AR-RaheeQ Al-Makhtum (THE
SEALED NECTAR)- Memoirs of the Noble Prophet
Author: Saifur Rahman al-Mubarakpuri - Jamia Salafia - India-
Translated by : Issam Diab
Pages : 1. 2. 3.4.5 .6 .7 .8 .9.10 .11 .12 .13 .14 .15.16 .17
In An-Nadwah (Council)
House
The Parliament of Quraish
The polytheists were paralysed
by the carefully planned and speedy movement of Muhammad’s
followers towards their new abode in Madinah. They were caught in
unprecedented anxiety and got deeply worried over their whole
pagan and economic entity. They already experienced Muhammad as an influential leader;
and his followers as determined, decent and always ready to
sacrifice all they had for the sake of the Messenger of Allâh . Al-Aws and Al-Khazraj
tribes, the would-be-hosts of the Makkan Muslims, were also known
in Arabia for their might and power in war, and judicious and
sensible approach in peace. They were also averse to rancour and
prejudice for they themselves had had bitter days of inter-tribal
warfare. Madinah , itself, the prospective headquarters of the
ever-growing Islamic Call, enjoyed the most serious strategic
position. It commanded the commercial routes leading to Makkah
whose people used to deal in about a quarter of a million gold
dinar-worth commodities every year. Security of the caravan
routes was crucial for the perpetuity of prosperous economic life.
All those factors borne in mind, the polytheists felt they were
in the grip of a serious threat. They, therefore, began to seek
the most effective method that could avert this imminent danger.
They convened a meeting on Thursday, 26th Safar, the year
fourteen of Prophethood / 12th September 622 A.D[1] .,
i.e. two and a half months after the Great ‘Aqabah Pledge. On
that day, "the Parliament of Makkah" held the most
serious meeting ever, with one item on the agenda: How to take
effective measures with a view to stopping that tidal wave.
Delegates representing all the Quraishite tribes attended the
meeting, the most significant of whom were:
- Abu Jahl bin Hisham, from
Bani Makhzum;
- Jubair bin Mut‘im, Tuaima
bin ‘Adi, and Al-Harith bin ‘Amir representing Bani
Naufal bin ‘Abd Munaf;
- Rabi‘a’s two sons
Shaibah and ‘Utbah besides Abu Sufyan bin Harb from
Bani ‘Abd Shams bin ‘Abd Munaf;
- An-Nadr bin Al-Harith (who
had besmeared the Prophet with animal
entrails) to speak for Bani ‘Abd Ad-Dar;
- Abul Bukhtary bin Hisham,
Zama‘a bin Al-Aswad and Hakeem bin Hizam to represent
Bani Asad bin ‘Abd Al-‘Uzza;
- Al-Hajjaj’s two sons
Nabih and Munbih from Bani Sahm;
- Omaiyah bin Khalaf from
Bani Jumah.
On their way to An-Nadwah House,
Iblis (Satan) in the guise of a venerable elderly man
standing at the door interrupted their talk and introduced
himself as a man from Najd curious enough to attend the meeting,
listen to the debate and wish them success to reach a sound
opinion. He was readily admitted in.
There was a lengthy debate and
several proposals were put forward. Expulsion from Makkah was
proposed and debated in turn but finally turned down on grounds
that his sweet and heart-touching words could entice the other
Arabs to attack them in their own city. Imprisonment for life was
also debated but also refused for fear that his followers might
increase in number, overpower them and release him by force. At
this point, the arch-criminal of Makkah, Abu Jahl bin Hisham
suggested that they assassinate him. But assassination by one man
would have exposed him and his family to the vengeance of blood.
