of Wahb, as
a wife for him. It was a good match for she was the
finest of Quraysh
women and 'Abd Allah the best of the men. He spent
several months with
his wife but then he had to leave her and travel with
one of the caravans
to trade with Syria. On his way back to Mecca from
Syria 'Abd Allah
became ill and had to stop off in Yathrib to recover. The
caravan, however,
continued on its way and arrived back in Mecca
without him. On
hearing of 'Abd Allah's illness, „Abd al-Muttalib sent
another son,
al-Hareth, to bring 'Abd Allah back to Mecca, but he was too
late.
When he arrived in
Yathrib „Abd Allah was dead. Aminah was heartbroken
to lose her husband
and the father of the child she would soon
give birth to. Only
Allah knew that this orphan child would one day be a
great Prophet.
The Elephant Refuses To Move
Abrahah,
who came from Abyssinia-a country in Africa-conquered
Yemen and was made
vice-regent there. Later, he noticed that at a certain
time of the year
large numbers of people would travel from all over
Yemen and the rest of
Arabia to Mecca. He asked the reason for this and
was told that they
were going on pilgrimage to the Ka'bah. Abrahah hated
the idea of Mecca being
more important than his own country, so he
decided to build a
church of colored marble, with doors of gold and
ornaments of silver,
and ordered the people to visit it instead of the
Ka'bah. But no one
obeyed him.
Abrahah became angry
and decided to destroy the Ka1bah. He
prepared a large army
led by an elephant and set off towards Mecca.
When the Meccans
heard that he was coming they became very
frightened. Abrahah's
army was huge and they could not fight it. But how
could they let him
destroy the Holy Ka'bah? They went to ask the advice
of their leader, 'Abd
al-Muttalib. When Abrahah arrived outside Mecca,
'Abd al-Muttalib went
to meet him. Abrahah said, 'What do you want?'
Abrahah had taken Abd
al-Muttalib's camels, which he had found grazing
as he entered Mecca,
so „Abd al-Muttalib replied, 'I want my camels
back.' Abrahah was
very surprised and said, 'I have come to destroy your
Holy Ka‟bah, the holy
place of your fathers, and you ask me about some
camels?' 'Abd
al-Muttalib replied calmly, „The camels belong to me; the
Ka‟bah belongs to
Allah and He will protect it.' Then he left Abrahah and
went back to Quraysh
and ordered them to leave Mecca and wait for their
enemies in the
mountains.
In the morning
Abrahah prepared to enter the town. He put armor on
his elephant and drew
up his troops for battle. He intended to destroy the
Ka'bah and then
return to Yemen. At that moment, however, the elephant
knelt down and
refused to get up, no matter how much the soldiers tried
to get it to move by
beating it.
But when they turned
its face in the direction of Yemen it
immediately got up
and started off. In fact, it did the same in any other
direction, but as
soon as they pointed it towards Mecca it knelt down
again. Suddenly,
flocks of birds appeared from over the sea. Each bird
carried three stones
as small as peas and they dropped them on Abrahah1s
army. The soldiers
suddenly fell ill. Even Abrahah was hit by the stones
and fled in fear with
the rest of his army back to Yemen, where he later
died. On seeing their
enemy flee the Arabs came down from the
mountains to the
Ka‟bah and gave thanks to Allah.
After this, Quraysh
gained great respect and became known as 'the
people of Allah', and
the year in which these events took place, 570A.D,
was named the 'Year of
the Elephant'. In that year Allah had saved the
Ka'bah and he would
soon bring forth a Prophet from among Quraysh. In
the Name of Allah,
the Beneficent, the Merciful: “Hast thou not seen how
thy Lord dealt with
the owners of the Elephant? Did He not bring their
stratagem to naught,
And send against them swarms of flying creatures,
Which pelted them
with stones of baked clay, And made them like green
crops devoured (by
cattle)? (Qur'an 105.1-5)
The Prophet Is Born
One
day, while travelling north, one of the Arab tribes from Mecca met a
hermit in the desert.
Some of the men stopped to speak with him. Hermits
were known to be wise
and the Arabs often asked their advice. The
hermit asked where
they had come from. When they replied that they
were from Mecca, he
told them that Allah would soon send a prophet,
who would come from
their people. They asked the name of this prophet
and the hermit
answered that his name would be Muhammad and that he
would guide them to a
new way of life.
Meanwhile in Mecca,
Aminah, although saddened by the loss of her
husband, felt
especially well and strong as she awaited the birth of her
baby. During this
time she dreamt of many things. On one occasion it was
as if a great light
were shining out of her, and on another she heard a
voice telling her
that she would have a boy and that his name would be
Muhammad. She never
forgot that voice but she told no one about it.
On Monday, the
twelfth day of Rabi al-Awwal in the Year of the
Elephant, Aminah gave
birth to a son. Allah sends man many signs when
one of His chosen
Prophets is born and on that twelfth day of Rabi al-
Awwal in the year 570
A.D, many such signs were seen. Some were seen
by Jewish scholars
who had read in their scriptures of a coming Prophet.
One of these learned
men in Yathrib, for instance, saw a brilliant new star
he had never seen
before as he studied the heavens that night. He called
the people around him
and, pointing the star out to them, told them a
Prophet must have
been born. That same night another Jew was passing
by the meeting place
of the leaders of Quraysh in Mecca. He asked them
if a baby boy had
just been born and told them that if it were true, this
would be the Prophet
of the Arab nation.
Aminah sent news of
the birth to her father-in-law, 'Abd al-Muttalib, who
was sitting near the
Ka'bah at the time. He was very happy and began at
once to think of a
name for the boy. An ordinary name would not do. Six
days came and went
and still he had not decided. But on the seventh day,
as he lay asleep near
the Ka‟bah, 'Abd al-Muttalib dreamt that he should
give the baby the
unusual name of Muhammad, just as Aminah herself
had dreamt. And the
child was called Muhammad (pbuh), which means
'the Praised One'.
When 'Abd al-Muttalib told the leaders of Quraysh
what he had named his
grandson, many of them asked, 'Why did you not
choose the sort of
name that is used by our people?' At once he replied, 'I
want him to be
praised by Allah in the heavens and praised by men on
earth.
A Time With Halimah
Like
many other women in Mecca, Aminah decided to send her son away
from the city for his
early years to the desert where it was more healthy.
Women from the desert
used to come to Mecca to collect the new babies
and they would then
keep them until they developed into strong children,
for which they were
well paid by the parents.
Among the women who
traveled to Mecca to fetch a new baby at the
time Aminah's son was
born, was a Bedouin woman called Halimah.
With her was her
husband and baby son. They had always been very poor
but this year things
were harder than ever because there had been famine.
The donkey that
earned Halimah on the journey was so weak from hunger
that he often
stumbled. Halimah's own baby son cried all the time because
his mother could not
feed him properly. Even their she-camel did not give
them one drop of
milk. Halimah did not know what to do. She thought to
herself, 'How can I
possibly feed another baby when I haven't got enough
milk even for my own
son?'
At last they reached
Mecca. All the other women of the tribe to which
Halimah belonged, the
Bani Sa'd, found a child to take back with them,
but not Halimah. The
only baby left was Muhammad (pbuh). Usually the
father paid the
wet-nurse but Mohammed‟s father was dead. So no one
wanted to take him,
even though he was from one of the noblest families
of Quraysh. Halimah
did not want to take him either, but she did not want
to be the only woman
to go back to her tribe without a baby to bring up.
She asked her husband
whether she should take Muhammad (pbuh) or
not. He advised her
to do so, adding, 'Perhaps Allah will bless us because
of him.' They started
on the return journey and as soon as Halimah began
to feed Muhammad
(pbuh) her milk suddenly increased and she had
enough for him as
well as her baby son. When they were back home,
everything began to
change.
The land became
green, and the date trees, one of their main sources
of food, gave lots of
fruit. Even the sheep and their old she-camel began
to give plenty of
milk.
Halimah and her
husband knew that this good fortune had come
because they had the
new baby, Muhammad (pbuh), whom they had
come to love as if he
were their own son.
When Muhammad (pbuh)
was two years old, Halimah took him back
to his mother. She
pleaded with Aminah, however, to let her keep him for
a little longer, and
to her great joy the mother agreed. During his time
with Halimah's family
in the desert, Muhammad (pbuh) played with her
children and together
they would take the sheep out to graze. At other
times, however,
Halimah would often find him sitting alone. It is said that
on one occasion, two
angels came to Muhammad (pbuh) and washed his
heart with snow. In
this way Allah made his heart pure for He intended
Muhammad (pbuh) to be
greater than any man ever born and to become
the Seal of the
Prophets.
In
the Name of Allah the Beneficent, the Merciful
“Did We not expand
thy breast for thee And eased thee of thy burden
Which weighed down
thy back; And exalted thy fame? So truly with
hardship comes ease,
Truly with hardship comes ease. So when thou art
relieved, still toil
And strive to please thy Lord. (Qur'an 94.1-8)
When Halimah finally
took Muhammad (pbuh) back to Aminah, he
was a healthy, strong
boy. Later he would look back with joy on the time
he had spent with
Halimah, and he always thought of himself as one of
the Bani Sa'd.
The Orphan's Childhood
Muhammad
(pbuh) returned to live with his mother in Mecca when he
was about three years
old. Three years later Aminah decided to take her
son to visit his
uncles in Yathrib. She told her maid, Barakah, to prepare
everything they would
need for the long journey, and then they joined
one of the caravans
going there. They stayed in Yathrib a month and
Muhammad (pbuh)
enjoyed the visit with his cousins. The climate there
was very pleasant and
he learned to swim and to fly a kite. On their way
back to Mecca,
however, Aminah became ill and died. She was buried in
the village at
al-Abwa not far from Yathrib. Muhammad (pbuh) returned
sadly to Mecca with
his mother's maid He was now six years old and had
lost both his father
and mother. He was then adopted by his grandfather,
„Abd al-Muttalib, who
loved him dearly and kept him by his side at all
times. It was the
custom of 'Abd al-Muttalib to sit on a blanket near the
Ka‟bah. There he was
always surrounded by people who had come to
speak to him. No one
was allowed to sit on the blanket with him,
however, except his
grandson Muhammad (pbuh), which shows how
close they were to
each other. Many times 'Abd al-Muttalib was heard to
say: 'This boy will
be very important one day.'
Two years later 'Abd
al-Muttalib became ill and Muhammad (pbuh)
stayed by him
constantly. 'Abd al-Muttalib told his son, Abu Talib, to
adopt Muhammad (pbuh)
after his death, which he did. Abu Talib had
many children of his
own, but Muhammad (pbuh) immediately became
part of his family
and the favorite child. The time came for Quraysh to
prepare a caravan to
go to Syria. Abu Talib was going with them and he
took Muhammad (pbuh)
along. It was Mohammed‟s first journey to the
north. After days of
travel, the caravan arrived at a place near Syria where
the Romans used to
come to trade with the Arabs. Near this marketplace
lived a monk called
Bahira‟. His cell had been used by generations of
monks before him and
contained ancient manuscripts.
Bahira' saw the
caravan in the distance and was amazed to see that
over it was a large
white cloud. It was the only cloud in a clear blue sky
and it appeared to be
shading one of the travelers. The monk was even
more surprised to see
that the cloud seemed to follow the caravan but
disappeared when the
person it was shading sat down under a tree.
Bahira‟ knew from the
scriptures that a prophet was expected to come
after Jesus and it
had been his wish to see this prophet before he died.
Realizing that what
he had just seen was a miracle, he began to think that
his wish might, after
all, come true.
The monk sent an
invitation to the Meccans to come and eat with him.
The Arabs were
surprised because they often passed by and Bahira‟ had
never invited them
before. When the group was all together for the meal,
the monk said, 'Is
this everyone?‟ 'No', someone said, 'a boy was left
watching the camels.'
Bahira‟ insisted that the boy should join them. The
boy was Muhammad
(pbuh). When he arrived Bahira‟ said nothing, but
watched him all
through the meal. He noticed many things about his
appearance which
fitted the description in the old manuscripts. Later on
he took him aside and
asked Muhammad (pbuh) many questions. He soon
found out how he felt
about the idols in the Ka'bah. When Bahira tried to
make him swear by
them, as the Arabs used to do, Muhammad (pbuh)
said, 'There is
nothing in this world that I hate more'. They talked together
about Allah and about
Mohammed‟s life and family. What was said made
Bahira certain that
this was indeed the Prophet who would follow Jesus.
Then the monk went to
Abu Talib and asked him how he was related
to Muhammad (pbuh).
Abu Talib told him that Muhammad (pbuh) was
his son. Bahira
replied that this could not be so because the boy was
destined to grow up
an orphan, and he ordered Abu Talib to watch over
Muhammad (pbuh) with
great care. There are many stories told about
Mohammed‟s youth.
Some tell of how he used to take the family's sheep
to graze and was
always kind to them. While they grazed he would sit
thinking about the
mysteries of nature. Unlike those around him1 he
never worshipped the
idols and never swore by them.
He also wondered why
people were always struggling for power and
money, and this
saddened him and made him feel lonely, but he kept his
feelings to himself.
He was a quiet, thoughtful boy, and rarely played
with other boys of
his age. On one occasion, however, Muhammad
(pbuh) went with some
of the boys to a wedding in Mecca. When he
reached the house he
heard the sounds of music and dancing but just as he
was about to enter he
suddenly felt tired and, sitting down, fell asleep. He
didn't wake up until
late the next morning and thus missed the
celebrations. In this
way Allah prevented him from doing anything
foolish for He was
keeping Muhammad (pbuh) for something much more
important
The Prophet's Marriage
By
the time Muhammad (pbuh) was twenty-five he was famous for his
honesty. He was
respected by everyone, even the elders of Mecca. The
purity of his nature increased
with the years. It seemed he had an inner
knowledge that other
people did not have. He believed in one God-
Creator of the
world-and he worshipped Him with all his heart and with
all his soul.
Muhammad (pbuh) was the finest of his people, the most
kind, truthful and
reliable person in Mecca. He was known among
Quraysh as 'the
trustworthy' (al-Amin) because of the good qualities
Allah had given him.
He spent many quiet hours in a cave in Mount Hira,
not far from Mecca,
thinking about Allah. Among Quraysh was a
respected and wealthy
woman named Khadijah. She was involved in
trade and on hearing
of Mohammed‟s reputation, sent for him and asked
him to take her goods
and trade with them in Syria. Muhammad (pbuh)
agreed and left for
Syria with one of Khadijah's caravans. With him went
her slave, Maysarah,
and they spent a great deal of time talking together.
Maysarah soon came to
admire Muhammad (pbuh). He thought he was
quite different from
all the other men of Quraysh.
Two unusual events
took place during this journey which puzzled
Maysarah very much.
The first happened when they stopped to rest near
the lonely home of a
monk. Muhammad (pbuh) sat under a tree while
Maysarah was busy
with some work. The monk came up to Maysarah
and asked, 'Who is
the man resting under the tree?' 'One of Quraysh, the
people who guard the
Ka‟bah', said Maysarah. 'No one but a Prophet is
sitting beneath this
tree', replied the monk. The second event occurred on
the journey back to
Mecca. It happened at noon, when the sun is at its
hottest. Maysarah was
riding behind Muhammad (pbuh) and as the sun
grew hotter he saw
two angels appear above Muhammad (pbuh) and
shield him from the
sun's harmful rays. The trading was very successful
and Muhammad (pbuh)
made more profit for Khadijah than she had ever
received before.
When they arrived
back in Mecca Maysarah told Khadijah everything
about the trip and
what he had noticed about Mohammed‟s character and
behavior.
Khadijah was a widow
in her forties and as well as being rich and
highly respected she
was also very beautiful.
Many men wanted to
marry her but none of them suited her. When
she met Muhammad
(pbuh), however, she thought he was very special.
She sent a friend to
ask Muhammad (pbuh) why he was not married.
Muhammad (pbuh) said
that it was because he had no money, to which
the friend replied:
'Supposing a rich, beautiful and noble lady agreed to
marry you?' Muhammad
(pbuh) wanted to know who that could be. The
friend told him it
was Khadijah. Muhammad (pbuh) was very happy,
because he greatly
respected Khadijah. He went with his uncles, Abu
Talib and Hamzah, to
Khadijah's uncle, and asked his permission to
marry her. The uncle
gave his permission and soon after, Muhammad
(pbuh) and Khadijah
were married.
Their marriage was a
joyful one and Muhammad (pbuh) and Khadijah
were well suited.
Their life together, however, was not without some
sadness. They were
blessed with six children, two sons and four
daughters. Sadly
their first born, a son called Qasim, died shortly before
his second birthday,
and their last child, also a son, only lived for a short
time. Happily, their
four daughters-Zaynab, Ruqayyah, Umm Kulthum,
and Fatimah-all
survived.
For a few years
Muhammad (pbuh) lived a calm and quiet life as a
merchant in Mecca.
His wisdom benefited many people. One such time
was when Quraysh
decided to rebuild the Ka‟bah. It was a difficult
decision for them
because they had to knock it down before rebuilding it
and the people were
afraid that Allah might be angry with them for
knocking down His
sanctuary. At last one of the wise old men of Quraysh
decided to begin,
then everybody followed him. They worked until they
reached down to the
first foundation that Abraham had built. As soon as
they began to remove
the stones of this foundation, however, the whole of
Mecca began to shake.
They were so afraid
that they decided to leave these stones where they
were and build on top
of them. Each tribe brought stones and they built
the Ka'bah up until
they reached the place where the black stone was to
be set. They then
began to argue about who should have the honor of
carrying the black
stone and lifting it to its place in one of the corners of
the Ka'bah.
They almost came to
blows but fortunately one of the men offered a
solution. He
suggested that they should be guided by the first person to
enter the place of
worship. They all agreed and as Muhammad (pbuh)
was the first to
enter everyone was pleased, because they all trusted him.
They told him the
cause of the argument and he asked them to bring a
large cloak. They did
as he asked, and after spreading the cloak on the
ground he placed the
black stone in the centre of it. Then he asked a man
from each tribe to
hold one edge of the cloak and together to raise it to the
height where the
stone should be see. When this was done, he took the
stone off the cloak
and put it into place himself. This story shows how all
Quraysh respected and
trusted Muhammad (pbuh) and how, by his
wisdom and good
sense, he was able to keep the peace.
The Coming of The Archangel Gabriel
Muhammad
(pbuh) believed that there was only one Allah, Creator of
the sun, the moon,
the earth, the sky, and of all living things, and that all
people should worship
only Him. Muhammad (pbuh) would often leave
the crowded city and
go to the cave in Mount Hira'. He liked to be alone
there, away from all
thoughts of the world and daily life, eating and
drinking little. In
his fortieth year, Muhammad (pbuh) left Mecca to
spend Ramadan, the
traditional month of retreat, in the cave. In the
second half of
Ramadan, Allah began to reveal His message for mankind
through Muhammad
(pbuh). This first Revelation occurred as follows.
The Archangel Gabriel
came to Muhammad (pbuh) in the cave and
commanded him to
'Read'. Muhammad (pbuh) replied 'I cannot read.' At
this the Archangel
took Muhammad (pbuh) in his arms and pressed him
to him until it was
almost too much to bear. He then released him and
said again 'Read.' 'I
cannot', replied Muhammad (pbuh), at which the
Archangel embraced
him again. For the third time the Archangel
commanded Muhammad
(pbuh) to read, but still he said he could not and
was again embraced.
On releasing him this time, however, the Archangel
Gabriel said:
“Read: In the Name of
thy Lord who createth, Createth man from a
clot. Read: And thy
Lord is the Most Generous Who teacheth by the pen,
Teacheth man that
which he knew not. (Qur'an 96.1-5) Muhammad
(pbuh) repeated these
verses, just as the Archangel had said them. When
the Archangel was
sure Muhammad (pbuh) knew them by heart, he we
away. Now that he was
alone Muhammad (pbuh) could not understand
what had happened to
him. He was terribly afraid and rushed out of the
cave. Perhaps the
cave was haunted? Perhaps the devil had taken a hold
of his mind? But he
was stopped by a voice from heaven which said; '0
Muhammad (pbuh) you
are the Messenger of Allah, and I am Gabriel.'
He looked up at the
sky and wherever he turned he saw the Archangel
Gabriel.
In a state of
confusion he returned home to Khadijah. When his wife
saw him she became
very worried as he began to shiver, as though in a
fever. He asked her
to wrap him in blankets, which she did. After a while
he recovered
sufficiently to tell her what had happened at Hira'. Khadijah
believed all that he
told her and with great respect said: 'Be happy, 0 son
of my uncle and be
confident. Truly I swear by Allah who has my soul in
His hands, that you
will be our people's Prophet.' Muhammad (pbuh), the
Messenger of Allah,
was eased by her faith in him, but after all that had
happened he was exhausted
and felt fast asleep.
Khadijah left the
Prophet (pbuh) sleeping and went to see her cousin,
Waraqah Ibn Nawfal,
to ask him what he thought about all that had
happened. Waraqah was
a very wise man who had read many books and
had become a
Christian after studying the Bible. He told Khadijah that
Muhammad (pbuh) had
been chosen by Allah to be His Messenger. Just
as the Archangel
Gabriel had come to Moses before and had ordered him
to guide his people,
so, too, would Muhammad (pbuh) be the Prophet of
his people. But
Waraqah warned that all the people would not listen to the
Prophet and some
would mistreat his followers. He must, however, be
patient because he
had a great message for all the world. From that day
on, the Archangel
Gabriel came often to the Prophet (pbuh) and the
verses he taught him,
the message from Allah to man, were later written
down, and are known
to us as the Holy Qur'an.
The First Muslims
After
that momentous day in the month of Ramadan, Revelation came
again and again to
the Prophet (pbuh). He understood now what he had to
do and prepared
himself for what was to come. Only a strong and brave
man, helped by Allah,
can be a true prophet because people often refuse
to listen to Allah's
message. Khadijah was the first to believe the Prophet
(pbuh) and accept as
true what he brought from Allah. Through her, Allah
made things easier
for the Prophet (pbuh). Khadijah strengthened him,
helped him spread his
message, and stood up to the people who were
against him.
Then Revelation
ceased for a time. The Prophet (pbuh) was upset and
unhappy, thinking
that Allah had left him, or that he might have angered
Allah in some way so
that Allah no longer thought him worthy of His
message. However, the
Archangel Gabriel came back to him and brought
this surah, or
chapter, of the Qur'an:
In
the Name of Allah, the Beneficent, the Merciful
“By the morning
hours, And by the night when it is stillest, Thy Lord
hath neither forsaken
thee nor doth He hate thee, And verily the Last will
be better for thee than
the First. And verily thy Lord will give unto thee
so that thou wilt be
content. Did He not find thee an orphan and protect
thee? Did He not find
thee wandering and guide thee? Did He not find
thee destitute and
enrich thee? Therefore the orphan oppress not,
Therefore the beggar
drive not away, And as for thy Lord's blessing,
declare it”. (Qur'an:
93.1-11)
The Prophet (pbuh)
began to speak secretly of Allah's message to
those Who were close
to him and whom he could trust. At that time
Mecca was going through
hard times. There was very little food to be
had. Abu Talib, the
Prophet's uncle, who had taken care of him after his
grandfather's death,
was finding it very difficult to feed his large family.
The Prophet (pbuh)
said that he and another uncle, al-'Abbas, who
was a rich man, would
each bring up one of Abu Talib's children in order
to help him. The
Prophet (pbuh) took „Ali and his uncle took Ja‟far.
One day, when the
Prophet (pbuh) was outside the city, the Archangel
Gabriel appeared to
him. The Archangel kicked the side of a hill and a
spring of water began
to flow out. He then began to wash himself in the
running water to show
the Prophet (pbuh) the ritual ablution to be made
before prayer. Then
the Archangel showed him all the positions of
Muslim prayer-the
various movements and things to be said with each
movement. The Prophet
(pbuh) returned home and taught all these things
first to Khadijah and
then to his followers. Since then Muslims have
continued to purify
themselves before prayer by performing the ritual
ablution and have
followed the same movements and prayers first
performed by the
Prophet (pbuh). To begin with, though, only the Prophet
(pbuh) and his wife
knew of these things. Then one day „Ali entered the
room and found the
Prophet (pbuh) and Khadijah praying. He was
puzzled and asked
what they were doing. The Prophet (pbuh) explained
to him that they were
praising Allah and giving thanks to Him. That night
'Ali stayed up
thinking about all that the Prophet (pbuh) had said; he had
great admiration and
respect for his cousin. Finally he came to a decision
and the next day he
went to the Prophet (pbuh) and told him that he
wanted to follow him.
Thus Khadijah was the first woman to embrace
Islam, the teachings
which the Prophet (pbuh) brought from Allah, and
„Ali was the first
young man. Shortly after they were joined by Zayd ibn
Harithah, a slave,
freed and adopted by the Prophet (pbuh).
The Prophet (pbuh)
began to leave Mecca with 'An in order to pray.
One day Abu Talib
happened to pass by and when he saw them he
stopped and asked
them what they were doing. The Prophet (pbuh) told
him that they were
praying and following the same religion as Abraham.
He explained that,
like Abraham, he had been ordered to guide the people
to Allah's truth. Abu
Talib looked at his son, 'Ali, and said: 'Muhammad
(pbuh) would never
make you do anything that was wrong. Go with him.
But I cannot leave
the religion I now follow and which was followed
by my father.' Then
he turned to the Prophet (pbuh), saying, 'Even so, I
promise you, Muhammad
(pbuh), that no one will hurt you as long as I
am alive.' And with
that Abu Talib went on his way. At about this time
the news of Muhammad
(pbuh) being the Prophet reached an honest,
wise, and respected
merchant of Mecca called Abu Bakr. He knew
Muhammad (pbuh) well
and believed he could never lie, so he went to
find out for himself
if the story were true. The Prophet (pbuh) told him
that he had indeed
been sent by Allah to teach everyone to worship the
one true Allah. On
hearing this from the Prophet's own lips Abu Bakr
knew it to be the
truth and became a believer instantly. Later the Prophet
(pbuh) was reported
to have said that everyone he ever invited to accept
Islam showed signs of
disbelief and doubt, except Abu Bakr; when he
was told of it he did
not hold back or hesitate. Because of his wisdom,
honesty, and kindness
people had always turned to Abu Bakr for advice.
He was, therefore, a
man of some influence and through him many people
came to Islam. Among
these was Sa'd ibn Abi Waqqas as, the uncle of
Aminah, the Prophet's
mother. The night before Abu Bakr came to visit
him and tell him
about Islam, Sa'd Ibn Abi Waqqas dreamt that he was
walking in darkness.
As he walked he saw the moon and when he looked
at it he saw 'Ali,
Abu Bakr, and Zayd, the Prophet's freed slave,
beckoning to him to
come and join them. When Abu Bakr told him about
the Prophet's
religion, he understood the meaning of his dream and went
at once to the
Prophet (pbuh) and declared himself a Muslim. He
understood that to be
a Muslim means to submit oneself to Allah's Will
and to serve only
Him. Another person brought to Islam by Abu Bakr was
Bilal. One night Abu
Bakr went to the house of Umayyah ibn Khalaf, one
of the most important
men of Quraysh. Umayyah was out and Abu Bakr
found only Umayyah's
slave, Bilal, at home. Abu Bakr talked to the slave
about Islam and
before he left, Bilal, too, had become a Muslim. The
number of people
following the Prophet (pbuh) began to grow.
Sometimes they would
all go out of the city to the mountains around
Mecca to hear him
recite the Qur'an and to be taught by him. This was all
done very secretly
and only a very few people knew about Islam in those
early days.
The Troubles Begin
Three
years passed and one day the Archangel Gabriel came to the
Prophet (pbuh) and
ordered him to start preaching openly to everyone. So
the Prophet (pbuh)
told the people of Mecca that he had something very
important to tell
them. He stood on a hillside in Mecca, called Safa, and
they gathered around
to hear what he had to say. He started by asking
them if they would
believe him were he to say that an army was about to
attack them. They
answered that indeed they would, because he never
lied. He then told
them that he was the Messenger of Allah, sent to show
them the right way,
and to warn them of terrible punishments if they did
not follow him in
worshipping only Allah and none other. Abu Lahab,
one of the Prophet's
uncles who was among the listeners, suddenly stood
up and said, 'May you
perish! Did you call us here just to tell us this?' At
this, Allah sent to
the Prophet (pbuh) the following Surah:
In
the Name of Allah, The Beneficent, The Merciful
“The Power of Abu
Lahab will perish, and he will perish. His wealth
and gains will not save
him. He shall roast at a flaming fire, And his wife,
the carrier of
firewood Will have upon her neck a rope of palm-fibre”.
(Qur'an 111.1-5)
Then the crowd
dispersed and the Prophet (pbuh) was left alone. A
few days later the
Prophet (pbuh) tried again. A feast was prepared in his
house for all of his
uncles. After the meal he spoke to them and said, 'O
sons of 'Abd
al-Muttalib! I know of no Arab who has come to his people
with a better message
than mine. I have brought you the best news for
this life and the
next. Allah has ordered me to call you to Him. So which
of you will help me?'
All the men kept silent. Then 'Ali, his cousin,
jumped up and said:
'O Prophet of Allah! I will help you.' Then the men
all got up and left,
laughing as they went because only one young boy had
agreed to help the
Prophet (pbuh).
His message ignored
by most of the people and his uncles, the Prophet
(pbuh) continued to
meet his friends secretly in a house near the hill of
Safa. There they
prayed together and he taught them about the religion of
Islam. But even
though they kept to themselves, they were sometimes
abused by those who
would not believe. From one such incident,
however, an
unexpected conversion to Islam took place. One day, when
the Prophet (pbuh)
was returning home, speaking with his followers, he
met Abu Jahl, a
leader of Quraysh, who hated the Prophet (pbuh) and his
teachings. Abu Jahl
started to insult him and to speak spitefully of Islam,
but the Prophet
(pbuh) made no reply and went on his way.
Later, Hamzah, one of
the Prophet's uncles, who was a strong and
brave warrior of whom
people were quite afraid, heard how his nephew
had been insulted.
Filled with rage, he ran straight to the Ka'bah where
Abu Jahl was sitting
among the people and struck him a violent blow in
the face with his
bow. Hamzah then shouted, 'Will you insult him when I
follow his religion,
and I say what he says? Hit me back if you can!'
Some people got up to
help Abu Jahl but he stopped them saying, 'Leave
Hamzah alone, for by
Allah, I have insulted his nephew badly. 'From that
moment on Hamzah
followed the teachings of the Prophet (pbuh) and
with his conversion
to Islam Quraysh realized that the Prophet (pbuh) had
a strong supporter
and so for a while they stopped persecuting him. Soon,
however, the leaders
of Quraysh became angry again, when they saw that
the Prophet (pbuh)
was going ahead with his teaching. A group of them
went to his uncle,
Abu Talib, who had promised to protect him. They told
him to ask the
Prophet (pbuh) to stop attacking their gods and their way
of life, and in
return they would let him do as he wished with his religion.
After a time they saw
that there was no change, so they went back to
Abu Talib and this
time they told him that if he did not stop his nephew,
they would fight them
both. Abu Talib was very upset by this quarrel
among his people, but
he could not break his word to his nephew. He sent
for the Prophet
(pbuh) and told him what had happened, saying, 'Spare
me and spare
yourself; do not put a greater burden on me than I can bear.'
The Prophet (pbuh)
thought that his uncle might abandon him and that he
would no longer have
his support, but nevertheless he answered, '0 my
uncle, by Allah, if
they put the sun in my right hand and the moon in my
left in return for my
giving up this cause, I would not give it up until
Allah makes Truth
victorious, or I die in His service. Abu Talib was
deeply moved by this
answer. He told the Prophet (pbuh) that he would
support him for as
long as he lived and encouraged him to go on
spreading Allah's
message. From that time on, however hard the leaders
of Quraysh tried to
convince Abu Talib to stop protecting his nephew, he
always refused to
listen to them. In order to get rid of the Prophet (pbuh)
and his followers,
his enemies started persecuting those Muslims who
were poor or weak, or
had no powerful friends. One such person was
Bilal, the slave of
Umayyah ibn Khalaf. His master would take him out
into the desert, tie
him up, and leave him in the sun with a large stone on
his chest.
Fortunately Abu Bakr was passing by one day and saw
Umayyah torturing
Bilal, so he bought him from his master for a large
sum of money and then
set him free. But not all persecuted Muslims were
as fortunate as
Bilal. Many suffered, but all of them endured it patiently,
knowing that they
were doing the right thing and that their reward in the
life to come would be
greater' than any happiness they could find on
earth.
The King Who Believed
As
the number of the Prophet's followers increased so the enemies of the
Muslims grew more and
more angry. At last some of the Muslims
decided to go to
another country in order to live in peace. It was only five
years since the
Archangel Gabriel had first come to the Prophet (pbuh)
and two years since
the Prophet (pbuh) had spoken out in public. The
Muslims asked the
Prophet (pbuh) to allow them to leave Mecca. He
agreed, saying 'It
would be better for you to go to Abyssinia. The king
there is a just man
and it is a friendly country. Stay there until Allah
makes it possible for
you to return. The Muslims prepared for the
journey. They decided
to wait until night so that they could leave without
being seen. The first
sixteen left Mecca and, after reaching the shore of
die Red Sea, crossed
over to Abyssinia. Another eighty-three men and
nineteen women
followed, all hoping to be welcomed by the king and
people of that
country. This was the first hijrah, or migration, in Islam.
The Meccans were
furious when they discovered that these Muslims
had secretly left the
city for among them were the sons and daughters of
many of the leading
families of Mecca. The anger of the Meccans was
even greater when
they found out that the Muslims had been warmly
welcomed in
Abyssinia. The leaders of Quraysh decided to send two men
to the Abyssinian
king in hopes of persuading him to send the Muslims
back. These were 'Amr
ibn al-'As, a very clever speaker, and „Abd Allah
ibn abi Rabi‟ah.
Before they met this king, they gave each of his advisers
a gift, saying: 'Some
foolish men from our people have come to hide in
your country. Our
leaders have sent us to your ruler to persuade him to
send them back, so
when we speak to the king about them, do advise him
to give them up to
us.' The advisers agreed to do what the Meccans
wished.
Amr ibn al-'As and
'Abd Allah ibn abi Rabi'ah then went to the king
and presented him
also with a gift, saying: 'Your Highness, these people
have abandoned the
religion we have always followed in Mecca, but they
have not even become
Christians like you.' The royal advisers, who were
also present, told
the king that the Meccans had spoken the truth and that
he should send the
Muslims back to their own people. At this, the king
became angry and
said, 'No, by God, I will not give them up. Those who
have come to ask for
my protection, settled in my country, and chosen me
rather than others,
shall not be betrayed. I will summon them and ask
them about what these
two men have said. If the Muslims are as the
Meccans say, I will
give them up and send them back to their own people,
but if the Meccans
have lied I will protect the Muslims.' 'Amr was very
upset by this for the
last thing he wanted was for the king to hear what the
Muslims had to say.
The king then sent for the Muslims. When they
entered, they did not
kneel before him as was the custom of the
Abyssinians. 'Why do
you not kneel before our king?' they were asked by
one of the advisors.
'We kneel only to Allah', they replied. So the king
asked them to tell
him about their religion.
Ja'far ibn abi Talib,
Ali's brother and a cousin of the Prophet (pbuh),
was chosen to speak
for the Muslims. He replied, '0 King, at first we were
among the ignorant.
We and our ancestors had turned from the faith of
Abraham, who, with
Ishmael, rebuilt the Ka‟bah and worshipped only
Allah. We used idols
in our worship of Allah; we ate meat that had not
been killed in the
right way; we did not respect the rights of our
neighbors; the strong
took advantage of the weak. We did terrible things
of which I dare not
speak. This was our life until Allah sent a Messenger
from among us, one of
our relatives, whom we have always known to be
honest, innocent, and
faithful. He asked us to worship only Allah, and to
give up the bad
customs of our forefathers. He asked us to be truthful and
trustworthy, to respect
and help our neighbors, to honor our families, and
to put a stop to our
bad deeds and endless fighting. He asked us to look
after orphans. He
ordered us not to slander or speak evil of women or
men.
He ordered us to
worship Allah alone and not to worship anyone or
anything else
alongside Him. He ordered us to pray, to give alms, and to
fast. We believe he
is right and therefore we follow him and do as he has
commanded us.
The Meccans began to
attack us and come between us and our
religion. So we had
to leave our homes and we have come to you, hoping
to find justice.'
The king, who was a
Christian, was moved by these words. „Amr had
to think quickly of a
way to win the argument. Cunningly he said to the
king, 'These people
do not believe in Jesus in the same way as you'. The
king then wanted to
know what the Prophet (pbuh) had said about Jesus.
Ja'far replied by
reciting a Surah from the Qur'an which tells the story of
Jesus and his mother
Mary. These are a few of the lines he recited:
In
the Name of Allah, the Beneficent, the Merciful
“And make mention of
Mary in the Scripture, when she had
Withdrawn from her
people to an eastern place, And had chosen
seclusion from them.
Then We sent unto her Our spirit and it assumed for
her the likeness of a
perfect man. She said: Lo! I seek refuge in the
Beneficent One from
thee, if Thou fearest God. He said: I am only a
messenger of thy
Lord, that I may bestow on thee a faultless son. She
said: How can I have
a son when no mortal hath touched me, neither have
I been unchaste? He
said: 'Even so thy Lord saith: It is easy for Me. And
(it will be) that We
may make of him revelation for mankind and a mercy
from Us, and it is a
thing ordained. And she conceived him, and she
withdrew with him to
a far place. Then she brought him to her own folk,
carrying him. They
said: O Mary! Thou hast come with an monstrous
thing. Oh sister of
Aaron! Thy father was not a wicked man nor was thy
mother a harlot. Then
Mary pointed to the child (Jesus); But they said,
'How can we speak to
one who is still in the cradle, a young child?' He
said, 'Lo, I am
Allah's servant; He has given me the Book, and made me a
Prophet.