The difficulty was at last solved by Abu Jahl himself, who
suggested that a band of young men, one from each tribe, should
strike Muhammad simultaneously with their swords so that the
blood-money would be spread over them all and therefore could not
be exacted, and his people would seek a mind-based recourse for
settlement. The sinful proposal was unanimously accepted, and the
representatives broke up the meeting and went back home with full
determination for immediate implementation.[1]
Migration of
the Prophet
When the iniquitous decision had
been made, Gabriel was sent down to Muhammad to reveal to him Quraish’s
plot and give him his Lord’s Permission to leave Makkah. He
fixed to him the time of migration and asked him not to sleep
that night in his usual bed. At noon, the Prophet went to see his
Companion Abu Bakr and arranged with him everything for the
intended migration. Abu Bakr was surprised to see the Prophet masked coming to visit
him at that unusual time, but he soon learned that Allâh’s
Command had arrived, and he proposed that they should migrate
together, to which the Prophet gave his consent.[1]
To make the necessary
preparations for the implementation of their devilish plan, the
chiefs of Makkah had chosen eleven men: Abu Jahl, Hakam bin Abil
Al-‘As, ‘Uqbah bin Abi Mu‘ait, An-Nadr bin Harith, Omaiyah
bin Khalaf, Zama‘a bin Al-Aswad, Tu‘aima bin ‘Adi, Abu
Lahab, Ubai bin Khalaf, Nabih bin Al-Hajjaj and his brother
Munbih bin Al-Hajjaj. All were on the alert. As night advanced,
they posted assassins around the Prophet’s house. Thus they
kept vigil all night long, waiting to kill him the moment he left
his house early in the morning, peeping now and then through a
hole in the door to make sure that he was still lying in his bed.
Abu Jahl, the great enemy of Islam, used to walk about haughtily
and arrogantly jeering at Muhammad’s words, saying to the
people around him: "Muhammad claims that if you follow him,
he will appoint you rulers over the Arabs and non-Arabs and in
the Hereafter your reward will be Gardens similar to those in
Jordan, otherwise, he will slaughter you and after death you will
be burnt in fire."[1] He was too confident of the success of
his devilish plan. Allâh, the All-Mighty, however, in Whose
Hands lie the sovereignty of the heavens and earth, does what He
desires; He renders succour and can never be overpowered. He did
exactly what He later said to His Prophet:
"And (remember) when
the disbelievers plotted against you (O Muhammad ) to imprison
you, or to kill you, or to get you out (from your home, i.e.
Makkah); they were plotting and Allâh too was planning,
and Allâh is the Best of the planners." [8:30]
At that critical time the plans
of Quraish utterly failed despite the tight siege they laid to
the Prophet’s house, the Prophet and ‘Ali were inside
the house. The Prophet told ‘Ali to sleep in
his bed and cover himself with his green mantle and assured him
full security under Allâh’s protection and told him that no
harm would come to him. The Prophet then came out of the
room and cast a handful of dust at the assassins and managed to
work his way through them reciting verses of the Noble Qur’ân:
"And We have put a
barrier before them, and a barrier behind them, and We
have covered them up, so that they cannot see." [36:9]
He proceeded direct to the house
of Abu Bakr who, immediately accompanied him and both set out
southwards, clambered up the lofty peak of Mountain Thawr, and
decided to take refuge in a cave.[1]
The assassins who laid siege to
the house were waiting for the zero hour when someone came and
informed them that the Prophet had already left. They
rushed in and to their utter surprise, found that the person
lying in the Prophet’s bed was ‘Ali not Muhammad . This created a stir in
the whole town. The Prophet had thus left his house
on Safar 27th, the fourteenth year of Prophethood, i.e. 12/13
September 622 A.D.[1]
Knowing already that Quraish
would mobilize all its potentials to find him, he played a clever
trick on them and instead of taking the road to Madinah in north
side of Makkah as the polythiest would expect, he walked along a
road least expected lying south of Makkah and leading to Yemen.
He walked for 5 miles until he reached a rough rocky mountain
called Thawr. There his shoes were worn out, some said he used to
walk tiptoe in order not to leave a trail behind him. Abu Bakr -
may Allah be pleased with him - carried him up the mountain to a
cave called after the name of the mountain, Cave Thawr. Abu Bakr
first entered to explore the cave and be sure that it was safe,
closed all holes with pieces torn off from his clothes, cleaned
it and then asked the Prophet to step in. The Prophet went in and immediately
laid his head in Abu Bakr’s lap and fell asleep. Suddenly Abu
Bakr’s foot was stung by a poisonous insect. It hurt so much
that his tears fell on the Prophet’s face. The Prophet immediately applied his
saliva on Abu Bakr’s foot and the pain went off on the spot.