He has made me
Blessed, wheresoever I may be; and He has enjoined
me to pray, and to
give alms, so long as I live, and likewise to cherish my
mother; he has not
made me arrogant, unblest Peace be upon me, the day
I was born, and the
day I die, and the day I am raised up alive!” (Qur'an
19:16-33) . When the
king heard this, his eyes filled with tears. Turning
to his advisers, he
said, 'These words have surely come from God; there is
very little to
separate the Muslims from the Christians. What both Jesus
and Muhammad, the
Messengers of Allah, have brought comes from the
same source.
So the Muslims were
given the king's permission to live peacefully in
his country. 'Amr was
given back the gift he had presented to the king
and the two Meccans
returned home, bitterly disappointed.
The Cruelty of Quraysh
The
leaders of Quraysh became increasingly worried about the way the
people of Mecca were
being divided by the Prophet's teachings. Finally,
„Umar ibn al-Khattab,
one of the nobles of Mecca, decided that the only
way to silence the
Prophet (pbuh) was to kill him. Having made up his
mind, he set out at
once to look for him. On his way he met a man who
saw at once what
„Umar was going to do and said: 'Why don't you look a
little closer to home
before going to kill Muhammad? Don't you know
your own sister
Fatimah is a Muslim?' 'Umar was shocked. He could not
believe this was
true. He went at once to his sister's house. When he
arrived outside the
house he heard Fatimah and her husband Sa‟id reading
aloud surah Ta Ha, a
chapter from the Qur'an. Hearing her brother's voice
at the door, Fatimah
quickly hid the scroll with the surah written on it
among the folds of
her dress. „Umar stormed into the room and
demanded, 'What is
this nonsense I heard?' Fatimah denied everything.
„Umar then lost his
temper and attacked Fatimah's husband shouting,
'They tell me that
you have joined Muhammad in his religion!' Fatimah
tried to defend her
husband and „Umar hit her too. Then she admitted,
„Yes, we are Muslims
and we believe in Allah and His Messenger and
you can do what you
like!'
Seeing her faith and
courage, „Umar suddenly felt sorry for what he
had done and said to
his sister, 'Let me see what I heard you reading just
now so that I may
understand just what it is that your Prophet has
brought. Fatimah gave
the scroll to him after he had washed to make
himself clean and
pure before touching it, and had promised to give it
back to her
afterwards.
In
the Name of Allah, the Beneficent, the Merciful
“Ta Ha We have not
revealed unto thee (Muhammad) this Qur'an For
thee to be
distressed, but only as a reminder Unto him who fears a
Revelation from Him
who created the earth and the high heavens; the
Beneficent One Who is
established on the Throne; To Him belongs
Whatsoever is in the
heavens and the earth And all that is between them,
and All that is
underneath the soil.
If Thou speakest
aloud Be thou loud in thy speech, yet Surely He
knows the secret
(thought) And that yet more hidden. Allah There is no
god but He To Him
belong the Most Beautiful Names”. (Qur'an 20: 1-8) .
As he read, 'Umar
suddenly knew that these were the most beautiful
words he had ever
heard and that this religion must be the true one. With
his sword still in
hand, he went straight to the Prophet's house and
knocked loudly at the
door. One of the Prophet's closest followers looked
out. There stood
'Umar who was known for his courage and strength.
When he saw 'Umar so
excited and with his sword in hand, he was afraid
for the Prophet's
life. But the Prophet (pbuh) asked him to allow 'Umar to
come in and to leave
them alone together. The Prophet (pbuh) asked
'Umar why he had
come, to which he replied: 'I have come to swear that
there is no god but
Allah and that you, Muhammad, are the Messenger of
Allah.' As he spoke
these words, his hand still held the sword with which
he had intended to
kill the Prophet (pbuh). This same sword' would now
be used to defend the
Prophet (pbuh) and the faith of Islam. At that time,
whenever Muslims
wanted to perform the ritual encircling of the Ka'bah,
known as tawaf they
had to do it secretly and in fear. 'Umar, however,
was very courageous.
As soon as he had declared his faith, he went
directly to the
Ka'bah and in broad daylight made the circling of the
Sacred House before
the astonished people of Mecca. No one dared to
say anything. But now
the leaders of Quraysh became even more alarmed
and began to see
Islam as a threat to the whole life of the city of Mecca.
They grew more and
more furious as the numbers of Muslims increased
until finally they,
too, decided as 'Umar once had, that the Prophet (pbuh)
would have to be
killed.
On hearing of these
plans, Abu Talib, the Prophet's uncle,
immediately sent a
message to all the sons of 'Abd al-Muttalib, asking
them to protect their
nephew, and this they agreed to do. When Quraysh
realized that they
could not kill the Prophet (pbuh) because of this
protection, they
decided instead to avoid him and his followers
completely. A
declaration to this effect was hung at the Ka‟bah. It stated
that no one in the
city was allowed to have anything to do with the
Prophet (pbuh) and
his people, or even to sell them any food or drink
whatsoever.
At first the Muslims
found some support among the Bani Hashim, the
branch of Quraysh to
which the Prophet (pbuh) belonged. Some of these
people were not
Muslims but showed loyalty to their kinsmen by
suffering along with
them. However, life grew more and more difficult
and food was scarce.
The hatred of the rest of Quraysh for the followers
of the Prophet (pbuh)
grew so great that when his companions tried to
buy supplies from a
caravan passing near to Mecca, Abu Lahab, one of
the Muslims' worst
enemies, offered ten times the price of the goods to
the merchant. By
doing this he managed to stop the Muslims, from
buying what they
desperately needed. During the years of this terrible
treatment, a
wonderful thing happened. Instead Of Islam becoming
weaker, it grew
stronger. Allah sent more and more Revelations. It was as
though the Muslims
were being strengthened and cleansed by the
hardships they
suffered and were being tested in their faith. Each year at
the time of the
pilgrimage to Mecca, people tame from all over Arabia.
These pilgrims saw
the terrible cruelty and injustice of Quraysh towards
the Muslims, and many
of them were sorry for the Prophet's followers.
Quraysh began to feel
ashamed of their harsh treatment, especially as
many of the Muslims were
their cousins and close relatives. Finally, at
the end of three
years, they were convinced that the time had come to put
an end to the
persecution of the Muslims, and they decided to take down
the notice hanging at
the Ka‟bah. To their astonishment, the sheet of
paper had been
completely eaten up by worms, all except the words, 'In
Your Name, O Allah',
which had been written at the top of the paper.
The Year of Sorrow
The
Prophet (pbuh) and his followers went back to a normal way of life
but the years of
hardship had made Khadijah very weak. She became ill
and soon afterwards
she died. Thus, the Prophet (pbuh) lost his beloved
wife and friend, the
first person to accept Islam and support him. She had
been a refuge from
all his troubles and, through her good-heartedness, the
best company in his
suffering. He had loved her very much. This
happened in 619 A.D.,
the year which became known as the 'Year of
Sorrow'. Soon after
this, the Prophet Muhammad's uncle and protector,
Abu Talib, also died.
Abu Talib had been one of the most respected men
in Mecca-one of the
elders of Quraysh. Even though he had never been a
follower of Islam, he
had protected the Prophet (pbuh) against his
enemies. Not only was
this a sad occasion for the Prophet (pbuh) but also
a dangerous one.
According to Arab custom anyone who is under the
protection of another
is safe so long as his protector lives. Now, with the
death of his uncle,
the Prophet's protection was gone.
The Prophet's enemies
rejoiced to see him so sad, without a wife to
console and comfort
him, and without his uncle to protect him. They
began to treat him
worse than ever before. Even small children insulted
him. One young man
actually threw some filth on the Prophet's head, but
the Prophet (pbuh)
went home without making anything of it. When one
of his daughters
rushed, weeping, to wash it away, he comforted her
saying, 'Do not weep
my little girl, for Allah will protect your father.'
Abu Talib had been
the Prophet's last tie with Quraysh and the Prophet
(pbuh) now felt that
Islam could make no further progress in Mecca
because the hearts of
Quraysh were closed against him. He decided,
therefore, to travel
to Ta'if where he hoped to find support. He walked all
the way to the town,
which was seventy kilometers away. There he spoke
in all the places
where people gathered, but no one listened to him. He
met the leaders of
the three most important tribes but they would not
listen either. Not
only did they take no notice of what he said, but they
laughed at him and
ordered their slaves to insult him and pelt him with
stones.
Sadly, the Prophet
(pbuh) left the city and found a quiet place near a
wall on the edge of
town where he could be alone. There he prayed to
Allah in these words:
“ O Allah, to Thee I complain of my weakness,
helplessness and
lowliness before men. 0 Most Merciful, Thou art the
Lord of the weak, and
Thou art my Lord. To whom wouldst Thou leave
my fate? To a
stranger who insults me or to an enemy to whom Thou hast
given power over me?
If Thou art not angry with me, I care not what
happens to me. Thy
favor alone is my objective. I take refuge in the Light
of Thy countenance by
which the darkness is illumined and on which this
world and the other
depend, lest Thy anger descend upon me or Thy
wrath light upon me. It
is for Thee to be satisfied until Thou art well
pleased. There is no
power and no might save through Thee.” The wall
near which the
Prophet (pbuh) was sitting belonged to a garden owned by
two brothers. When
they heard his prayer, they were very sorry for him
and sent one of their
slaves to him with a dish filled with grapes. Before
he began to eat, the
Prophet (pbuh) said 'Bismillah'-'In the Name of
Allah.' The servant,
whose name was „Addas, was very surprised at these
words, which he had
never heard before. 'By Allah', said „Addas, 'this is
not the way the
people of this country speak.' 'Then from what country do
you come, 'Addas, and
what is your religion?' asked the Prophet (pbuh). 'I
am a Christian from
the Assyrian town of Nineveh', he replied. 'From the
town of that good man
Jonah, son of Matta', added the Prophet 'How do
you know about him?'
asked „Addas. 'He is my brother-he was a Prophet
and I am a Prophet',
answered the Messenger of Allah (pbuh). „Addas
bent down and kissed
the Prophet's head, his hands and his feet, because
now he saw that he
was truly a Prophet. The Prophet (pbuh) then walked
back to Mecca. He was
now able to put up with everything patiently for
he knew that Allah
would never leave him. His journey to Ta'if had not
been in vain for
„Addas, the Christian, had become a Muslim, and this
was to he the
beginning of great changes.
The Night Journey And The Ascent To Heaven
One
night as the Prophet (pbuh) lay sleeping in the same spot where 'Abd
al-Muttalib used to
sleep, next to the Ka‟bah, he was woken by the
Archangel Gabriel.
Later the Prophet (pbuh) described what happened: 'I
sat up and he took
hold of my arm. I stood beside him and he brought me
to the door of the
mosque where there was a white animal for me to ride.'
The Prophet (pbuh)
told of how he mounted the animal and, with the
Archangel Gabriel at
his side, was transported from Mecca to the mosque
called al-Aqsa, in
far away Jerusalem. There the Prophet (pbuh) found
Abraham, Moses, and
Jesus among a group of Prophets. The Prophet
Muhammad (pbuh) acted
as their leader, or imam, in prayer. Then he was
brought two jugs, one
containing wine and the other milk. He chose the
milk and refused the
wine. At this, the Archangel Gabriel said, 'You have
been rightly guided
to the fitrah, the true nature of man, and so will your
people be, Muhammad.
Wine is forbidden to you. The Prophet (pbuh)
also related how they
passed through Heaven's gates and saw countless
angels. Among them
was Malik, the Keeper of Hell, who never smiles.
Malik stepped forward
and showed the Prophet (pbuh) a view of Hell and
the terrible plight
of those who suffer in that place. Then the Prophet
(pbuh) was taken up
by the angels, through the seven Heavens, one by
one Along the way he
again saw Jesus, Moses, and Abraham, and the
Prophet (pbuh) said
that he had never seen a man more like himself than
Abraham. He also saw
John, called Yahya in Arabic, Joseph or Yusef,
Enoch, that is Idris,
and Aaron. At last he reached the Lote Tree of the
Uttermost, the sidrat
al-muntaha where no Prophet had been before. Here
the Prophet (pbuh)
received Revelation of what Muslims believe.
“The Messenger
believeth in that which hath been revealed unto him
from his Lord and (so
do) the believers. Each one believes in Allah and
His Angels and His
Books and His Messengers-We make no distinction
between any of His
messengers-and they say: We hear, and we obey.
Grant us Thy
forgiveness, our Lord. Unto Thee is the homecoming”.
(Qur'an 2.285) , Then
he was taken into the Light of the Divine Presence
of Allah, and was
instructed that Muslims should pray fifty times a day.
The Prophet (pbuh)
recalled: “ On my way back I passed by Moses and
what a good friend to
you he was! He asked me how many prayers had I
been ordained to
perform. When I told him fifty, he said, 'Prayer is a
serious matter and
your people are weak, so go back to your Lord and ask
Him to reduce the
number for you and your community.' I did so and He
took away ten. Again
I passed by Moses and he said the same again; and
so it went on until
only five prayers for the whole day and night were left.
Moses again gave me
the same advice. I replied that I had been back to
my Lord and asked him
to reduce the number until I was ashamed, and I
would not do it
again. He of you who performs the five prayers faithfully,
will have the reward
of fifty prayers.
On the morning
following these events and the Prophet's return to
Mecca, he told
Quraysh what had happened. Most of them said, 'By God!
This is ridiculous! A
caravan takes a month to go to Syria and a month to
return! Can you do
that long journey in a single night?' Even many
Muslims were amazed
by this and wanted the Prophet (pbuh) to explain.
Some ran with the
news to Abu Bakr who said, 'By Allah, if Muhammad
(pbuh) himself has
said so, then it is true. Remember, the Prophet tells us
that the word of
Allah comes to him directly from heaven to earth at any
hour by day or night,
and we believe him.
Isn't that a greater
miracle than what you are now doubting?' Then
Abu Bakr went to the
mosque and listened to the Prophet's detailed
description of
Jerusalem. He commented, 'You tell the truth, 0 Prophet of
Allah!' From then on,
Abu Bakr was honored with the title 'al-Siddiq‟,
which means 'he who
gives his word to support the truth'. Others also
began to believe the
Prophet's story when he went on to describe two
caravans he had seen
on his way back to Mecca. He told the doubters
where he had seen the
caravans, what they were carrying and when they
would arrive in
Mecca. All that the Prophet (pbuh) had said was born out
when the caravans
arrived at the time he said they would, carrying all that
he had described.
“Glory be to Him, who
carried His servant by night from the Holy
Mosque to the Far
distant place of worship, the Neighborhood which We
have blessed, that We
might show him some of Our signs, He, only He is
the All-hearing, the
All-seeing”. (Qur'an 17:1)
By the Star when it
setteth, Your comrade is not astray, neither
deceived, Nor does he
speak of his (own) desire. This is naught but a
revelation revealed,
Taught him by one mighty in power, very strong; he
stood poised, being
on the uppermost horizon, Then drew near and came
down, two
bows'-length away, or nearer, Then revealed to His servant
that which He
revealed. His heart lies not of what he saw; What, will you
then dispute with him
what he sees? Indeed, he saw him yet another time
By the Lote- Tree of
the utmost Boundary Near which is the Garden of
Abode When there
covered the Lote- Tree that which covered; his eye
turne not aside, nor
yet was overbold. Verily, he saw one of the greatest
signs of his
Lord.(Qur'an 53:1-18)
The Treaty of ‘Aqabah
In
Yathrib there were two main tribes, the Aws and the
Khazraj. Both were
very powerful, they were always at war with one
another, and both worshipped
idols. Also in Yathrib were many Jews
who, unlike the Arab
at that time, knew that there was only One God, and
worshipped Him. They
had told the Arabs many times that a Prophet
would be coming to
them. The time came for the pilgrimage to the
Ka‟bah, and several
people from Yathrib were going, among them six
men from the tribe of
Khazraj. They had heard about the Prophet
Mohammed‟s preaching
and thought that must be the Prophet the Jews
had told them about.
So they decided to go speak to him during their stay
in Mecca. They met
the Prophet (pbuh) at a spot known as „Aqabah, near
Mecca, and invited
them to sit with him. He explained to them what
Islam meant recited
to them from the Qur'an. When they heard the Qur'an
recited touched their
hearts so deeply that they became Muslims and on
leaving Mecca they
promised to return the following year. When they
reached Yathrib
carrying Islam in their hearts, they told their relatives and
friends what they had
heard from the Prophet (pbuh) and many more
people became
Muslims.
A year passed and the
pilgrimage season came around again. Twelve
important men from
Yathrib went to Mecca to meet the Prophet (pbuh)
and promised
faithfully to serve him and Islam. In return, the Prophet
(pbuh) sent one of
his friends, Mus‟ab ibn 'Umayr, with them to teach the
Qur'an and instruct
them in their new religion. Another year passed and
still more Muslims
came from Yathrib to Mecca for the pilgrimage. On
this occasion a
secret meeting with the Prophet (pbuh) was arranged to be
held at night.
Seventy-three men and one woman from Yathrib came, and
the Prophet (pbuh)
arrived with his uncle, al-„Abbas. During this meeting
the men from Yathrib
offered to protect and defend the Prophet (pbuh)
and his followers if
they would come to live in Yathrib. This promise of
protection came to be
known as the Treaty of „Aqabah.
The treaty was most
fortunate for even though Islam was growing in
Yathrib, the Muslims
in Mecca were still suffering. The Prophet (pbuh)
therefore told his
friends and followers to go to Yathrib where they would
be safe, and most of
them took this opportunity to leave. Despite all this
suffering the Prophet
(pbuh) was not allowed to fight his enemies, for
Allah had told him to
forgive those who insulted him or would not listen
to his message. But
the Quraysh had closed their minds so utterly to the
word of Allah, and
grew so hard-hearted towards the Prophet (pbuh)and
his followers, that
Allah gave permission to the Prophet (pbuh) to fight
those who tried to
harm him or his companions.
“Permission is given
unto those who fight because they have been
wronged; And Allah is
surely able to give them victory; Those who have
been driven from
their homes unjustly only because they said: Our Lord
is Allah”.(Qur'an
22.39-40)
Quraysh began to fear
the Prophet (pbuh) for they realised that he was
now strong enough to
fight them and had been given leave to do so by
Allah. They also knew
that he now had the people of Yathrib to help and
protect him.
Seeing that the
Muslims were leaving the city, they decided to kill the
Prophet (pbuh),
before he, too, left Mecca to join his followers in Yathrib.
In this way they
hoped to put an end to Islam once and for all.
Al-Hijrah
The
Breaking of All Connections with One's Home, for the Sake of Allah
Alone. After his
companions had left for Yathrib, the Prophet (pbuh)
stayed in Mecca,
waiting for permission from Allah to leave the city. Abu
Bakr and Ali stayed
with him. There were also some Muslims whom
Quraysh had not
allowed to leave. Abu Bakr kept asking the Prophet
(pbuh) to allow him
to go to Yathrib, but the Messenger of Allah (pbuh)
kept saying, 'Do not
be in a hurry; it might be that Allah will give you a
travelling
companion.' The leaders of Quraysh assembled in the house of
their ancestor, Qusayy,
as was customary when they had an important
decision to make.
They had to find a way of getting rid of the Prophet
Muhammad (pbuh),
before he was able to join his friends in Yathrib. As
they were busy
arguing, the Devil appeared at the door in the form of a
noble and handsome
old man. When they saw this elderly gentleman
standing there, they
asked him who he was. He said he was a Shaikh from
the mountains who had
heard what they meant to do and thought he
might be able to help
or advise them. They thought he looked like a wise
man, so they invited
him in.
Each leader then
started to put forward ideas about what should be
done, but none of
them could agree about which was best, until AbuJahl
told them his plan.
This was that each clan should provide a strong,
young warrior, each
of whom would be given a sword. All the young
warriors would then
wait outside the Prophet's house and together attack
him as he came out.
In this way they would be rid of him but as the blame
for killing him would
fall on all the clans, the Prophet's family would not
be able to seek
revenge.
When he heard this,
the Devil in the disguise of the old man, said,
'That man is right;
in my opinion it is the only thing to do!' The leaders of
Quraysh then left to
carry out their plan to murder the Prophet (pbuh).
“And when the
unbelievers plot against thee, to confine thee, or kill
thee, or to drive
thee out, they were plotting, But Allah was (also)
plotting; and Allah
is the best of plotters”. (Qur'an 8.30)
Before the night
fell, on which Muhammad (pbuh) was to be killed,
the Archangel Gabriel
came to him and said, 'Do not sleep tonight in your
own bed.' The Prophet
(pbuh) understood what was going to happen, so
he told „Ali to lie
in his bed and wrap himself in the blanket that the
Prophet (pbuh)
normally used, promising that no harm would befall
him.With the coming
of darkness the young men of Quraysh had gathered
outside the Prophet's
house, waiting for him to come out. After he had
made sure that 'Ali
was safe, the Prophet (pbuh) left the house. At that
very moment Allah
took away the sight of the warriors so that they could
not see the Prophet
(pbuh), who took a handful of dust, sprinkled it on
their heads and
recited these verses:
In
the Name of Allah, the Beneficent, the Merciful
“Ya Sin By the Wise
Qur'an, Thou art truly among those sent On the
straight path; A
Revelation of the All-mighty, the All-wise, That thou
may warn a people
whose fathers were never warned, so they are
heedless. The Word
has already proved true of most of them, yet they do
not believe. Lo! We
have put on their necks collars of iron up to the chin,
so that they are made
stiff-necked. and We have put before them a
barrier; and We have
covered them so they do not see”.(Qur'an 36.1-9)
The young men waited
the whole night and were furious when, in the
morning, they saw
„Ali instead of the Prophet (pbuh) coming out of the
house. I They
realised that their plan had failed completely. In the
meantime, the Prophet
(pbuh) went to Abu Bakr's house and told him,
'Allah has told me
that now is the time for us to leave Mecca.' 'Together?'
asked Abu Bakr.
'Together', the Prophet (pbuh) replied. Abu Bakr wept
for joy, because now
he knew that the travelling companion he had been
promised was the
Prophet (pbuh) himself.
Then he said,'O
Messenger of Allah, these are the two camels which I
have kept ready for
this.' And so, the two of them left for a cave in
Thawr, a mountain to
the south of Mecca where they intended to hide.
When they were out of
the city the Prophet (pbuh) looked back and
said, 'Of all Allah's
earth, you are the dearest place to Allah and to me and
if my people had not
driven me out I would never have left you.'
When Quraysh found
out that the Prophet (pbuh) and his companion
had gone, they set
out after them, searching in every direction. Three days
later they finally
reached the cave where the Prophet (pbuh) and Abu
Bakr were hiding, but
a strange and wonderful thing had happened. A
spider had woven its
web right across the entrance to the cave and a dove
was nesting with her
mate nearby. As the Meccans stood in front of the
cave, with only the
spider's web separating them from the fugitives, Abu
Bakr began to fear
for their safety. He whispered to the Prophet (pbuh),
they are very close.
If one of them turns we will be seen.' But he was
comforted by the
Prophet's reply: “What do you think of two who have
with them Allah as
their third? 'Grieve not, for verily Allah is with us”.
(Qur'an 9.40) . After
a few moments the search parry decided that no one
could have entered
the cave recently, or the spider's web would not have
been complete and the
dove would not have nested there, and so they left
without searching
inside. Three days later the Prophet (pbuh) and Abu
Bakr thought it safe
to leave the cave. Abu Bakr's son, 'Amir, had
arranged for three
camels and a guide to help them continue their journey
to Yathrib. 'Amir
would ride behind his father. The leaders of Quraysh,
meanwhile, returned
to Mecca and offered a reward of one hundred
camels to whoever
captured the Prophet (pbuh). Among those who went
in search of him was
a famous warrior. He was, in fact, the only one to
catch up with him,
but whenever he came close, his horse would suddenly
sink up to its knees
in the sand. When this had happened three times, he
understood that the
Prophet (pbuh) was protected by a power stronger
than anything he had
known, and so he went back to Mecca. On arriving
there he warned
everyone against continuing the search, relating what had
happened to him.
“If you do not help
him, still Allah has helped him already, When the
unbelievers drove him
forth, (he second of two, When the two were in the
Cave, when he said to
his companion, "Grieve not; surely Allah is with
us." Then Allah
caused His peace and Reassurance to descend upon him,
And helped him with
hosts you cannot see, And He made the word of the
unbelievers the
lowest; While Allah's word is the uppermost; Allah is Allmighty,
All-wise”. (Qur'an
9.40)
The Prophet's journey
from Mecca is called the hijrah, or migration. It
was really the first
step towards the spread of Islam throughout the entire
world, and Muslims
begin their calendar from the year of the hijrah
Arrival In Yathrib
When
the people of Yathrib heard that the Prophet (pbuh) had left Mecca
and was on his way to
their city, they anxiously awaited his arrival. Each
morning they would go
to the edge of the city to see if he were coming.
Finally, on Monday,
September 27, in the year 622 A.D., someone saw
him in the distance
and shouted to everyone, 'Here is Muhammad! (pbuh)
the Messenger of
Allah has arrived!' All the Muslims went out to greet
him, shouting,
“Allahu Akbar”! Allah is Great! Muhammad the
Messenger of Allah
has arrived!' The women and children sang songs to
show how glad they
were to see him. The Prophet (pbuh) entered the city
with his friend Abu
Bakr. Most of The people there had not seen him
before and as they
gathered around they did not know which of the two
was the Prophet
(pbuh), until Abu Bakr got up to shield him with his
cloak from the
burning sun. Yathrib would now be Called al-Medina,
which means, The
City.
The Messenger of God
(pbuh) stayed in Quba', which is a place at the
entrance of Medina,
for three days. On the first Friday after his arrival the
Prophet led the
congregation in prayer. After this many of the wealthiest
men invited him to
come and live with them and share their riches. But he
refused and, pointing
to his she-camel, Qaswa', said, 'Let her go her way',
because he knew that
his camel was under Allah's command and would
guide him to the spot
where he should stay. They let the camel go until
she finally knelt
down beside a house belonging to the Bani an-Najjar, the
tribe to whom the
Prophet's mother was related. This house was used as a
drying-place for
dates and belonged to two young orphan boys named
Sahl and Suhayl. They
offered to give it to the Prophet (pbuh) but he
insisted on paying
them for it, and so their guardian, As‟ad the son of
Zurarah, who was
present, made the necessary arrangements.
The Prophet (pbuh)
ordered that a mosque and a place for him to live
be built on the site.
All the Muslims worked together to finish it quicklyeven
the Prophet (pbuh)
joined in. It was here that the Muslims would
pray and meet to make
important decisions and plans. The building was
quite plain and
simple. The floor was beaten earth and the roof of palm
leaves was held up by
tree trunks. Two Stones marked the direction of
prayer. At first
worshippers faced Jerusalem, but Soon after the direction
of prayer was changed
towards the Ka‟bah in Mecca.
After the building of
the mosque, the Prophet (pbuh) wanted to
strengthen the
relationship between the people called the Muhajirah or
Emigrants, who had
left Mecca with him, and the people of Medina, who
were known as the
Ansar, or Helpers. Each man from Medinah took as
his brother a man
from Mecca, sharing everything with him and treating
him as a member of
his own family. This was the beginning of the
Islamic brotherhood.
In the early days of Islam, the times for prayer were
not announced and So
the Muslims would come to the mosque and wait
for the prayer so as
not to miss it. The Prophet (pbuh) wondered how to
tell the people that
it was time for prayers. He discussed it with his
friends, and at first
two ideas were put forward; that of blowing a horn as
the Jews did, and
that of using a wooden clapper like the Christians.
Then a man called
„Abd Allah ibn Zayd came to the Prophet (pbuh)
and told him he had
had a dream in which he had seen a man dressed all
in green, holding a
wooden clapper. He had said to the man, 'Would you
sell me your clapper
in order to call the people to prayer?' The man had
replied, 'A better
way to call the people to prayer is to Say: "Allahu
Akbar, Allah is Most
Great!" four times, followed by "I bear witness that
there is no divinity
but Allah, I bear witness that Muhammad is the
Messenger of Allah,
Come to prayer, come to prayer, Come to salvation,
come to salvation.
Allahu Akbar, Allahu Akbar! There is no divinity but
Allah!"'
When the Prophet
(pbuh) heard this, he said it was a true vision from
Allah. He sent for
Bilal, who had a beautiful, strong voice, and ordered
him to call the
people to prayer in just this way. Bilal did so and soon
after 'Umar came out
of his house and told the Prophet (pbuh) that he had
seen exactly the same
vision himself.
The Prophet (pbuh)
replied, 'Allah be praised for that.' The adhan, or
call to prayer, which
came to 'Abd Allah ibn Zayd in his dream and was
performed by Bilal on
the instruction of the Prophet (pbuh), is the one we
still hear today
being called from the minarets of mosques all over the
world.
The Battle Of Badr
The
Muslims who had gone to Medinah, had left all their belongings
behind in Mecca and
these had been taken by their enemies. Thus, when
the Muslims heard
that Abu Sufyan, one of the leaders of Quraysh, was
on his way back to
Mecca from Syria with a large caravan of goods, they
decided that the time
had come for them to retrieve some of their losses.
The Prophet (pbuh)
gave the Muslims permission for this attack and
everyone began to get
ready for the raid, for it had been revealed:
“Permission to fight
is given unto those who fight because they have
been wronged; and
Allah is surely able to give them victory” (Qur'an
22.39)
“The Revelation had
mentioned that a thing most serious with Allah
was to turn (men)
from the way of Allah, and to disbelieve in Him and in
the Holy Mosque, and
to drive his people from there…for persecution is
worse than killing”.
(Qur'an 2.217)
The retrieval of
their goods, however, was not their only reason for
wanting to attack the
caravan. The Muslims did not think they should
simply remain safely
in Medinah; they wanted to spread the message of
Islam. They thus felt
that if Quraysh wanted freedom to trade in safety,
then the Muslims must
also have freedom to believe in Allah, to follow
His Messenger (pbuh),
and spread His Word. It was, therefore, thought
that the best, and
only way to get Quraysh to understand this was to
attack what was most
important to them-a caravan.
Abu Sufyan, in the
meantime, heard about the Muslims' plan and
quickly sent a
message to Quraysh in Mecca, telling them that the
caravan was in danger
and asking for help. As a result nearly all Quraysh
came out to help him
defend the caravan. There were a thousand men and
two hundred horses.
The women also went along to cheer the men on
with their singing.
Unaware of this, the Prophet (pbuh) set out with his
followers. It was the
month of Ramadan and the Muslims were fasting.
There were only three
hundred and five of them, most of them Ansar,
men from Medinah.
With them they had three horses and seventy camels,
on which they rode in
turns.
They arrived in the
area of Badr, some distance from Medinah where
they made camp and
waited for news of the caravan. Then they heard that
Quraysh had set out
from Mecca with a strong army. The situation had
suddenly changed.
They were no longer going to make a raid on a
caravan-they were
going to have to fight Quraysh. The Prophet (pbuh)
gathered his men
around him to find out what they wanted to do. First
Abu Bakr, and then
„Umar, spoke for the Muslims who had come from
Mecca. They said they
would obey the Prophet (pbuh). But the Prophet
(pbuh) wanted to hear
the opinion of the Ansar, because he did not want
to force them into
doing something they did not want to do. Sa‟d Ibn
Mu‟adh, one of the
leaders of the Ansar, got up and said, we believe in
you and we swear
before all men that what you have brought is the truth.
We have given you our
word and agreement to hear and obey. So go
where you wish, we
are with you even if you should lead us into the sea!
The Prophet (pbuh)
was greatly encouraged by these words and so it
was agreed to fight.
Abu Sufyan learned where the Muslims were
camped. He changed
the course of the caravan and quickly took it out of
their reach. He then
sent word to Quraysh telling them that the caravan
was safe and that
they should return to Mecca. But the leaders of Quraysh
were proud and
stubborn men. They refused to return as they had made
up their minds to
show everyone how powerful they were by destroying
the Muslims.Now there
was a wadi, or valley, at Badr, with wells on the
side nearest Medina,
and it was here that the Muslims took up position
facing the valley
with the wells behind them.
Quraysh meanwhile
placed themselves on the other side of the valley.
The Muslims then dug
a reservoir, filled it with water from one of the
wells, and made a
barrier around it. Then they stopped up the wells. In
this way the Muslims
had enough drinking water for themselves, while
the Meccans would
have to cross the valley and fight the Muslims in
order to get water.
The night before the battle, while the Muslims slept
peacefully, a heavy
rain fell.
“When He made the
slumber fall upon you as a reassurance from
Him and sent down
water from the sky upon you, in order that He might
purify you, and
remove from you the fear of Satan, and strengthen your
hearts and make firm
(your) fret thereby”. (Qur'an 8.11) On the morning
of Friday, the 17th
of Ramadan, 2 A.H., (March 17th, AD), the two
armies advanced and
drew closer to one another. The rain been heavier
on the side of
Quraysh, making the ground soft and difficult. On the side
of the Muslims,
however, the rain had backed the sand down hard,
making it easy for
them to march. The Prophet (pbuh) preferred the men
to fight in ranks. As
they prepared to march he noticed someone had
stepped out in front
of the others.
The Prophet
(pbuh)prodded him in the side with an arrow, saying,
'Stand in line!' The
man, Sawad, exclaimed, 'You have hurt me, O
Messenger of Allah!
Allah has sent you to be just and good.' Prophet
(pbuh) lifted his
shirt and said, 'Then do the same to me. The man
approached and kissed
him on the spot instead, saying, '0 Messenger of
Allah, you see what
is before us and I may not survive the battle. If this is
my last time with
you, I want the last thing I do in life to be this.'Shortly
after he went into
battle, Sawad died a martyr. Having examined the
ranks, the Prophet
(pbuh) then went to a shelter made of palm branches
from which he could
command the battle. Abu Bakr stayed with him,
while Sa‟d ibn
Mu'adh, with several of the Ansar, stood outside guarding
the hut. When the
Prophet (pbuh) saw the enormous Quraysh army
descending the hill
into the valley, with all their banners and drums, he
began to pray for the
help which Allah had promised him. These were
some of his words. '0
Allah, here come Quraysh full of vanity and pride,
who oppose Thee and
call Thy Messenger a liar. O Allah, if this little
band (the Muslims)
perishes today, there will be none left in the land to
worship Thee.'
“When ye sought help
of your Lord and He answered you (saying): I
will help you with a
thousand of the angels, rank on rank. Allah
appointed it only as
good tidings, and that your hearts might thereby be at
ease. Victory cometh
only by the help of Allah. Lo! Allah is Mighty,
Wise”. (Qur'an 8.
9-10)
At first the battle
began in single combat when one of Quraysh swore
that he would drink
from the Muslims' reservoir and then destroy it, or
die in the attempt. Hamzah,
the Prophet's uncle, came forward to face him
and killed him. Three
of the most important men of Quraysh then stepped
forward and gave out
a challenge for single combat. The Prophet (pbuh)
sent out 'Ali,
Hamzah, and „Ubaydah ibn al-Harith, to face them. It was
not long before
Hamzah and „Ali had killed their opponents.
As for 'Ubaydah, he
had wounded his enemy but was wounded
himself, and so his
two companions killed the wounded Meccan and
carried 'Ubaydah back
to the safety of the Muslim ranks. After this, the
two armies attacked
each other and fighting broke out all around. The sky
was filled with
arrows. The Muslim army held its ground against the
great army of Quraysh
and even though the Muslims were much fewer in
number, they gained a
great victory, destroying the Meccan army and
killing most of its
leaders. Among the leading Meccans who died were
Abu Jahl and Umayyah
ibn Khalaf, who was killed by his former slave,
Bilal. Seeing that
their leaders were nearly all dead, the remainder of
Quraysh retreated.
The Prophet (pbuh) sent word to Medinahto tell them
of the victory. He
then gathered up the spoils of war and divided them
equally among the
Muslims. Some of the Meccans had been taken
prisoner and the
Prophet (pbuh) gave orders that they should be treated
well until their
relatives from among Quraysh came to fetch them.
“Ye (Muslims) did not
slay them, but Allah slew them and thou
(Muhammad) threwest
not when thou didst throw, but Allah threw, so
that He might test
the believers by a fair test from Him. Lo! Allah is Allhearing,
All-Knowing”. (Qur'an
8.17)
Uhud-Defeat Comes From Disobedience
When
the survivors of the defeated Quraysh at Badr to Mecca gathered
to speak with Abu
Sufyan. They said, 'Muhammad has best men, so help
us to fight him so
that we may avenge those we have lost.' In order to do
this it was agreed
that everyone who had had a share in the caravan
should put his
profits towards the cost of a new army, which would be
three times as big as
the one at Badr. Among those who joined the new
army was an
Abyssinian slave called Wahshi; who was known for his
accuracy with the
spear. His master, Jubayr ibn al-Mut‟im, said to him,
'Go with the army and
if you kill Hamzah, the uncle of Muhammad, in
revenge for my
uncle's death, I will set you free when Hind, Abu Sufyan's
wife, heard about
this she sent a Wahshi to say that she would clothe him
in gold and silk if
he would carry out his master's wish, for she, too,
wanted Hamzah dead
because he had both her father and brother.