They confined themselves to this cave for three nights, Friday,
Saturday and Sunday. ‘Abdullah, the son of Abu Bakr would go to
see them after dusk, stay the night there, apprise them of the
latest situation in Makkah, and then leave in the early morning
to mix with the Makkans as usual and not to draw the least
attention to his clandestine activities. ‘Amir bin Fuhairah,
while in the company of other shepherds of Makkah tending his
master Abu Bakr’s flock, used to stole away unobserved every
evening with a few goats to the cave and furnished its inmates
with a plentiful supply of milk.[1]
Quraish, on the other hand, were
quite baffled and exasperated when the news of the escape of the
two companions was confirmed. They brought ‘Ali to Al-Ka‘bah,
beat him brutally and confined him there for an hour attempting
desperately to make him divulge the secret of the disappearance
of the two ‘fugitives’, but to no avail. They then went to
see Asma’, Abu Bakr’s daughter, but here also their attempts
went in vain. While at her door Abu Jahl slapped the girl so
severely that her earring broke up.[1]
The notables of Makkah convened
an emergency session to determine the future course of action and
explore all areas that could help arrest the two men. They
decided to block all avenues leading out of Makkah and imposed
heavy armed surveillance over all potential exits. A price of 100
camels was set upon the head of each one.[1] Horsemen,
infantry and tracers of tracks scoured the country. Once they
even reached the mouth of the cave where the Prophet and Abu Bakr were hiding.
When he saw the enemy at a very close distance, Abu Bakr
whispered to the Prophet : "What, if they
were to look through the crevice and detect us?" The Prophet
in his God-inspired
calm replied:
"Silence Abu Bakr!
What do you think of those two with whom the Third is Allâh."[1]
It was really a Divine miracle,
the chasers were only a few steps from the cave.
For three days Muhammad and Abu Bakr lived in
the cave and Quraish continued their frantic efforts to get hold
of them.
Someone called ‘Abdullah bin
Uraiquit, who had as yet not embraced Islam, but was trusted by
Abu Bakr, and had been hired by him as a guide, reached the cave
after three nights according to a plan bringing with him Abu Bakr’s
two camels. His report satisfied the noble ‘fugitives’ that
the search had slackened. The opportunity to depart was come.
Here Abu Bakr offered the Prophet the swift animal to ride
on. The latter agreed provided that he would pay its price. They
took with them the food provisions that Asma’, daughter of Abu
Bakr, brought and tied in a bundle of her waistband, after
tearing it into two parts, hence the appellation attached to her:
"Asma’ of the two waistbands." The Prophet , Abu Bakr and ‘Amir
bin Fuhairah departed, and their guide ‘Abdullah bin Uraiquit
led them on hardly ever trodden ways along the coastal route.
That was in Rabi‘ Al-Awwal, 1st year A.H., i.e. September 622 A.D.
The little caravan travelled through many villages on their way
to Quba’. In this context, it is relevant to introduce some
interesting incidents that featured their wearying journey:
- One day they could find no
shelter from the scorching heat so Abu Bakr - may Allah
be pleased with her - cast a glance and found a little
shade beside a rock. He cleaned the ground, spread his
mantle for the Prophet to lie on and
himself went off in search of food. He came across a
shepherd, a bedouin boy, who was also seeking a shelter.
Abu Bakr asked him for some milk and took it to the
Prophet ,
cooled it with some water and waited till the Prophet woke up and
quenched his thirst.[1]
- Whoever asked Abu Bakr -
may Allah be pleased with him -about the identity of his
honourable companion, he would reply that he was a man
who guided him on his way. The questioner would think
that Muhammad was a guide, in
terms of roads, whereas Abu Bakr used to mean guide to
the way of righteousness.[1]
- Quraish, as we have already
mentioned, had declared that whoever would seize Muhammad
would
receive a hundred camels as reward. This had spurred many
persons to try their luck. Among those who were on the
lookout for the Prophet and his
companion in order to win the reward was Suraqah, the son
of Malik. He, on receiving information that a party of
four, had been spotted on a certain route, decided to
pursue it secretly so that he alone should be the winner
of the reward. He mounted a swift horse and went in hot
pursuit of them. On the way the horse stumbled and he
fell on the ground. On drawing a lot so as to divine
whether he should continue the chase or not, as the Arabs
used to do in such circumstances, he found the omens
unpropitious. But the lust for material wealth blinded
him altogether and he resumed the chase. Once more he met
with the same fate but paid no heed to it. Again he
jumped onto the saddle and galloped at a break-neck speed
till he came quite close to the Prophet . Abu Bakr’s
heart agitated and he kept looking back while the Prophet
remained
steadfast and continued reciting verses of the Qur’ân.