While the Meccans made
their plans, the Prophet's uncle, „Abbas, one
the few Muslims still
living in Mecca, sent a letter of warning to the
Prophet (pbuh) in
Medina. He told him that Quraysh were setting out
with a huge arm for
Uhud, a place just outside Medina. On receiving this
timely warning the
Prophet (pbuh) gathered his companions around him
to discuss what they
should do. He thought it would be better to wait for
the enemy inside city
rather than go out to meet them, because it would
be easier to defend
Medinahfrom inside the city walls. But the young
Muslims were go out
and face Quraysh. They said, '0 Prophet of Allah,
lead us out against
our enemies, or else they will think we are too
cowardly and too weak
to fight them.' One of the rulers of Medina, „Abd
Allah ibn Ubayy,
however, agreed with the Prophet (pbuh) and advised
him to remain in the
city, saying, 'Whenever we have gone out to fight an
enemy we have met
with disaster, but none has ever come in against us
without being
defeated.'
But when the Prophet
(pbuh) saw that the majority were in favor of
going out to meet
Quraysh, he decided to do so, and after the Friday
prayer he put on his
armor.
The Muslims then set
out with one thousand men in the direction of
Mount Uhud which
overlooks Medina. The enemy was camped on the
plain below the
mountain where they were laying waste the crops of the
Muslims.'Abd Allah
ibn Ubayy was angry that the Prophet (pbuh) had not
followed his advice
and after going part of the way, turned back for
Medina, taking one
third of the entire army with him. This left the
Prophet (pbuh) with
only seven hundred men to meet the enormous
Meccan army, which
numbered three thousand.
The remainder of the
Mus1ims went on until they reached the
mountain of Uhud.
There the Prophet (pbuh) ordered them to stand in
ranks in front of the
mountain, so that they would be protected from
behind. He then
positioned fifty archers on top of the mountain, giving
them the following
order: 'Keep the Meccan cavalry away from us with
your arrows and don't
let them come against us from the rear, whether the
battle goes in our
favor or against us. Whatever happens keep to your
places so that we
cannot be attacked from your direction, even if you see
us being slain or
booty being taken.' When the Muslims were in position,
the Prophet (pbuh)
held up his sword and said, 'Who will use this sword
with its right?' This
was a great honor and many men rose to claim it, but
the Prophet (pbuh)
decided to give it to Abu Dujanah, a fearless warrior.
Then the battle
commenced. The Muslims were well organized and had
the advantage,
because although Quraysh had more than four times as
many men, they were
tired from their journey and thus not ready to fight.
As a result, the
Muslims were able to make a surprise attack, led by Abu
Dujanah, who was
wearing a brilliant red turban. As the fighting
increased the Quraysh
women, led by Hind, began to beat their drums to
urge their men on.
They called out poems to encourage their men to be
brave. 'If you
advance, we hug you, spread soft rugs beneath you; if you
retreat, we leave
you. Leave and no more love you.'
Abu Dujanah said: 'I
saw someone urging the enemy on, shouting wildly,
and I made for him,
but when I lifted my sword against him he screamed
and I saw that it was
a woman; I respected the Apostle's sword too much
to use it on a
woman.' That woman was Hind. As usual, Hamzah, the
Prophet's uncle,
fought with great courage, but while leading the Muslims
in a fierce attack,
which nearly defeated the Meccans, he was suddenly
and cruelly struck
down by the slave Wahshi. Later, Wahshi told how it
happened: 'I was
watching Hamzah while he was killing men with his
sword. I... aimed my
spear until I was sure it would the mark and hurled it
at him. He came on
towards me but collapsed and fell. I left him there
until he died, then I
came and took back my spear. Then I went back to
the camp because I
did not want to kill anyone but him. My only aim in
killing him was to
gain my freedom.'
The Quraysh warriors
were soon scattered and forced to retreat. It
looked as though they
had been defeated! Seeing this, forty of the fifty
Muslims archers on
top of the mountain ran down from their position to
collect booty, for
the Quraysh army had left many of their belongings
behind. The archers
rushed to take what they could, forgetting the
Prophet's orders.
Khalid Ibn al-Walid, Commander of the Quraysh
cavalry, saw what'
happening and quickly turned his men around and
ordered them to
attack the Muslims from behind. The Muslims were
taken completely by surprise.
The Quraysh then began attacking from
both sides at once.
Many Muslims were killed and instead of winning
they began to lose
the battle.
To add to the
confusion, it was rumored that the Prophet (pbuh) had
killed. When the
Muslims heard this they were at a loss to know what to
do. Then a man named
Anas called out, 'Brothers! If Muhammad (pbuh)
has been killed what
will your lives be worth without him? Don't think
about living or
dying. Fight for Allah. Get up and die the way
Muhammad (pbuh)
died!‟ and on hearing these words the Muslims took
courage.
There had been
several cavalry attacks on the position held by the
Prophet (pbuh) and
his companions and the Prophet's cheek had been
badly gashed. As the
Meccans closed in again he called out, 'Who will
sell his life for
us?' At this, five Ansar got up and fought until they were
killed, one by one.
Their places were
soon taken, however, by a number of Muslims who
drove off the
attackers. Amongst the defending Muslims was Abu
Dujanah who put his
arms around the Prophet (pbuh) and made himself
into a human shield.
Throughout the remainder of the battle he held on to
the Prophet (pbuh),
but as the fighting drew to a close he suddenly let go.
Abu Dujanah was dead,
killed by the many arrows in his back that had
been aimed at the
Prophet (pbuh). With the defeat of the Muslims,
Quraysh were at last
avenged. As they left the field of battle Abu Sufyan
called out to his
men, 'You have done well; victory in war goes by turnstoday
in exchange for
Badr!' When he heard this, the Prophet (pbuh) told
„Umar to answer him,
saying, 'Allah is Most High and Most Glorious. We
are not equal. Our
dead are in Paradise and your dead are in Hell!' The
Muslim soldiers then
followed the departing Quraysh part of the way to
make sure they were
not going to attack Medinah.
After the enemy had
left, the Prophet (pbuh) made his way around the
Battle-field to see
the extent of the Muslim losses. Many of the most
faithful Muslims had
been killed. Among the dead, the Prophet (pbuh)
found the body of his
closest friend and uncle, Hamzah, who had been
killed by the slave,
Wahshi. At the sight of this, the Prophet (pbuh) said,
'There will never be
a moment as sad for me as this.' Hamzah's sister,
Safiyya, came to pray
and ask forgiveness for her brother, saying 'We
belong to Allah and
to Allah we are returning.' After the Prophet (pbuh)
had prayed over the
many dead, he said, 'I tell you that no one has been
wounded in Allah's
cause but Allah will remember him and on the Day of
Resurrection will raise
him from the dead. Look for the one who has
learned most of the
Qur'an and put him in front of his companions in the
grave.' They were
buried where they had fallen as martyrs.
Of them Allah says:
“Do not think that
those, who were killed for Allah's sake are dead.
Nay, they are alive.
With their Lord they have provision. Jubilant (are
they) because of that
which Allah hath bestowed upon them of His
bounty, rejoicing for
the sake of those that have not yet joined them
because they have
nothing to fear or grieve over”.(Qur'an 3.169-170)
It is said that the
Prophet (pbuh) swore that no Muslim who had died
for his beliefs would
want to come back to life for a single hour, even if
he could own the
whole world, unless he could return and fight for Allah
and be killed a
second time. The Muslims realised that their defeat had
been caused by their
disobedience to the Prophet (pbuh). The Qur'an tells
us that the Muslims
had been tested by Allah at Uhud and had failed but
that Allah forgave
them their weakness.
“Some of you there
are that desire this world, and some of you there
are that desire the
next world. Then He turned you from them, that He
might try you; and He
has forgiven you; and Allah is bounteous to the
believers”. (Qur'an
3.145)
People living nowadays
should learn from the lessons learned by the
early Muslims at
Uhud. Disobedience to the Prophet (pbuh) and love for
the things of this
world caused their defeat. The same can happen to us as
well. Even if we have
no battle like Uhud to fight, we can still die for
Allah's sake by
fighting what is bad in ourselves. When the Prophet
(pbuh) came back from
a battle he said to his men, 'We have returned
from the lesser war
to the greater war.' He meant by this that the struggle
that goes on within
every human being to become a better person is the
more difficult
battle.
The Battle Of The Trench
When
the Prophet (Pbuh) first arrived in Medinah, the Jews who were
living there had
welcomed him. The Prophet (Pbuh) had returned their
greeting, as he
wished to be on good terms with them. An agreement was
also reached between
the Muslims and the Jews, which gave the Jews the
freedom to practice
their religion and which also set out their rights and
their duties. Among
these duties was that in the case of war with
Quraysh, the Jews
would fight on the side of the Muslims.
Despite this
agreement, however, some of the Jewish tribes, who
resented the
Prophet's presence in Medinah, soon began to cause trouble
amongst the Muslims.
They tried to set the Muslim Emigrants from
Mecca and the Ansar
against each other. The troublemakers were given
many warnings but
they continued to be a nuisance. In the end, the
Muslims had no choice
but to drive them from Medinah. A new
agreement was offered
those Jews who remained but the trouble did not
end there. One of the
Jewish tribes, the Bani Nadir plotted to murder the
Prophet (Pbuh) but
their plan was discovered and they, too, were exiled
from the city.
Knowing that they could not defeat the Muslims
themselves, some of
the leaders of the exiled Jews secretly went to Mecca
to enlist the help of
Quraysh. Knowing what the Meccans would like to
hear, they pretended
to believe in the same things. They said that they
thought that the old
Arab tradition was better than the teachings of the
Prophet Muhammad
(Pbuh) and that they believed that the Quraysh
religion of
worshipping many idols was better than the Prophet's with
only one God. Then
the Jews told them that if all the Arab tribes attacked
Medinah, the Jews
inside the city would help to defeat the Prophet (Pbuh)
and Islam once and
for all.
The leaders of
Quraysh were pleased to hear all this and seizing on
what seemed to them a
very good opportunity, agreed to the plan and
began to gather
together a formidable army. In the meantime in Medinah,
only one Jewish
tribe, the Bani Quraydhah, refused to betray the
Muslims.
Eventually the
Muslims learned of the preparations being made for
war in Mecca and of
the plotting of the Jews within Medinahitself. The
betrayal of the
Muslims by the Jews did not surprise the Prophet (Pbuh),
who said of them:
'The hearts of the Jews have become closed to the
truth. They have
forgotten what Muses taught them long ago that there is
only one God.'
“The likeness of
those who are entrusted with the Law of Moses, yet
apply it not, is as
the likeness of the ass carrying books. Evil is the
likeness of the
people who deny the revelations of Allah. And Allah
guideth not
wrongdoing folk”. (Qur'an 62.5)
The Muslims wondered
how they could defend Medinah. They heard
that Abu Sufyan was
coming to attack them with an enormous army
which included many
other Arab tribes, as well as Quraysh. What were
they to do with only
a single week to prepare? The Prophet (Pbuh) and
his men knew that it
would be impossible for them to fight off all these
tribes! The only
thing they could do was to stay inside the city and try to
defend it as best
they could. Now among the people of Medinah was a
Persian named Salman,
who had to live in the city some time before the
Prophet's arrival
there. As a convert to Christianity he had traveled to
Medinah after
Christian sages had told him that a Prophet would be born
in Arabia. On
arriving in he was, however, sold into slavery by the
merchants with whom
he had traveled. Later he became a Muslim, gained
his freedom and
became a member of the Prophet's household.
When the people
gathered to discuss a plan of action against the
approaching enemy,
Salman was present and it was he who suggested
that they should dig
a trench around the city. The Prophet (Pbuh) thought
this a good idea, so
the Muslims set to work, although it was in the
middle of winter.
They worked day and night, digging the trench as
quickly as possible.
The Prophet (Pbuh) himself carried rocks and when
the men were tired he
gave them the will to carry on. Someone later
recalled how
beautiful he looked, dressed in a red cloak with dust upon
his breast and his
dark hair nearly reaching his shoulders. There was little
food at this time and
the men were often hungry as they worked.
On one occasion, however,
a little girl gave some dates to the Prophet
(Pbuh), which he
spread out on a cloth. The men were then called to eat
and the dates kept
increasing in number until everyone had been fed.
Even after everyone
had eaten their fill, the dates continued to increase so
that there were more
than the cloth could hold. Similarly, there is the
story of the lamb,
that has come down to us from one who was there: 'We
worked with the
Apostle at the trench. I had a half-grown lamb and I
thought it would be a
good thing to cook it for Allah's Messenger. I told
my wife to grind
barley and make some bread for us. I killed the lamb
and we roasted it for
the Prophet (Pbuh). When night fell and he was
about to leave the
trench, I told him we had prepared bread and meat and
invited him to our
home. I wanted him to come on his own, but when I
said this he sent
someone to call all the men to come along. Everyone
arrived and the food
was served. He blessed it and invoked the Name of
Allah over it. Then
he ate and so did all of the others. As soon as one lot
were satisfied,
another group came until all the diggers had eaten enough,
but still there was
food to spare.
On March 24, 627 A.D,
Abu Sufyan arrived with more than ten
thousand men. The
Muslims numbered only three thousand. Quraysh and
their allies
surrounded Medinah but between the two armies was the long,
wide trench.
The Prophet (pbuh)
and his men stayed behind this trench for nearly a
month defending the
city against their more powerful enemy. Many times
warriors tried to
cross the trench and enter the city, but each time they
were pushed back by
the Muslims. The Muslims were afraid that if any
did manage to cross
over, the Jews inside Medinah would join forces with
them and the Muslims
would be beaten. The Jewish tribe of Bani
Quraydhah, who had
stood by the, agreement with the Muslims, were
pressed by a Jewish
emissary from the enemy without, to break their
promise. Eventually
they agreed to do so and when the news of this
reached the Prophet
(pbuh) and his companions they were greatly
troubled. Sa'd ibn
Mu'adh, the leader of the tribe of Aws, was sent by the
Prophet (pbuh) with
two other men to find out if this were true. When
they arrived in the
part of Medinah where the Jews lived, they found were
even worse than they
had previously thought.
Sa'd ibn Mu'adh,
whose tribe was closely allied with the Bani
Quraydhah, tried to
persuade their leader not to break the treaty with the
Muslims, but he
refused to listen. This meant that the Muslims could not
relax their guard for
one moment, for they were now threatened not only
by the enemy beyond
the trench, but by the Bani Qurayzah, within the
walls of the city.
Things became more
difficult for the Muslims day by day. It was
extremely cold and
food began to run out. To make matters worse, the
Bani Qurayzah began
openly and actively to join forces with the other
Jews and cut off all
supplies to the Muslims, including food. The enemies
of Islam then planned
how to capture Medinah.
The situation looked
desperate and the Prophet (pbuh) prayed to Allah
to Allah to help the
Muslims defeat their enemies. That very night a
sandstorm blew up
which buried the tents of Quraysh. The storm
continued for three
days and three nights making it impossible for the
enemy to light a fire
to cook a meal or warm themselves by.
On one of these dark
nights the Prophet (pbuh) asked one of his men,
Hudhayfah Ibn
al-Yaman, to go on a dangerous mission. The Prophet
(pbuh) told him to
make his way across the trench to the enemy camp
where he should find
out what they were doing. With much difficulty
Hudhayfah crossed the
trench and made his way to a circle of Quraysh
warriors talking in
the darkness. He sat near them, but as there was no
fire, no one noticed
him. He then heard Abu Sufyan's voice: 'Let us go
home!' he said. 'We
have had enough. The horses and camels are dying,
the tents keep
blowing away, most of the equipment has been lost, and we
can not cook our
food. There is no reason to stay!'
Shortly after hearing
this Hudhayfah made his way quickly and
quietly back across
the trench and the next morning the Muslims rejoiced
to find that what he
had overheard had come true-Quraysh and their allies
had gone away! The
siege of Medinah had ended in a great victory for
Islam. But this was
not to be the end of the difficulties, for the Archangel
Gabriel the Prophet
(pbuh) and told him that he should punish the Bani
Qurayzah for
betraying him and the Muslims.
On hearing this, the
Prophet (pbuh) ordered the Muslims to march
against the Bani
Qurayzah as they hid in their fortress. The Muslims
besieged them for
twenty-five days until they finally gave in. On
surrendering, they
asked the Prophet (pbuh) to let someone judge their
case, and he agreed.
He also allowed them to choose who would give the
ruling. The man
chosen to judge the Bani Qurayzah was Sa'd ibn Mu'adh,
leader of the Aws, a
tribe which had always protected the Qurayzah in the
past. Sa'd ibn Mu'adh
who had himself been wounded in the battle,
decided that the Jews
should be tried by their own Holy Law, according
to which anyone who
broke a treaty would be put to death. As a result all
the men of the Bani
Qurayzah were executed and the women and children
made captive. If the
Jews had succeeded in their pact, Islam would have
been destroyed.
Instead from that day on, Medinah became a city where
only Muslims lived.
Very soon after peace
had been restored to Medinah, Sa'd ibn Mu'adh
died of his wounds.
It was said that the Archangel Gabriel came in the
middle of that night
and said to the Prophet (pbuh) '0 Muhammad, who is
this dead man? When
he arrived, the doors of heaven opened and the
Throne of Allah
shook.' The Prophet (pbuh) got up as soon as he heard
this, but found that
Sa'd was already dead. Although he had been a heavy
man, the men who
carried his body to the grave found it quite light. They
were told that the
angels were helping them. When he was buried, the
Prophet (pbuh) said
three times 'Subhan Allah!' (Glory be to Allah!), and
'Allahu Akbar!'
(Allah is Most Great!). When asked why he did this, he
replied, 'The grave
was tight for this good man, until Allah eased it for
him.' This is one of
the rewards that Allah gives to martyrs and good
Muslims.
The Treaty Of Hudaybiyah
Ouraysh
had tried to destroy Islam but had failed. The number of
Muslims grew and
their armies increased from three hundred at the battle
of Badr, seven
hundred at the battle of "Uhud, to three thousand at the
battle of the Trench.
After the annual fast of Ramadan, the Prophet (pbuh)
had a dream, which
indicated that the Muslims should go to Mecca for
the pilgrimage. One
thousand and four hundred Muslims got ready to go
with him on the
Lesser Pilgrimage called 'the `Umra'. They dressed in
white and went
unarmed to show Quraysh that they had come to make the
pilgrimage and not to
fight. When Quraysh heard that the Prophet (pbuh)
was on his way, they
sent troops with Khalid Ibn al-Walid to stop the
Muslims from entering
the city. To avoid meeting this small army the
Prophet (pbuh)
changed his route and led the men through rugged
mountain passes. When
they reached easier ground he told them, 'Say, we
ask Allah's
forgiveness and we repent towards Him 'At Hudaybiyah,
south of Mecca, the
Prophet's camel knelt down and refused to go any
further. The Muslims
thought she was either stubborn or tired, but the
Prophet (pbuh) said:
'The same power that once stopped the elephant
from entering Mecca
is now stopping us!' He then ordered them to make
camp, which they did,
although they all hoped they would travel on to the
sacred Ka'bah the
following day.