The repeated stumbling of
Suraqah’s horse and his falling off awakened him to the
situation, and he realized that it was a constant warning
of Allâh for his evil design which he contemplated
against the Prophet . He approached
the travelling group with a penitent heart and begged of
the Prophet
forgiveness in all humility. He addressed the Prophet and his
companion, saying: "Your people (the Quraishites)
have promised a generous reward to anyone who captures
you." He added that he offered them provision but
they declined his offer. They only asked him to screen
off their departure and blind the polytheists to their
hiding place. Then the Prophet forgave him and
confirmed it with a token written by ‘Amir bin Fuhairah
on a piece of parchment. Suraqah hurried back to Makkah
and tried to foil the attempts of those who were in
pursuit of Muhammad and his noble
companions. The sworn enemy was converted into an honest
believer.[1] In a version by Abu Bakr - may
Allah be pleased with her - , he said: "We emigrated
while the Makkans were in pursuit of us. None caught up
with us except Suraqah bin Malik bin Ju‘sham on a horse.
I said: ‘O Messenger of Allâh, this one has caught up
with us.’ The Prophet replied:
‘Don’t be cast
down, verily, Allâh is with us.’"
- The party continued its
journey until it reached to solitary tents belonging to a
woman called Umm Ma‘bad Al-Khuza‘iyah. She was a
gracious lady who sat at her tent-door with a mat spread
out for any chance traveller that might pass by the way.
Fatigued and thirsty, the Prophet and his
companions wanted to refresh themselves with food and
some milk. The lady told them that the flock was out in
the pasture and the goat standing nearby was almost dry.
It was a rainless year. The Prophet , with her
permission, touched its udders, reciting over them the
Name of Allâh, and to their great joy, there flowed
plenty of milk out of them. The Prophet first offered
that to the lady of the house, and he shared what was
left with the members of the party. Before he left, he
milked the goat, filled the container and gave it to Umm
Ma‘bad. Later on, her husband arrived with slender
goats hardly having any milk in their udders. He was
astonished to see milk in the house. His wife told him
that a blessed man passed by the way, and then she gave
details about his physical appearance and manner of talk.
Here Abu Ma‘bad realized on the spot that the man was
the one whom Quraish were searching for and asked her to
give full description of him. She gave a wonderful
account of his physique and manners, to which we will go
in detail later in the process of talking about his
attributes and merits.
Abu Ma‘bad, after
listening to his wife’s account, expressed a sincere
wish to accompany the Prophet whenever that
was possible, and reiterated his admiration in verses of
poetry that echoed all over Makkah to such an extent that
the people therein thought it was a jinn inculcating
words in their ears. Asma’, daughter of Abu Bakr, on
hearing those lines, got to know that the two companions
were heading for Madinah .[1]
The short poem opened with thanks giving to Allâh having
given them (the Ma‘bads) the chance to host the Prophet
for a while.
It then gave an account of the bliss that would settle in
the heart of the Prophet’s companion whosoever he was;
it closed with an invitation to all mankind to come and
see by themselves Umm Ma‘bad, her goat and the
container of milk that would all testify to the
truthfulness of the Prophet .
- On his way to Madinah , the
Prophet met
Abu Buraidah, one of those driven by their lust for the
reward of Quraish. No sooner did he face the Prophet and talk with
him, than he embraced Islam along with seventy of his men.
He took off his turban, tied it round his lance and took
it as a banner bearing witness that the angel of security
and peace had come to imbue the whole world with justice
and fairness.[1]
- The two Emigrants resumed
their journey. It was during this time that they met Az-Zubair
at the head of a caravan returning from Syria. There was
warm greeting and Az-Zubair presented to them two white
garments which they thankfully accepted.[1]
On Monday, 8th Rabi‘ Al-Awwal,
the fourteenth year of Prophethood, i.e. September 23rd. 622, the
Messenger of Allâh arrived at Quba’.[1]
As soon as the news of Muhammad’s
arrival began to spread, crowds came flocking out of Madinah .
They would come every morning and wait eagerly for his appearance
until forced by the unbearable heat of the midday sun to return.
One day they had gone as usual, and after a long wait and watch
they retired to the city when a Jew, catching a glimpse of three
travellers clad in white winding their way to Madinah , shouted
from the top of a hillock: "O you people of Arabia! Your
grandfather has come! He, whom you have been eagerly waiting for,
has come!" The Muslims immediately rushed holding their
weapons, (to defend him)[1] . The joyful news soon spread through the
city and people marched forward to greet their noble guest.
Ibn Al-Qayyim said: "The
shouts of ‘Allâhu Akbar’ (Allâh is Great) resounded
in Banu ‘Amr bin ‘Auf. Muhammad’s elation correspondingly
increased, but with rare sense of timing and propriety, called a
halt. Serenity enveloped him and the evelation was sent down:[2]
"... then verily, Allâh
is his Maula (Lord, Master or Protector), and Gabriel,
and the righteous among the believers, - and furthermore,
the angels - are his helpers." [66:4][1]
‘Urwah bin Az-Zubair said:
They received the Messenger of Allâh , and went with them to
the right. There Banu ‘Amr bin ‘Awf hosted him. That was on
Monday, Rabi‘ Al-Awwal. He sat down silent, and Al-Ansar
(the Helpers), who had not had the opportunity to see him before,
came in to greet him: It is said that the sun became too hot so
Abu Bakr stood up to shade him from the hot sun rays.[1]
It was really an unprecedented day in Madinah . The Jews could
perceive concretely the veracity of their Prophet Habquq, who
said: ‘God has come from At-Taiman, and the Qudus one from
Faran Mount.’
Muhammad stayed in Quba’ with
Kulthum bin Al-Hadm, a hospitable chief of the tribe of ‘Amr
bin ‘Awf. Here he spent four days: Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday
and Thursday . It was during this period that the foundation of
Quba’ Mosque was laid on the basis of pure piety.
‘Ali hung back in Makkah for
three days to return the trusts, on behalf of the Prophet , to their respective
owners. After that he started his emigration journey to catch up
with him at Quba’.[1]
On Friday morning, the Prophet , sent for Bani An-Najjar,
his maternal uncles, to come and escort him and Abu Bakr to
Madinah . He rode towards the new headquarters amidst the cordial
greetings of his Madinese followers who had lined his path. He
halted at a place in the vale of Banu Salim and there he
performed his Friday prayer with a hundred others[1] .
Meanwhile the tribes and families of Madinah , the new name for
Yathrib and a short form of ‘The Messenger’s Madinah (City)’,
came streaming forth, and vied with one another in inviting the
noble visitor to their homes. The girls of the Madinese used to
chant beautiful verses of welcome rich in all meanings of
obedience and dutifulness to the new Messenger.
Though not wealthy, every Ansar
(Helper) was wholeheartedly eager and anxious to receive the
Messenger in his house. It was indeed a triumphal procession.
Around the camel of Muhammad and his immediate
followers, rode the chiefs of the city in their best raiment and
in glittering armour, everyone saying: "Alight here O
Messenger of Allâh, abide by us." Muhammad used to answer everyone
courteously and kindly: "This camel is commanded by Allâh,
wherever it stops, that will be my abode."
The camel moved onward with
slackened rein, reached the site of the Prophetic Mosque and
knelt down. He did not dismount until it rose up again, went on
forward, turned back and then returned to kneel down in the very
former spot. Here, he alighted in a quarter inhabited by Banu
Najjar, a tribe related to the Prophet from the maternal side.
In fact, it was his wish to honour his maternal uncles and live
among them. The fortunate host, Abu Ayyub Al-Ansari, stepped
forward with unbounded joy for the Divine blessing appropriated
to him, welcomed the Noble Guest and solicited him to enter his
house.[1]
A few days later, there arrived
the Prophet’s spouse Sawdah, his two daughters Fatimah and Umm
Kulthum, Usama bin Zaid, Umm Aiman, ‘Abdullah — son of Abu
Bakr with Abu Bakr’s house-hold including ‘Aishah - may Allah
be pleased with her - . Zainab was not able to emigrate and
stayed with her husband Abi Al-‘As till Badr Battle.[1]
‘Aishah - may Allah be pleased
with her - said: "When the Messenger of Allâh arrived in Madinah ,
both Abu Bakr and Bilal fell ill. I used to attend to their needs.