On setting up camp,
the believers were dismayed to find that the
springs were almost
dry. When he heard this the Messenger of Allah
(pbuh) instructed a
man called Najiyah to take the bowl of water in which
he had performed his
ablutions, pour it into the hollows where the small
amount of spring
water lay, and stir it with his arrows. Najiyah did as he
was told and the
fresh water gushed up so suddenly that he was hardly
able to get out of
the way in time.
Messengers were sent
to Quraysh to tell them that the Muslims had
come only for the
pilgrimage, to worship Allah at the Holy Ka'bah, and
that they wanted to
enter the city peacefully. But Quraysh took no notice.
Finally, the
Prophet's son-in-law, 'Uthman Ibn Affan, a wise and
respected man, was chosen
to go, and the Muslims settled down to wait
and see what news he
would bring back. After they had waited a long
time, the Muslims
became very worried. At last they decided that he must
have been killed. A
state similar to that of Revelation then came upon the
Prophet (pbuh). He
gathered the Muslims around him under an acacia tree
and asked them to
swear their allegiance to him, which they did. This
pact, which is
mentioned in the Qur'an, became known as the Treaty of
Radwan (which means
Paradise). Shortly after, `Uthman Ibn Affan
returned and the
Muslims were relieved to see that no harm had come to
him. Some Meccan
warriors tried to attack the Muslim camp but were
captured and brought
before the Prophet (pbuh), who forgave them when
they promise to stop
attacking the Muslims. Soon after this, official
messengers came from
Quraysh and talks began for a peaceful settlement.
A man called Suhayl
ibn 'Amr was sent by the Meccans to work out a
treaty. When the
Prophet (pbuh) asked 'Ali to write 'In the Name of Allah,
the Most Gracious,
the Most Merciful', on the top of the page, Suhayl
objected, saying
'Write only: bismik Allahumma (in Thy name, 0 Allah).
I don't know him as
al-Rahman (the Most Gracious), al-Rahim (the most
Merciful).' The
Prophet (pbuh) agreed and dictated: 'This is a treaty
between Muhammad the
Messenger of Allah and Suhayl ibn 'Amr.''Stop!'
cried Suhayl, 'I
don't believe that you are Rasulallah (the Messenger of
Allah). If I thought
you were Allah's Messenger, I wouldn't be fighting
against you, would
I?' Calmly, the Prophet (pbuh) agreed that he should
be referred to in the
treaty as Muhammad', son of 'Abd Allah. The
Muslims were very
upset at this, and 'Umar furiously cried out, 'Are you
not Allah's
Messenger, and are we not Muslims? How can we accept such
treatment when we are
right and they are wrong? This will make people
laugh at our
religion!' But the Prophet (pbuh) knew what was best and the
Treaty of Hudaybiyah
was signed.
In this treaty the
two sides agreed to stop fighting for a period often
years. It was also
agreed that the Muslims should go back to Medinah
immediately but that
they could return the following year for the
pilgrimage. This
pilgrimage would last three days. In addition, the treaty
allowed Muslims
wishing to leave Islam and return to Mecca to do so.
It also permitted
Meccans to leave and become Muslims provided
they had the
permission of their guardians. The Muslims agreed to send
any Meccan who did
not have their guardian's permission back to Mecca.
Suhayl's son had come
with his father with the idea of joining the
Prophet (pbuh) but
when the treaty was signed he was, of course, forced
to return to Mecca.
He cried bitterly. The Prophet (pbuh) said, '0 Abu
Jandal, be patient
and control yourself. Allah will provide relief and find
a way out for you and
others like you.'
The majority of the
Muslims were very disappointed when they heard
the terms of the
agreement and thought that it should not have been
accepted. They did
not realize that this was in fact a great victory for the
Prophet (pbuh), which
Allah would later confirm in a Revelation. The
agreement made sure
that the following year they would enter Mecca
peacefully, and in
time would result in Muslims becoming stronger and
more respected
throughout Arabia. At the time the treaty was signed the
Muslims could not
have foreseen that the number of people who would
travel to Medinah to
become Muslims in following year would be greater
than in all the years
before. Before the Muslims departed, they followed
the Prophet's example
of making sacrifice and either shaving or cutting
their hair. Even
though they were unable to visit the sacred mosque, their
pilgrimage was
accepted by Allah because it had been their true intention.
On the return journey
to Medinah, the 'Victory' chapter of the Qur'an
was revealed to the
Prophet (pbuh). It begins:
In
the Name of Allah, the Beneficent, the Merciful
“Surely We have given
thee (0 Muhammad) a clear victory, That
Allah may forgive
thee of thy sin That which is past and that which is to
come, And may
complete His blessings upon thee, And may guide thee
on the right path,
And that Allah may help thee with mighty help”.
(Qur'an 48.1-3)
Now most of those who
left Mecca to join the Prophet (pbuh) without
the consent of their
guardians and were turned back by him as agreed,
Did not in fact
return to Mecca, but lived instead in groups along the
seashore. Then they
were joined by others who had left Mecca but these
groups began to
endanger Quraysh caravans which were passing by and
disrupted their trade
because of this, Quraysh told the Prophet (pbuh) that
if he wanted to take
these new Muslims, they would not ask for them to
be returned. The
young men, therefore, joined the Prophet (pbuh) and the
people in Mecca and
Medinah grew more at ease with one another. The
young men from the
seashore were shortly followed by those Muslims
who were still living
in Abyssinia, and soon the numbers of believers in
Medinah had doubled.
About this time,
Khalid Ibn al-Walid, the great warrior who had
defeated the Muslims
at Uhud, set out from Mecca for Medinah. Along
the way he met 'Amr
Ibn al-'As, the clever speaker who had pursued the
Muslims when they
fled to Abyssinia. 'Amr, who had attempted to find
asylum in Abyssinia,
had just returned from that country, the Negus
having urged him to
enter Islam. He asked Khalid, 'Where are you
going?' Khalid
replied, 'The way has become clear. The man is certainly a
Prophet, and by
Allah, I am going to become a Muslim. How much
longer should I
delay?' 'Amr Ibn al-As answered, 'I am travelling for the
same reason. So they
both traveled on to Medinah to join the
Prophet(pbuh). The
two men were, however, worried about meeting the
Prophet (pbuh)
because of having fought against the Muslims in the past.
Therefore, 'Amr came
before Allah's Messenger he said, 'O Prophet,
will my past faults
be forgiven and no mention made of what has gone
before?' The Prophet
(pbuh) replied, 'Amr, Islam wipes away everything
that happened before,
as does the hijrah.'
A year after the
signing of the Treaty of Hudaybiyah, the Prophet
(pbuh) was able to
lead two thousand pilgrims on the 'Umra. Quraysh
vacated Mecca and
watched the rites from the hills above the city. The
agreed period of
three days was observed, after which the Muslims
returned to Medinah.
The Invitation
The
peace which the Treaty of Hudaybiyah guaranteed for ten years
meant people could
travel from all over Arabia to visit the Prophet (pbuh)
and a great many came
to declare their Islam. Also, during this period the
Prophet (pbuh) decided
that the time had come for his message to be
taken to other
countries, so he sent trusted companions with letters,
telling of his
message, to the leaders of the most powerful nations of the
day. It is recorded
that he said, Allah has sent me as a mercy to all men,
so take the message
from me that Allah has mercy on you.‟ It is also
recorded that some
time before, when the Prophet (pbuh) was digging
before the Battle of
the Trench, three flashes of lightning had blared forth
from a rock he had
been striving to remove. These flashes had shown him
the fortresses of the
civilizations to the South, East, and West which were
soon to come into
Islam.
Now at the time the
Prophet (pbuh) sent out his message. Abu Sufyan
and some other
members of Quraysh were trading in Syria, a province of
the Eastern Roman
Empire (later to be called Byzantium). Also, at about
this time the Emperor
Heraclius, ruler of this Empire, had a dream, and
sadly told visitors
to his court in Syria: „I saw our Empire fall and victory
go to a people who do
not follow our religion.' At first he thought this
must refer to the
Jews and he even had it in mind to kill all the Jews
living under his rule
fit then an envoy from the governor of Basra arrived
with a message for
the Emperor: 0 Emperor Heraclius. there are some
Arabs in the city who
are speaking of wonderful happenings in their
country', and he then
told of what he had heard about the Prophet (pbuh).
On hearing this
Heraclius commanded his soldiers: Go and find me
someone who can tell me
more about this.' The soldiers, however, did not
find those who had
been talking about the Prophet (pbuh), but instead
found Abu Sufyan and
some of his companions and brought them before
the Emperor.
Heraclius asked, 'Is
there anyone among you who is a close relative of
the Prophet Muhammad
(pbuh)?' Abu Sufyan replied, „I am.‟ So the
Emperor addressed all
the questions to him, thinking he would know the
Prophet (pbuh) best.
He said, 'Tell me what is the Prophet's position in
your tribe" Abu
Sufyan said, 'he is a member of our most respected
family. Did anyone
before him say the kinds of things he says?' the
Emperor went on.
„No.‟ was the reply.' And was he ever accused of lying
or cheating?'
„Never.‟ And then the Emperor asked: „And what about his
ideas and opinions,
and his powers of reasoning?‟ „No one has ever had
cause to doubt him or
find fault with his reasoning‟, replied Abu Sufyan.
„Who follows him, the
proud or the humble?‟ „The humble.‟ „Do his
followers increase or
decrease?‟ „They increase‟, said Abu Sufyan, „none
of his followers
leave him.‟ The Emperor then turned to other matters and
asked: „If he makes a
treaty, does he keep it?‟ „Yes‟, Abu Sufyan replied.
„Did you ever fight
against him?‟ inquired the Emperor. To which Abu
Sufyan answered: „Yes.
Sometimes we won, sometimes he won, but he
never broke his word
in any agreement.‟ The emperor then asked: „What
does he say people
must do?‟ „To worship one God‟, said Abu Sufyan.
„He forbids people to
worship as their fathers worshipped, and says they
must pray to Allah
alone, give elms, keep their word, and fulfil their
duties and
responsibilities.‟ Abu Sufyan had spoken the truth even though
he was an enemy of
the prophet (pbuh), and did not become a Muslim
until the very end of
his life. But he was afraid to lie before the members
of his caravan who
were also there with him. The meeting ended with
these words from the
Emperor: „I see from this that he is indeed a
prophet. You said
that his followers don not leave him which proves they
have true faith, for
faith does not enter the heart and then go away. I knew
he was coming and if
what you say is true, he will surely conquer me. If I
were with him now, I
would wash his feet. You may leave now.‟
It was not long after
this that the messenger, Dihyah, arrived at the
Syrian court bearing
the Prophet Mohammed‟s letter which said, „If you
accept Islam you will
be safe and Allah will give you a double reward. If
you do not, you will
have to live with results of your decision.‟ Heraclius
grabbed the letter.
He was so upset he could hardly control himself. He
said to Dihyah, „I
know your master is a true prophet of Allah. Our books
tell of his coming.
If I were not afraid
that the Romans would kill me, I would join Islam.
You must visit Bishop
Daghatir and tell him every thing. His word is
more respected among
the people than mine.‟ So Dihyah related the
message to the Bishop
and when he heard it, Daghatir said, „Yes, your
master whom we call
Ahmed is mentioned in our scriptures.‟ He then
changed from his black
ropes into white ones and went and spoke to the
people gathered in
the church. ‟O Romans, a letter has come to us from
Ahmed, in which he
calls us to Allah. I bear witness that there is no
Divinity but Allah
and that Ahmed is his slave and messenger.‟ (Ahmed
is another name for
the Prophet Muhammad (pbuh).) But on hearing this
the crowd grew angry
and attacked Daghatir, beating him until he was
dead.
Heraclius was afraid
that the same thing would happen to him, so he
spoke to his generals
from a balcony saying, „O Romans! A man has
written to me calling
me to his religion I believe he is truly the prophet
we have been told to
expect. Let us follow him so that we can be happy in
this world and the
next.‟ The Romans cried out in anger when they heard
this, so Heraclius
quickly said, „I was only pretending; I wanted to see
how strong your faith
was. I am pleased to see that you are true to your
religion.‟ Heraclius
then suggested that they attack or give land to the
Muslims in order to
maintain peace, but the Romans refused. Realizing
that he could do no
more, and knowing that one day Islam would conquer
Syria, Heraclius left
the province and returned to Constantinople, the
capital of Eastern
Roman Empire.
As he rode away he
turned around to look back and said, „Goodbye for
the last time, O land
of Syria!‟ Meanwhile, another of the Prophet‟s
messengers arrived at
the palace of Chosroes, the Shah (or king) of
Persia, where he was
told by the royal guard: „When you see the Shah,
you must bow and not
lift your head until he speaks to you.‟ To this the
Prophet‟s messenger
replied, `I will never do that. I bow only to Allah.‟
„Then the Shah will
not accept the letter you bring‟, they said. And when
the time came for the
messenger to see him, the Shah was indeed very
surprised to see the
man holding his head high and refusing to kneel
respectfully before
him like everyone else. Nonetheless, the Shah still
read out the letter:
In
the name of Allah, the Beneficent, the Most Merciful
“From Muhammad,
Messenger of Allah to Chosroes, Shah of Persia.
Peace be upon those
who follow the truth, who believe in Allah and His
Prophet and who
testify that there is no divinity but Allah and that
Muhammad is His
Messenger. I ask you in the Name of Allah, because I
am His Messenger, to
warn your people that if they do not accept His
Message, they must
live with the consequences. Become Muslim and you
will be safe. If you
refuse to tell them you will be to blame for the
ignorance of your
subjects”.
The Shah was furious
when he read this and tore the letter into little
pieces. When the
messenger returned to Arabia and told the Prophet
(pbuh) what Chosroes
had done, the Prophet (pbuh) said, 'May Allah also
tear his kingdom into
little pieces.' And several years later it happened
just as the Prophet
(pbuh) had said it would. As with Syria and Persia, a
messenger was also
sent to the Negus (or King) of Abyssinia, with the
following letter:
“Peace. Praise be to Allah, the King, the
All-Holy, the Peacemaker,
the Keeper of Faith,
the Watcher. “He is Allah, there is no divinity but
He, the Sovereign
Lord, the Holy One, the All-peaceable, the Keeper of
Faith, the Guardian,
the Majestic, the Compeller, the All-sublime.
Glorified be Allah
from all that they associate with Him”.(Qur'an 59.23)
And I testify that
Jesus, son of Mary, is the spirit of Allah and His
Word which He cast to
Mary the Virgin, the good, the pure, so that she
conceived Jesus.
Allah created him from His Spirit and His Breath as He
created Adam by His
Hand and His Breath. I call you to Allah, the
Unique, without
partner, to His obedience, and to follow me and to
believe in that which
came to me, for I am the Messenger of Allah. Peace
be upon all those who
follow true guidance.
The King of Abyssinia
was a very wise man, and was thought by the
world to be a good
Christian. He had, of course, already heard of the
Prophet (pbuh) and
his religion from the Muslims who had sought refuge
in his country years
before. He was deeply moved by the letter and when
he came down from his
throne it was not just to show his respect but also
to declare that he
was already a Muslim. He answered the Prophet's letter
with one of his own.
“To Muhammad the Prophet of Allah from the
Negus al-Asham, King
of Abyssinia. Assalamu aleikum 0 Prophet of
Allah wa rahmatullah
wa Barakatuhu.
There is none like
Him who has guided me to Islam. I received your
letter, O Messenger
of Allah. Some of your followers, as well as your
cousin Ja'far, still
live here. I believe you arc truly the Messenger of God
and reaffirm the pledge
of allegiance I made to you some time ago before
your cousin Ja‟far,
at whose hand I joined Islam and surrendered to the
Lord of the Worlds.
A fourth messenger
had, in the meantime, traveled by boat to
Alexandria to meet
the Muqawqis, the ruler of Egypt, who was a Coptic
Christian. In his
letter, the Prophet (pbuh) invited the Muqawqis to accept
Islam, because
Christian who believed in the message of Jesus should
also believe in him,
for he had come with the same message from Allah.
It read:
In
the name of Allah, the Beneficent, the Most Merciful,
“From Muhammad, son
of 'Abd Allah to the great Copt.
Peace he upon whoever
follows the Truth. I beseech you to accept Islam.
Become a Muslim.
Allah will reward you twice.
If you refuse, you
will carry the blame for not allowing your people to
share in this
blessing”. The Muqawqis showed respect for what the letter
said. He treated the
messenger well, and sent many presents with him for
the Prophet (pbuh),
but he did not become a Muslim. Although only
Abyssinia responded
to the Prophet's call to Islam, all was not lost, for a
few years later
Persia, Syria and Egypt all became Muslim countries.
Entry Into Mecca
Despite
the improved relations between Mecca and Medinah after the
signing of the Treaty
of Hudaybiyah, the ten-year peace was to be broken
by Quraysh who, with
their allies, the Bani Bakr, attacked the Khuza‟ah
tribe. Now Khuza‟ah
were allies of the Muslims and when the Prophet
(pbuh)heard of the
attack he immediately ordered his men to prepare for
war. When they were
ready he told them that their destination was Mecca
and, as he did not
want any fighting within the walls of the city, he told
them they must move
quickly and take the enemy by surprise. In this way
the Meccans would not
have time to prepare for war and, being
surrounded would have
to surrender. The Muslims would then be able to
take the city without
injury or loss of life to anyone.
When the Muslim army,
which numbered ten thousand, set out for
Mecca it was the
month of Ramadan in the eighth year of the Hijrah.
Many of the men kept
the fast, even though they were not obliged to
because they were
travelling. Everyone was jubilant because they were
going to Mecca,
especially as some of them had not seen their homes in
the city for eight long
years. In the meantime, the Prophet's uncle, al-
'Abbas, had decided
that the time had come for him and his wife to leave
Mecca and join the
Prophet (pbuh) in Medinah. They did not, however,
have to go far as
after a distance of only twenty-five kilometers they
came across the
Muslim camp. When the Prophet (pbuh) saw them he
said, 'Uncle, your
emigration is the last emigration. My prophecy is the
last prophecy.'
Al-'Abbas then joined the army and his wife went on to
the safety of
Medinah.
Night fell and the
Muslims made fires to light their camp. The
Meccans, looking out
of the city, were amazed to see the many fires, and
Abu Sufyan went all
over Mecca trying to find out whose camp it was.
Suddenly he saw
al-„Abbas riding towards him from the direction of the
fires. He was
returning as a messenger of peace from the Prophet (pbuh)
and said to Abu
Sufyan, 'The Muslims have come with a large army.