When the fever took firm grip of Abu Bakr he used to recite
verses of poetry that smacked of near death; Bilal, when the fit
of fever alleviated, would also recite verses of poetry that
pointed to clear homesickness." ‘Aishah - may Allah be
pleased with her - added:
"I briefed the Prophet on their grave
situation, and he replied: O Allâh, we entreat You to establish
in our hearts a strong love for Madinah equal to that we used to
have for Makkah, or even more. O Allâh, bless and increase the
wealth of Madinah and we beseech You to transmute its rotten mud
into wholesome edible fat."[1]
Life in
Madinah
The Madinese era could be
divided into three phases:
- The first phase was
characterized by too much trouble and discord, and too
many obstacles from within coupled by a hostile wave from
without aiming at total extermination of the rising faith.
It ended with Al-Hudaibiyah Peace Treaty in Dhul Qa‘da
6 A.H.
- The second phase featured a
truce with the pagan leadership and ended in the conquest
of Makkah in Ramadan 8 A.H. It also witnessed the Prophet
inviting
kings beyond Arabia to enter the fold of Islam.
- In the third phase, people
came to embrace Islam in hosts. Tribes and other folks
arrived in Madinah to pay homage to the Prophet . It ended at the
death of the Prophet in Rabi‘ Al-Awwal
11 A.H.
The First
Phase
The Status Quo in
Madinah
at the Time of Emigration
Emigration to Madinah could
never be attributable to attempts to escape from jeers and
oppression only, but it also constituted a sort of cooperation
with the aim of erecting the pillars of a new society in a secure
place. Hence it was incumbent upon every capable Muslim to
contribute to building this new homeland, immunizing it and
holding up its prop. As a leader and spiritual guide, there was
no doubt the Noble Messenger , in whose hands
exclusively all affairs would be resolved.
In Madinah, the Prophet had to deal with three
distinctively different categories of people with different
respective problems:
- His Companions, the noble
and Allâh fearing elite - may Allah be pleased with them
all -
- Polytheists still detached
from the Islam and were purely Madinese tribes.
- The Jews.
1. As for his Companions,
the conditions of life in Madinah were totally different
from those they experienced in Makkah. There, in Makkah,
they used to strive for one corporate target, but
physically, they were scattered, overpowered and forsaken.
They were helpless in terms of pursuing their new course
of orientation. Their means, socially and materially,
fell short of establishing a new Muslim community. In
parallel lines, the Makkan Chapters of the Noble Qur’ân
were confined to delineating the Islamic precepts,
enacting legislations pertaining to the believers
individually and enjoining good and piety and forbidding
evils and vices.In
Madinah , things were otherwise; here all the affairs of
their life rested in their hands. Now, they were at ease
and could quite confidently handle the challenges of
civilization, construction, means of living, economics,
politics, government administration, war and peace,
codification of the questions of the allowed and
prohibited, worship, ethics and all the relevant issues.
In a nutshell, they were in Madinah at full liberty to
erect the pillars of a new Muslim community not only
utterly different from that pre-Islamic code of life, but
also distinctive in its features in the world at large.
It was a society that could stand for the Islamic Call
for whose sake the Muslims had been put to unspeakable
tortures for 10 years. No doubt, the construction of a
society that runs in line with this type of ethics cannot
be accomplished overnight, within a month or a year. It
requires a long time to build during which legislation
and legalization will run gradually in a complementary
process with mind cultivation, training and education.
Allâh, the All-Knowing, of course undertook legislation
and His Prophet Muhammad , implementation
and orientation:
"He it is Who sent
among the unlettered ones a Messenger (Muhammad ) from among
themselves, reciting to them His Verses, purifying them (from
the filth of disbelief and polytheism), and teaching them
the Book (this Qur’ân, Islamic laws and Islamic
Jurisprudence) and Al-Hikmah (As-Sunna:
legal ways, orders, acts of worship, etc. of the Prophet
Muhammad .)."
[62:2]
The Prophet’s
Companions - may Allah be pleased with them all - ,
rushed enthusiastically to assimilate these Qur’ânic
rules and fill their hearts joyfully with them:
"And when His
Verses (this Qur’ân) are recited unto them, they (i.e.
the Verses) increase their Faith." [8:2]
With respect to the
Muslims, this task constituted the greatest challenge for
the Messenger of Allâh . In fact, this
very purpose lay at the heart of the Islamic Call and the
Muhammadan mission; it was never an incidental issue
though there were the matters that required urgent
addressing.