They do not wish to
fight, only to enter the city. It would be better to
surrender and not
fight. Come under my protection and meet the Prophet
(pbuh).' Abu Sufyan
agreed, and got up behind al-Abbas, who was riding
the Prophet‟s white
mule. It was still night as they entered the Muslim
camp. Each time they
passed a fire, someone would call out, 'Who goes
there?' None of them
recognized the stranger as the leader of their enemy
but all knew
al-„Abbas and so let them through. As they passed by 'Umar,
however, he
immediately recognized Abu Sufyan and yelled out, 'Abu
Sufyan! The enemy of
Allah!' He ran after them intending to kill his
enemy but al-„Abbas
made the mule go faster. They reached the Prophet's
tent just before
„Umar who rushed in after them quite out of breath.
'Umar begged the
Prophet (pbuh), '0 Messenger of Allah, let me end the
life of Abu Sufyan,
this enemy of Islam, who has led the Quraysh armies
in their attacks on
us!' Al-„Abbas interrupted, saying, 'I have sworn to
protect him during
his time here whereupon the Prophet (pbuh) told his
uncle to take Abu
Sufyan to his tent for the night.
In the morning Abu
Sufyan was taken to the Prophet (pbuh) who said,
'Abu Sufyan! Have you
not yet realized that there is no divinity but
Allah?' To this Abu
Sufyan replied, 'If there had been another he surely
would Have helped me
by now.‟ „Shame on you, Abu Sufyan', responded
the Prophet (pbuh),
'it is time you realize that I am truly Allah's
Messenger.' After a
moment or two, Abu Sufyan, who remembered how
„Umar had not been
allowed to kill him, replied: 'I can see you are a
generous and
forgiving man but I still cannot be sure of that.' At this, al-
„Abbas, who had been
standing nearby turned to him and said: „Believe
as I do now.' Abu
Sufyan stood quietly for a moment, then in a calm,
clear voice swore in
front of everyone, there is no divinity but Allah, and
Muhammad is the
messenger of Allah.'
The Prophet (pbuh)
then told Abu Sufyan to go back to Mecca and
tell the people that
the Muslims would enter the city the next morning.
Before he left,
however, al-'Abbas suggested to the Prophet (pbuh) that as
Abu Sufyan was a
proud man, it would be good to give him an honorable
position. The Prophet
(pbuh) took this advice, saying to Abu Sufyan, 'Tell
the people that when
we enter, anyone seeking refuge in your house will
be safe.' This was a
great honor for Abu Sufyan.
In addition, the
Prophet (pbuh) told him to assure the Meccans that
those who remained in
their own homes or at the Ka‟bah would also be
protected.
Abu Sufyan returned
quickly to the city. He made straight for the hill
Hagar had climbed in
her search for water and from which the Prophet
(pbuh) later spoke,
and called upon Quraysh to come to him. Abu Sufyan
then spoke to the
people, '0 people of Mecca, the fires we saw all around
us were the camp
fires of Muhammad and his men. He has come with a
strong army and there
are too many for us to fight. It is best, therefore, to
surrender. Anyone who
stays in my house, or in his own home, or at the
Ka'bah will be safe.'
Early next day, the
Muslims entered Mecca from all sides. They had
been ordered to cause
no harm unless anyone tried to stop them entering.
When the Prophet
(pbuh) arrived, he got off his camel, bowed down on
the ground and
thanked Allah for this victory. When the unbelievers saw
this, they knew that
the Prophet (pbuh) had come in peace. People began
leaving their homes
and running towards the Ka‟bah. When they arrived
there, they found the
Prophet (pbuh) performing the ritual encircling of
the Ka'bah, the tawaf
on his camel, surrounded by the Muslims. When he
had finished, he
said, 'There no divinity except Allah and He has no
partner. Men and
women of Quraysh be not proud for all are equal; we
are all the sons of
Adam, and Adam was made of dust.' Then he recited
this verse to them:
“O mankind! Lo! We
have created you male and female, and have
made you nations and
tribes so you may know each another. Surely the
noblest of you, in
the sight of Allah, is the best in conduct. Lo! Allah is
All-knowing,
All-aware”. (Qur'an 49.13)
After this he said to
them: 'O Quraysh, what do you think I am going
to do to you?' The
people thought carefully before answering because
they knew that
according to the laws of war they could all be taken
prisoner. They also
knew, however, that the Prophet Muhammad (pbuh)
was generous, so they
replied, „You will treat us as a kind nephew and a
generous brother
would.'
To this he replied
with the words used by the Prophet Joseph when his
brothers came to
Egypt: 'God forgives you and He is the Most Merciful of
the merciful.' Later
the Prophet (pbuh) went to the hill of Safa and there
the crowd followed
him and surged forward, taking his hand one by one,
to declare themselves
Muslim. He then turned to the Ka'bah and, pointing
his staff at the
three hundred and sixty-five idols which were placed there,
recited from the
Qur'an:
“… Truth has come and
falsehood has vanished away. Lo! Falsehood
is ever bound to
vanish”. (Qur'an 17.81)
At this, each idol
fell over onto its face. Together with his followers
the Prophet (pbuh)
then proceeded to purify the Ka'bah, after which he
ordered Bilal to climb
on top of it and perform the call to prayer. Since
then the call to
prayer has been heard five times a day in Mecca.
The Ka'bah, the House
of Allah, has served the purpose for which it
was built by Abraham
thousands of years ago, as a sanctuary for the
worship of Allah, our
Creator, and Mecca continues to be the spiritual
centre of Islam.
On the day Mecca was
conquered, the Prophet (pbuh) addressed the
people saying: 'Allah
made Mecca holy the day He created heaven and
earth and it is the
Holy of Holies until the Resurrection Day. It is not
lawful for anyone who
believes in Allah and the Last Day to shed blood
therein, nor to cut
down trees therein. It was not lawful for anyone before
me and it will not be
lawful for anyone after me.
Indeed it is not lawful
for me except at this time, only Allah's anger
against his people
makes it permissible. Mecca has now regained its
former holiness. Let
those here now go forth and tell others.'
The Lesson Of Pride At The Valley Of Hunayn
Islam
flourished in Mecca and the Muslims became stronger and
stronger. But south
of Mecca lived a tribe of warriors called Hawazin,
who had not become
Muslim. They made an agreement with another tribe
from Ta'if, called
Thaqif to fight the Muslims and destroy them before
they could spread
their religion throughout Arabia. The Thaqif, who were
known for their
courage, soon won the support of other tribes living
around the Ta'if
area, especially when such tribes were told: „Look what
has happened! If
Quraysh, the largest tribe of all, have fallen to
Muhammad, it is only
a matter of time before the same will happen to the
rest of us. We should
strike now before the Muslims are established in
Mecca and have the
support of Quraysh.' The Chief of one of these tribes,
a fearless warrior called
Malik Ibn „Awf, was chosen as the leader. He
put forward a plan:
'You should all go out to battle accompanied by your
families, your tents,
your sheep and goats, for with all your belongings at
stake, none of you
will dare give up the fight.'
Everyone agreed with
Malik except an old, blind man called Dorayd.
He had been a great
warrior in his day and because of his experience and
valuable advice still
accompanied the men into battle. 'I don't like Malik's
plan', he insisted.
'If a man is so cowardly as to leave a battle, then he will
leave his family as
well. The women and children will be a great worry to
us and if we are
defeated all our wealth will fall into enemy hands.' But
Malik ignored this
advice and stuck to his original plan. When the
Prophet (pbuh) heard
what the enemy tribes were planning, he found
himself forced to
fight and ordered his army towards Ta‟if. He had twelve
thousand men and the
enemy only four thousand. The Muslims were
proud of their
strength and as they looked around at their number, said to
themselves, 'We will
never be defeated!' On hearing this the Prophet
(pbuh) knew that the
Muslims had become too proud and because of this
would not succeed.
He warned them, 'Look
to Allah and not to your own strength.‟
The time for battle came.
The Muslim army advanced along the
Hunayn path, a narrow
way in the rugged mountains, towards the valley
where the Hawazin and
the other tribes were waiting. It was very early
morning and not yet
light. The Muslims were unaware that, under cover
of darkness, the
Hawazin warriors had already climbed up the mountain
and were waiting for
them. As soon as all the Muslims were trapped in
the narrow
passage-way below, the Hawazin ambushed them. First they
threw rocks down upon
them and then attacked with arrows and swords.
In surprise and fear,
the Muslims started to retreat. The Prophet
(pbuh) was bitterly
disappointed to see them fleeing in terror but he
stayed firmly in his
place with Abu Bakr, 'Ali, his uncle al-„Abbas, and a
few companions at his
side. Al-'Abbas then called to the Muslims to
return and not to
abandon the Prophet (pbuh). Ashamed at what they had
done, and seeing the
Prophet (pbuh) facing the enemy almost alone, the
Muslims quickly
returned to fight. Then Allah sent His angels-the hosts
ye cannot see-to
their aid. A fierce battle followed. The Muslim warriors
advanced, attacking
furiously, driving the Hawazin back from the path
into the valley,
where the fighting went on long and hard. At the end of
the day the Muslims
won but not before having learned a hard lesson
about the danger of
pride.
Just as the old man
had predicted, the defeated enemy fled, leaving
their families and
possessions to be captured. Later all the leaders of the
tribes except one
came to ask for them back and to declare their
acceptance of Islam.
The Prophet (pbuh) forgave them and returned their
families to them, but
not their belongings. The one exception was the
leader of Hawazin. He
fled to Ta'if, where he sought protection in the
castle, but the
Muslims pursued him and surrounded the city, which they
besieged for about
three weeks.
They tried to break
into the castle but after losing many men in the
attempt the Prophet
(pbuh) ordered a withdrawal. The story did not end
there, however, for
shortly afterwards Hawazin and most of the other
tribes came to Mecca
and declared themselves Muslim, including Malik
Ibn Awf, who had led
them in battle and whom the Prophet (pbuh) now
made their leader.
After the battle of
the Hunayn Valley, the Prophet (pbuh) distributed
what goods had been
taken between the people of Quraysh and the other
Bedouin tribes. The
Ansar from Medinah, who had been his only support
during the long hard
years before the conquest of Mecca, received
nothing. They felt
angry about this and went to the Prophet (pbuh) to
complain. He said to
them, what is this I hear of you? Do you think badly
of me? Did I not come
to you when you did not know the truth and Allah
guided you; when you
were poor and Allah made you rich; when you
were enemies and
Allah softened your hearts? Are you covetous for the
things of this world
that I must use to gain people's trust so that I can then
lead them to Islam?
Surely for you Islam is enough? Are you not satisfied
that while some men
take away flocks and herds you take Allah's
Messenger back with
you to Medinah?' On hearing this, all the men felt
very contrite and
began to weep then with great humility and reverence
their spokesman said:
'We are indeed well pleased to have Allah's
Messenger as our gift
in this life.‟ Perhaps we could ask ourselves the
same question. Are we
not blessed to have the Prophet Muhammad
(pbuh) and the Book,
guiding us in what really matters for ever and ever?
Is this not so much
more important than thinking about the momentary
pleasures of the day?
Shortly after this
the Ansar left for Medinah accompanied by the
Prophet (pbuh). He
could have stayed among his own people and lived
out his days in
Mecca, but he returned as he had promised, to live among
the people of
Medinah, which was a great blessing for them.
“Allah gave you
victory on many fields and on the day of Hunayn,
when you exulted in
your great numbers it was of no help to you, and the
earth, vast as it is,
was straitened for you; then you turned back in flight;
Then Allah sent His
peace of reassurance down upon is Messenger and
upon the believers,
and sent down hosts you could not see, and punished
those who did not
believe. Such is the reward of disbelievers. Then
afterwards Allah will
relent toward whom He will; for Allah is Forgiving,
Merciful”. (Qur'an
9.25-27)
Tabuk-The Test Of Faith
News
of the growing power of the Muslims, as more and more of Arabia
followed the Prophet
(pbuh), eventually reached Heraclius, Emperor of
the Eastern Roman
Empire. The Romans saw the uniting of the Arabs in
Islam as a possible
threat to their Empire and the Emperor's advisors and
generals, therefore,
decided that the best thing to do would be to attack
the Muslims from the
north and east at the same time and destroy Islam
once and for all.
Two years had passed
since Heraclius had told them of the Prophet's
letter asking them to
submit to Islam, but just as then, they were in no
mood now to listen to
such ideas. When the Prophet (pbuh) heard of the
Romans' plans, he
decided that it would be better to meet the Roman
army in Tabuk, some
500 kilometers form Medinah on the route to Syria,
than to await an
attack on Medinah. One reason for this decision was that
the Prophet (pbuh)
felt that if the Muslims were defeated at Medinah, the
city as well as the
army would be taken, which would mean the end of
Islam. This was a
very hard decision for him to make because not only
was Tabuk a very long
way away, but it was also harvest time and a
particularly hot
year. Added to this was the fact that the enemy had an
enormous army. Now at
this time there were some people living in
Medinah who were not
true believers. They were called 'hypocrites'
because they
pretended to believe but hid what was truly in their hearts.
When the Prophet
(pbuh) everyone to war, these hypocrites tried to create
fear and doubt among
the Muslims, saying 'How can we hope to defeat
the Romans whose
great empire stretches over vast areas of the world?
And even if we could,
we will not get the chance because the long
journey and the heat
will defeat us first. In any case, our crops and fruits
are ready to be
harvested; how can we leave them? We will be ruined if
we do!'
All that the
hypocrites said severely tested the Muslims. Who would
continue to fight for
his religion against such odds? Who would have the
courage to give his
wealth to help equip an army? This test of faith would
indeed show who the
true Muslims were. On this question, Allah revealed
the following verse:
“O you who believe!
What aileth you that when it is said unto you:
Go forth in the way
of Allah, you are bowed down to the ground with
heaviness. Do you
take pleasure in the life of the world rather than in the
Hereafter? The
comfort of the life of the world is but little in the
Hereafter”. (Qur'an
9.38)
To form and equip an
army the Prophet (pbuh) needed a great deal of
money and despite all
that the hypocrites had said, many Muslims,
especially the
Prophet‟s close friends, were willing to help. 'Uthman Ibn
„Affan, for instance,
generously provided horses and arms for ten
thousand soldiers and
Abu Bakr gave all that he had in the world. „Umar,
too, gave a great
deal, and in this way the Prophet (pbuh) was able to
equip an army of
forty thousand soldiers.
Finally everything
was ready but just as they were about to leave,
seven more men came
to the Prophet (pbuh) to ask if they could go with
him. Unfortunately,
he had to refuse because there were no animals for
them to ride. The
seven men were so upset that they wept as they left.
With nothing more to
be done, the army moved off, but just then several
spare camels were
found. On learning of this, the Prophet (pbuh) sent for
the seven men, who
were overjoyed to find that they could join him in his
fight.
By now the Romans had
heard that the Muslims were coming out to
meet them. They felt
even more sure of victory when they heard this
because they believed
that it would be quite impossible for an army to
cross a waterless
desert in the scorching summer sun. Even if by some
miracle the Muslims
succeeded, they would be so exhausted that it would
be easy to defeat
them.
As it happed the heat
was so intense and the journey so difficult that
several Muslims did
turn back. The Prophet (pbuh) and most of the
others, however,
continued until they finally ran out of water. The
expedition now seemed
hopeless as the men grew thirstier and thirstier.
The Prophet (pbuh)
prayed to Allah for help and, as he finished his
prayer, the first
drops of rain came splashing down. The rain continued to
fall until all the
Muslims had drunk their fill. That night they slept
soundly for the first
time in days, refreshed by the water and confident
that Bilal would wake
them as usual for the dawn prayer. But Bilal slept
so deeply that he did
not wake up. It was the first time that the Muslims
had missed a prayer
and they were very upset. The Prophet (pbuh),
however, was not
angry with Bilal and told the Muslims that they need
not be upset because
they had not intentionally missed the prayer.
The Prophet (pbuh)
and his army continued their trek across the desert
and finally arrived
at the oasis of Tabuk. When they got there, however,
they were surprised
to find that the Roman army had retreated in fear on
hearing of the
miraculous crossing of the desert by the Muslims. The
Prophet (pbuh) waited
at the oasis for a while but when it became
apparent that the
Romans were not going to fight, he gave the order to
return home. The
enemy was not pursued because the Prophet (pbuh)
only fought when
attacked. The long march to Tabuk had been yet
another test of faith
for the Muslims. Even so, there were still some
among those who made
that heroic journey who were hypocrites,
pretending to be
sincere while being enemies of Islam in their hearts. No
one could have
suspected that anyone who had made that journey across
the desert with the
Prophet (pbuh) would be an enemy of his.
Realizing this,
several hypocrites plotted to kill the Prophet (pbuh) by
pushing him off the
top of a high, rocky passage that ran between the
mountains of „Aqabah.
Before the army reached this rocky passage,
however, Allah warned
the Prophet (pbuh) about this wicked plan. The
Prophet (pbuh),
therefore, ordered the entire army to travel through the
valley while he and
his two guards went by way of the cliff. As the
plotters approached,
he shouted to them so that they could see that he
knew of their plan,
whereupon they quickly ran back to the army and
tried to hide among
the rest of the soldiers.
Later, the Prophet
(pbuh) gathered his followers around him and told
them what had
happened. He picked out the men who had plotted against
him and even told
them the exact words they had spoken to each other.
Some of the Prophet's
companions said that these men should be killed,
but the Prophet
(pbuh) forgave them. As soon as he arrived back in
Medinah, the Prophet
(pbuh) went to the mosque and prayed. Many of the
hypocrites and the
lukewarm who had not gone with him to Tabuk came
to give their reasons
for not having done so. Three men of spiritual value
who had not joined
the army were subjected by the Prophet (pbuh) to the
discipline of waiting
for Allah's forgiveness. For fifty days no one spoke
to them. Finally,
Allah revealed a verse to the Prophet (pbuh) which
declared that these
three men were forgiven:
“Allah hath turned in
mercy to the Prophet, and to the Muhajirin and
the Ansar who
followed him in the hour of hardship. After the hearts of a
party of them had
almost swerved aside, then He turned unto them in
mercy. Lo! He is full
of Pity, Merciful. And to the three also (did He turn
in mercy) who were
left behind, when the earth, vast as it is, was
straitened for them,
and their own souls were straitened for them till they
understood that there
is no refuge from Allah save toward Him. Then He
turned unto them in
mercy that they (too) might turn (repentant unto
Him). Lo! Allah! He
is the Relenting, the Merciful. O you who believe!
Be careful of your
duty to Allah, and be with tile truthful”. (Qur'an 9.117-
119)
The Farewell Pilgrimage
The
Prophet (pbuh) had become the most powerful leader in the whole of
Arabia. After the
idols in the Ka'bah had been smashed and Quraysh had
become Muslim, most
of the other tribes of Arabia came to declare their
Islam. The year in
which they came was later to be called the Year of
Deputations. As each
tribe joined Islam, the Prophet Muhammad (pbuh)
sent his men to teach
them about their new religion. Many people also
came to Medinah to
question the Prophet (pbuh) himself. One tribe sent a
man called Dimam, who
was large and strong. On arriving in Medinah,
he went straight to
the mosque, where the Messenger of Allah (pbuh) was
sitting with some of
his companions, and stood over the Prophet (pbuh).