The Muslims in Madinah
consisted virtually of two parties: The first one already
settled down in their abode, land and wealth, fully at
ease, but seeds of discord amongst them were deeply
seated and chronic enmity continually evoked; they were Al-Ansar
(the Helpers). The second party were Al-Muhajirun
(the Emigrants), homeless, jobless and penniless. Their
number was not small, on the contrary, it was increasing
day by day after the Prophet had given them
the green light to leave for Madinah whose economic
structure, originally not that prosperous one, began to
show signs of imbalance aggravated by the economic
boycott that the anti-Islamic groups imposed and
consequently imports diminished and living conditions
worsened.
- The purely Madinese
polytheists constituted the second sector with whom the
Prophet had
to deal. Those people had no control at all over the
Muslim. Some of them nursed no grudge against the
Muslims, but were rather skeptical of their ancestors’
religious practices, and developed tentative inclination
towards Islam and before long they embraced the new faith
and were truly devoted to Allâh. However, some others
harboured evil intentions against the Prophet and his
followers but were too cowardly to resist them publicly,
they were rather, under those Islamically favourable
conditions, obliged to fake amicability and friendliness.
‘Abdullah bin Ubai, who had almost been given
presidency over Al-Khazraj and Al-Aws tribes in the wake
of Bu‘ath War between the two tribes, came at the head
of that group of hypocrites. The Prophet’s advent and
the vigorous rise of the new spirit of Islam foiled that
orientation and the idea soon went into oblivion. He,
seeing another one, Muhammad , coming to
deprive him and his agents of the prospective temporal
privileges, could not be pleased, and for overriding
reasons he showed pretension to Islam but with horrible
disbelief deeply-rooted in his heart. He also used to
exploit some events and weak-hearted new converts in
scheming malevolently against the true believers.
- The Jews (the Hebrews), who
had migrated to Al-Hijaz from Syria following the
Byzantine and Assyrian persecution campaigns, were the
third category existent on the demographic scene in
Madinah. In their new abode they assumed the Arabian
stamp in dress, language and manner of life and there
were instances of intermarriage with the local Arabs,
however they retained their ethnic particularism and
detached themselves from amalgamation with the immediate
environment. They even used to pride in their Jewish-Israeli
origin, and spurn the Arabs around designating them as
illiterate meaning brutal, naďve and backward. They
desired the wealth of their neighbours to be made lawful
to them and they could thus appropriate it the way they
liked.
"… because they say:
"There is no blame on us to betray and take the
properties of the illiterates (Arabs)" [3:75]
Religiously, they showed no
zeal; their most obvious religious commodity was fortunetelling,
witchcraft and the secret arts (blowing on knots), for which they
used to attach to themselves advantages of science and spiritual
precedence.
They excelled at the arts of
earning money and trading. They in fact monopolized trading in
cereals, dates, wine, clothes, export and import. For the
services they offered to the Arabs, the latter paid heavily.
Usury was a common practice amongst them, lending the Arab
notables great sums to be squandered on mercenary poets, and in
vanity avenues, and in return seizing their fertile land given as
surety.
They were very good at
corrupting and scheming. They used to sow seeds of discord
between adjacent tribes and entice each one to hatch plots
against the other with the natural corollary of continual
exhaustive bloody fighting. Whenever they felt that fire of
hatred was about to subside, they would nourish it with new means
of perpetuity so that they could always have the upper hand, and
at the same time gain heavy interest rates on loans spent on
inter-tribal warfare.
Three famous tribes of Jews
constituted the demographic presence in Yathrib (now Madinah):
Banu Qainuqua‘, allies of Al-Khazraj tribe, Banu An-Nadir and
Banu Quraizah who allied Al-Aws and inhabited the suburbs of
Madinah.
Naturally they held the new
changes with abhorrence and were terribly hateful to them, simply
because the Messenger of Allâh was of a different race, and this
point was in itself too repugnant for them to reconcile with.
Second, Islam came to bring about a spirit of rapport, to
terminate the state of enmity and hatred, and to establish a
social regime based on denunciation of the prohibited and
promotion of the allowed. Adherence to these canons of life
implied paving the way for an Arab unity that could work to the
prejudice of the Jews and their interests at both the social and
economic levels; the Arab tribes would then try to restore their
wealth and land misappropriated by the Jews through usurious
practices.