In a loud, rough
voice he asked, 'Which of you is the son of 'Abd al-
Muttalib?' When the
Prophet (pbuh) answered him Dimam went on, 'I am
going to ask you a
hard question, so do not misunderstand me. I ask you
to swear by Allah,
your Allah, the Allah of those before you and the
Allah of those who
will come after you, has He sent you to us as a
messenger?' 'Yes, He
has', replied the Prophet (pbuh). 'Has Allah
instructed you to
order us to serve Him; to pray these five prayers; to pay
alms; to fast; to
make the pilgrimage and to follow the other laws of
Islam)?' continued
Dimam. When the Prophet (pbuh) answered that Allah
had indeed instructed
him in this way, Dimam became a Muslim and, as
he left, added, 'Then
I will do the things we are told to do and avoid the
things we are
forbidden-no more and no less.` As Dimam mounted his
camel to leave, the
Prophet(pbuh) told the people around him, 'If this man
is sincere, he will
go to Paradise.' When Dimam reached his people they
all thought he had
gone mad but by nightfall, after he had finished
speaking, there was
not among them that had not accepted Islam.
When the time came
for the yearly pilgrimage, it was proclaimed that
the prophet (pbuh)
would be going to Mecca. The Muslims flocked to
Medinah from all over
Arabia to join him on his journey to the Ka‟bah.
As the tribes arrived
they camped around the city until they finally
numbered more than
thirty thousand.
The Prophet (pbuh)
went out with his family and friends to
pilgrimage, but
before setting off, he led all the Muslims in prayer. After
the prayers, the
Prophet (pbuh) got on his camel and headed towards
Mecca followed by the
pilgrims, all of whom, for the first time in
centuries, worshipped
Allah, the One God. The Prophet (pbuh) and his
companions were
deeply moved by the sight of the huge number of
Muslims accompanying
them to Mecca, carrying no arms, and fearing no
one. They could not
help but remember their original flight from Mecca
when they had been so
few in number and were forced to leave in order
to avoid the anger of
Quraysh. Throughout the journey the Muslims
repeated a prayer
taught to them by the Prophet (pbuh) which he in turn
had received from the
Archangel Gabriel. This prayer, the talbiyah, has
been part of the Hajj
ritual ever since. It is in answer to the call Abraham
was commanded to make
when he and Ishmael finished building the
Ka‟bah.
Labaik
Allahumma labaik, labaik la sharika laka labaik in alhamd
wa
al-ni'amatu laka wal-mulk, la sharika laka. Here
I am, O
Allah, at Thy
service. Here I am, Thou art without partner, here I am. All
Praise and blessings
are thine, and Dominion! Thou art without partner!
After ten days the
pilgrims marched at sunset through the same pass
by which they had
entered on the Day of Conquest of Mecca. When they
reached the Ka‟bah,
the Prophet (pbuh) stood before it in prayer, then he
and all the Muslims
walked around it seven times saying their prayer
aloud. Next, just as
Abraham had done, they went towards the Mount of
Mercy at 'Arafah,
which the Prophet (pbuh) ascended on a camel. From
the mountain he led
the people in prayer and then spoke to them as they
stood assembled on
the vast plain below.
What the Prophet (pbuh)
said is known as the „Farewell Sermon‟,
because it was the
last speech the Prophet (pbuh) made before he died. He
said, 'surely you
will meet your Lord and He will question you about your
works.' He asked the
Muslims to take their guidance from the Qur'an and
from his own example.
This, he said, was the best way to live. He ordered
them to cease living
in the way they had before Islam.
Revenge, one of the
oldest traditions in Arabia, was ended forever;
usury was prohibited;
property was to be respected. Things which
previously were
forbidden during the four sacred months of the year were
now forbidden at all
times. He then commanded, 'Know that every
Muslim is a Muslim's
brother', which was a completely new idea to the
tribes who had so
often quarreled in the past. He also said, 'Allah has
given everyone his
due-exactly what each one deserves. After each point
the Prophet (pbuh)
asked, 'Have I explained it well? Is it perfectly clear?'
Everyone answered,
'Yes.' For these were the people who would have to
pass on the Prophet's
message and instructions to those who were unable
to be present that
day and to future generations. The Prophet (pbuh) said,
'I have left you two
things. If you hold on to them you will be saved.
They are Allah's Book
and the words of your Prophet.' He then asked,
'Have I not conveyed
the message?' The multitude shouted out, 'By Allah,
yes!' The Prophet
(pbuh) ended, '0 Allah! Bear witness to that.'
“… This day those who disbelieve are in
despair of (ever harming)
your religion; so do
not fear them, but fear Me! This day I have perfected
your religion, for
you, and I have completed My favor unto you, and have
chosen for you as a
religion AL-ISLAM”. (Qur'an 5.3) Many Muslims
started to shed
tears, knowing that if the Prophet (pbuh) had completed
his message, his life
must be near its end.
After spending the
rest of the day of „Arafah in prayer and
contemplation, the
Muslims began to complete the pilgrimage by
returning to Mecca
with the talbiyah prayer still on their lips. The first
night of the return
journey was spent at Muzdalifah. Here they gathered
pebbles, which they
carried with them the next day to Mina. There they
stood before a huge
rock and stoned it in remembrance of Abraham's
meeting with the
Devil in that very place. When Abraham received the
order from Allah to
sacrifice his son Ishmael as a test of his faith, the
Devil had tried to
convince him not to do it. He came to Abraham at
Mina, as he was on
his way to carry out Allah's command, but Abraham
took some stones and
hurled them at the Devil to drive him away since
the casting of stones
at Mina on the Prophet's 'Farewell Pilgrimage', this
has become another
ritual which Muslims perform on the annual
pilgrimage to remind
them that they, too, must continue to drive the Devil
away when he tries to
prevent them from being obedient to Allah. After
throwing the stones,
the pilgrims sacrificed sheep and camels and gave
the meat to the poor.
In this way the great faith of Abraham was
remembered, for when
he had been ready to sacrifice Ishmael, Allah had
sent a sheep in his
place. The Muslims then completed the pilgrimage by
again circling the
Ka‟bah seven times. They then cut their hair and nails
and changed out of
their white clothes to show they had returned to their
daily lives. Before
returning to Medinah, the Muslims spent three nights
in the valley at
Medinah where the final preparations were made for the
journey home.
As for the Prophet
(pbuh), he made one final visit before leaving
Mecca. This was to
the grave of his devoted wife, Khadijah, who had
been the first person
to believe in Allah's Revelation through him. The
Prophet (pbuh) knew
that this would be the last time he would see the
grave, or Mecca,
because during the pilgrimage he had received the
chapter of the Qur'an
called 'Help', form which he knew that his death
was not far away.
In
the name of Allah, the Beneficent, the Merciful
“When Allah's help
and triumph comes And thou seest, mankind
entering the religion
of Allah in troops, Then hymn the praises of thy
Lord, and seek
forgiveness of Him. Lo! He is ever ready to show mercy”.
(Qur'an 110.1-3)
The Prophet’s Death
One
Night, shortly after his return to Medinah, the Prophet(pbuh) woke
up at midnight and
asked his servant‟ Abd Allah to saddle his mule. They
then left the house
and went to the Baqi al-Gharqad, the burial ground of
the Muslims. There
the Prophet (pbuh) stood in the front of the graves
and, as though he
could see the Muslims buried in them, spoke to them
and prayed over them.
Later, ‟Abd Allah reported, ‟The Prophet (pbuh)
told me that he was
ordered to pray for the dead and that I was to go with
him.‟
After the Prophet
(pbuh) had prayed he turned to „Abd Allah and said,
„I can choose between
all the riches of this world, a long life and then
Paradise, or meeting
my Lord and entering Paradise now.‟ „Abd Allah
begged him to choose
a long, rich life, followed by Paradise, but the
Prophet (pbuh) told
him that he had already chosen to meet his Lord now
rather than remain in
the world. The following morning the Prophet
(pbuh) awoke with a
terrible headache, but despite this he had led the
prayers at the
mosque. From what he said afterwards to the people
assembled there, they
understood that his death was near. The Prophet
(pbuh) praised his
best friend, Abu Bakr, who had begun to weep, and
told everyone that he
knew they would all meet again at a pool in
Paradise. He added,
however that although he was sure they would
always worship Allah
alone, he feared that the pleasures of the world
would attract them,
and they would begin to compete with one another
for material
possessions, forgetting spiritual things. Soon after the
Prophet (pbuh)
requested that he be moved to the room of A‟isha, one of
his wives. As the
days passed his fever grew worse, until one day he was
so ill that he could
not even get to the mosque, which was next to where
A‟isha lived. The
Prophet (pbuh) told A‟isha to tell the Muslims to let
Abu Bakr, her father,
lead the prayer, which made them very sad for this
was the first time
anyone had taken the Prophet's place.
Later, on the 12th
day of Rabi al-Awal, in the 11th year of Islam (June
8
th
632 A.D.), the
Prophet (pbuh) heard the voices of the people in prayer.
With great effort he
got up and looked from his door at all the Muslims
who were assembled in
rows behind Abu bakr; he smiled with great
satisfaction. Abu
Bakr saw him and stepped back to give the Prophet
(pbuh) his place. The
Muslims were happy, thinking he was going to pray
with them as before,
but the Prophet Muhammad (pbuh), who looked
radiantly beautiful
that day signaled to them to continue on their own. He
prayed in a sitting
position at the right of Abu Bakr, after which he went
back inside and lay
his head on 'A'ishah's lap. He was in such pain that
his daughter Fatimah cried
out in pity. Then the Prophet (pbuh) said,
'There is no pain for
your father after this day; truly, death has appeared
to me. We must all
suffer it till the Day of Judgement.' As he lay there,
A'ishah remembered
that he had once said, Allah never takes a Prophet to
Himself without
giving him the choice.' Then she heard the Prophet
(pbuh) speak. His
last words were, 'Nay, rather the Exalted Communion
of Paradise.'
A‟ishah then said to
herself, 'So, by Allah, he is not choosing us!'
When the people in the
mosque heard that the Prophet (pbuh) was dead,
they were filled with
grief. „Umar could not, and would not, believe it,
and exclaimed that it
was not true. Abu Bakr then went out and spoke
gently to the people,
saying 'All praise belongs to Allah! 0 people,
whoever worshipped
Muhammad, Muhammad is dead. But for him who
worships Allah, Allah
is living and never dies.'
He then recited this
verse from the Qur'an which had been revealed after
the battle of Uhud:
In
the name of Allah, the Beneficent, the Merciful
“Muhammad is but a
messenger, messengers (the like of whom) have
passed away before
him. Will it be that, when he dies or is slain, you will
turn back on your
heels? He who turns back does no hurt to Allah, and
Allah will reward the
thankful. No soul can ever die except by Allah's
permission and at a
term appointed.
Who so desires the
reward of the world, We bestow on him thereof;
and whosoever desires
the reward of the Hereafter, We bestow on him
thereof We shall
reward the thankful”. (Qur'an 3.144-145)
After this the people
pledged their loyalty to Abu Bakr, whom the
Prophet (pbuh) had
chosen to lead the prayer. Abu Bakr accepted and
concluded what he had
to say with these words: 'Obey me so long as I
obey Allah and His
Messenger. But if I disobey Allah and His
Messenger, you owe me
no obedience. Arise for your prayer, Allah have
mercy upon you!' The
people rose and asked him; 'Where will the
Prophet (pbuh) be
buried?' Abu Bakr remembered that the Prophet (pbuh)
had said, 'No Prophet
dies who is not buried on the spot where he died.'
And so the Prophet
(pbuh) was buried in a grave dug in the floor of
A'ishah's room, in
the house next to the mosque. The spot became known
as the Haram
al-Nabawi and Muslims from all over the world go there to
pray and to give
their blessings and greetings of peace the Prophet
Muhammad (pbuh). And
Lo! thine verily will be a reward unfailing. And
Lo! thou art of a
tremendous nature. (Qur'an 67. 3-4)
GLOSSARY
Abd
Allah Abd al-Mulib's youngest son. Father of the
Prophet
Abd
Allah Ibn One of the rulers of Yathrib before the
Ubayy
Hijrah. He became a Muslim but secretly
plotted with the
Meccans against the
Prophet.
Abd
Al- Son of Hashim. He took the place of his
Muttalib
father as the head of Quraysh. He dug the
well of Zamzam.
Abd
Allah Ibn Was sent with Amr Ibn al-'Ass to
Abu
Rabiah Abyssinia.
Abdu
Manaf Son of Qusayy; took over as leader of the
Quraysh after his
father's death.
Abrahah
King of Yemen who came to Mecca with a
big army to destroy
the Kabbah.
Abraham
The founding father of the three
(Ibrahtm)
monotheistic (worshipping one God only)
religions-Judaism,
Christianity and Islam.
The descendants of
his son Ish maci
(fsma'ii) formed the
tribe of Quraysh,
which is the tribe of
the Prophet
Muhammad
Abo
Bakr A rich and much respected merchant of
Mecca. The first man
to believe in the Prophet
and embrace Islam. He
was the Prophet's
closest friend and
companion.
Abu
Dujanah One of the great Ansar warriors. lt was he
who died Shielding
the Prophet with his
ownbody during the
battle of Uhud
Abujahl
One of the important men of Quraysh.
Violently opposed to
Islam, he did many
things to harm the
Prophet. He was
killed at Badr. ABU
LAHAB: One of the
Prophet Mohammed‟s
uncles, who was a
great enemy of Islam.
He is referred to in
the Qur'an in Surah cxi.
Abu
Sufyan One of the leaders of Quraysh who led the
unbelievers in their
fight against the
Prophet. He finally
became a Muslim. His
wife was Hind.
Abo
Talib The Prophet's uncle, father of 'Ali, one of the
respected men of
Quraysh He took care of the
Prophet after his
grandfather died and
continued to protect
him until his own death.
'Addas
A Christian servant of one of the big tribes
of Ta'if and the only
person from this town
to believe in the
Prophet ~ at the time of
his first visit
there.
Adhan
Call to prayer.
'Aisah
The Prophet's wife and daughter of Abu
Bakr.
Al-'Abbas
One of the uncles of the Prophet ~.
Converted to Islam
and joined the Muslims
just as they were
about to enter Mecca.
Ali Son
of Abu Tilib. First cousin of the
Prophet. 'Ali later
married Fatimah, the
youngest daughter of
the Prophet.
Allahu
Akar Phrase meaning 'God Allah is Great'.
Alms
Money, clothes or food given to the poor.
Aminah
Aminah bint Wahb. The motherof the Prophet.
'Amro
Ibun An important and clever man from
Al'ass
Quraysh; was sent to Abyssinia to bring
back the first Muslim
emigrants. Later
became one of the
great Warriors of Islam.
Ansar
The inhabitants of Medinah who became
Muslims and asked the
Prophet to come
and live with them.
Apostle
Person sent to teach men about God.
Wa
Aleikum Phrase used by the Muslims in greeting,
Assalamu
meaning: 'May the Peace, Mercy and Grace
Rahmatullah
of Allah be upon you.
Wa
Barakatuiiu
Bah1ira
A monk who lived in the desert on the
Quraysh caravan route
to Syria.
Bani
Hashim The branch of Quraysh to
which the Prophet
belonged.
Bani
Qurayzah A Jewish tribe who were living in Yathrib
at the time the
Prophet arrived there. Several
times they betrayed
their Covenant with
the Prophet, forcing
him to fight them.
Bedouin
Nomadic Arabs of the desert, usually shepherds.
Bilal
The Slave of Umayyah ibn Khalaf. He
became a Muslim
against the will of his
master and was
persecuted cruelly but
never lost his faith.
Later he became the
first mu'adhdhin (the
person who calls the
adhan).
Bismillah
The phrase meaning 'In the Name of Allah
the Merciful, The
Compassionate'.
Booty
Things captured from an enemy in war.
Buraq
Animal ridden by the Prophet Muliammad ~
on his ascent to
heaven (the Isra' and Mi'raj).
Caravan
A group of travellers, usually merchants
with their goods.
Clan
Large family or tribe.
Congregation
Gathering of people for prayer.
Convert
To change from one state into another,
usually said of
religion.
Copt
An Egyptian Christian.
Descendants
People originating from a certain person
(children,
grandchildren, etc.).
Destined
Fated, already decided by God.
Famine
Scarcity of food.
Fast
To go without food and water, e.g. the
month of Ramadan.
Fitrah
The pure original nature God gave to man.
Gabriel
(Jibril) The Archangel who conveyed the
Revelation of the
Quran to the Prophet from
Allah.
Graze
To feed on grass, as sheep do.
Guardian
One who is responsible for someone (e.g. a
child)? A place, or
thing.
Hadith
An account of what the Prophet ~ said or
did, or his silent
approval of something said
or done in his
presence
Hagar
Abraham's second wife and mother of his
(Haajar)
first son Ishmael.
Halimah
A Bedouin woman from Bani Sa'd, who
cared for the Prophet
during his early
childhood.
Hamzah
The Prophet's uncle; one of the bravest
and strongest of the
Muslims. Fought at
Badr and was killed
in Uhud.
Has
Him Son of Abdu Manif. Organized the caravan
journeys of Quraysh
to Syria and Yemen.
As a result Mecca
grew rich and became a
large and important
centre of trade.
Heraclius
Emperor of the Eastern Roman Empire.
Hermit
A holy man who lives far away from
people.
Hiurah
The flight from Mecca to Medinah;
emigration
Hind
Abu Sufyin's wife.
Imam
A man who leads the Muslims in prayer.
Ishmael
The first son of Abraham from his wife
(Isma'il)
Hagar. Settled in Mecca where he helped
his father rebuild
the Kabah. From his
descendants came
Quraysh.
Islam
Religion revealed to the Prophet
Muhammad.
Ja'far
Ibn Abu A cousin of the Prophet and brother of
Ali,
Tallb
he was the spokesman of the Muslims who
emigrated to
Abyssinia.
Khadijah
The Prophet Mohammed‟s first and only
wife until her death.
She was the first to
believe in the
Prophet and to accept as true
the Message he
brought from Allah.
Khalid
Ibn Al- A great warrior, very skilled at warfare. He
Walid
planned the defeat of the Muslims at Uhud,
but later converted
to Islam and fought
even more strongly
for his new faith.
Martyr
One who dies in the cause of God.
Maysarah
Khadijah's slave. Accompanied the Prophet
on his journey with Khadijah's
caravans.
Minaret
Tower from which the call to prayer is
made.
Mosque
Building in which Muslims pray.
Muslim
One who submits to God, usually referring
to the followers of
the Prophet Muhammad.
Oasis
A small area in the desert where water and
trees are to be
found.
Paradise
Place to which the souls of good people go
after death
Pilgrimage Journey to a holy place, e.g. Hajj
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