The Jews of course deeply
considered all these things ever since they had known that the
Islamic Call would try to settle in Yathrib, and it was no
surprise to discover that they harboured the most enmity and
hatred to Islam and the Messenger even though they did not
have the courage to uncover their feelings in the beginning.
The following incident could
attest clearly to that abominable antipathy that the Jews
harboured towards the new political and religious changes that
came to stamp the life of Madinah. Ibn Ishaq, on the authority of
the Mother of believers Safiyah - may Allah be pleased with her -
narrated: Safiyah, daughter of Huyayi bin Akhtab said: I was the
closest child to my father and my uncle Abi Yasir’s heart.
Whenever they saw me with a child of theirs, they should pamper
me so tenderly to the exclusion of anyone else. However, with the
advent of the Messenger of Allâh and setting in Quba’
with Bani ‘Amr bin ‘Awf, my father, Huyayi bin Akhtab and my
uncle Abu Yasir bin Akhtab went to see him and did not return
until sunset when they came back walking lazily and fully
dejected. I, as usually, hurried to meet them smiling, but they
would not turn to me for the grief that caught them. I heard my
uncle Abu Yasir say to Ubai and Huyayi: "Is it really he (i.e.
Muhammad )?"
The former said: "It is he, I swear by Allâh!" "Did
you really recognize him?" they asked. He answered: "Yes,
and my heart is burning with enmity towards him"[1]
An interesting story that took
place on the first day, the Prophet stepped in Madinah,
could be quoted to illustrate the mental disturbance and deep
anxiety that beset the Jews. ‘Abdullah bin Salam, the most
learned rabbi among the Jews came to see the Prophet when he arrived, and
asked him certain questions to ascertain his real Prophethood. No
sooner did he hear the Prophet’s answers than he embraced
Islam, but added that if his people knew of his Islamization they
would advance false arguments against me. The Prophet sent for some Jews and
asked them about ‘Abdullah bin Salam, they testified to his
scholarly aptitude and virtuous standing. Here it was divulged to
them that he had embraced Islam and on the spot, they imparted
categorically opposite testimonies and described him as the most
evil of all evils. In another narration ‘Abdullah bin Salam
said, "O Jews! Be Allâh fearing. By Allâh, the only One,
you know that he is the Messenger of Allâh sent to people with
the Truth." They replied, "You are lying." ...
That was the Prophet’s first experience with the Jews.[1]
That was the demo-political
picture within Madinah. Five hundred kilometres away in Makkah,
there still lay another source of detrimental threat, the
archenemy of Islam, Quraish. For ten years, while at the mercy of
Quraish, the Muslims were subjected to all sorts of terrorism,
boycott, harassment and starvation coupled by a large scale
painstaking psychological war and aggressive organized propaganda.
When they had emigrated to Madinah, their land, wealth and
property were seized, wives detained and the socially humble in
rank brutally tortured. Quraish also schemed and made attempts on
the life of the first figure of the Call, Muhammad . Due to their
acknowledged temporal leadership and religious supremacy among
the pagan Arabs, given the custodianship of the Sacred Sanctuary,
the Quraishites spared no effort in enticing the Arabians against
Madinah and boycotting the Madinese socially and economically. To
quote Muhammad Al-Ghazali: "A state of war virtually existed
between the Makkan tyrants and the Muslims in their abode. It is
foolish to blame the Muslims for the horrible consequences that
were bound to ensue in the light of that long-standing feud."[1]
The Muslims in Madinah were
completely eligible then to confiscate the wealth of those
tyrants, mete out for them exemplary punishment and bring twofold
retaliation on them in order to deter them from committing any
folly against the Muslims and their sanctities.
That was a resume of the major
problems that the Prophet Muhammad had to face, and the
complicated issues he was supposed to resolve.
In full acknowledgment, we could
safely say that he quite honestly shouldered the responsibilities
of Messengership, and cleverly discharged the liabilities of both
temporal and religious leadership in Madinah. He accorded to
everyone his due portion whether of mercy or punishment, with the
former usually seasoning the latter in the overall process of
establishing Islam on firm grounds among its faithful adherents.
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