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By Mohammed Marmaduke Pickthall
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The Jews and
Hypocrites
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The first
Qiblah was the Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem
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In the first year of his
reign at Yathrib the Prophet made a solemn treaty with the Jewish tribes, which
secured to them equal rights of citizenship and full religious liberty in return
for their support of the new state. But their idea of a Prophet was one who
would give them dominion, not one who made the Jews who followed him brothers of
every Arab who might happen to believe as they did. When they found that they
could not use the Prophet for their own ends, they tried to shake his faith in
his Mission and to seduce his followers, behavior in which they were encouraged
secretly by some professing Muslims who considered they had reason to resent the
Prophet’s coming, since it robbed them of their local influence. In the
Madinah’s surahs there is frequent mention of these Jews and Hypocrites.
The Qiblah
Till then the Qiblah (the
place toward which the Muslims turn their face in prayer) had been Jerusalem .
The Jews imagined that the choice implied a leaning toward Judaism and that the
Prophet stood in need of their instruction. He received command to change the
Qiblah from Jerusalem to the Ka‘bah at Makkah. The whole first part of juz’ 2,
part of Surah II, relates to this Jewish controversy.
The First Expeditions
The Prophet’s first concern
as ruler was to establish public worship and lay down the constitution of the
State: but he did not forget that Quraysh had sworn to make an end of his
religion, nor that he had received command to fight against them till they
ceased from persecution. After he had been twelve months in Yathrib several
small expeditions went out, led either by the Prophet himself or some other of
the fugitives from Makkah for the purpose of reconnoitering and of dissuading
other tribes from siding with Quraysh. These are generally represented as
warlike but, considering their weakness and the fact that they did not result in
fighting; they can hardly have been that, though it is certain that they went
out ready to resist attack. It is noteworthy that in those expeditions only
fugitives from Makkah were employed, never natives of Yathrib; the reason being
(if we accept Ibn Khaldun’s theory, and there is no other explanation) that the
command to wage war had been revealed to the Prophet at Makkah after the Yathrib
men had sworn their oath of allegiance at al-‘Aqabah, and in their absence.
Their oath foresaw fighting in mere defense not fighting in the field. Blood was
shed and booty taken in only one of those early expeditions, and then it was
against the Prophet’s orders.
One purpose of those
expeditions may have been to accustom the Makkah Muslims to going out in war
like trim. For thirteen years they had been strict pacifists, and it is clear,
from several passages of the Qur’an, that many of them, including, it may be,
the Prophet himself, hated the idea of fighting even in self-defense and had to
be inured to it.
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The site of
the campaign of Badr. The enclosed square is the opening of the
well.
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The Campaign of
Badr
In the second year of the
Hijrah the Makkahn merchants’ caravan was returning from Syria as usual by a
road which passed not far from Yathrib. As its leader Abu Sufyan approached the
territory of Yathrib he heard of the Prophet’s design to capture the caravan. At
once he sent a camel-rider on to Makkah, who arrived in a worn-out state and
shouted frantically from the valley to Quraysh to hasten to the rescue unless
they wished to lose both wealth and honor. A force a thousand strong was soon on
its way to Yathrib: less, it would seem, with the hope of saving the caravan
than with the idea of punishing the raiders, since the Prophet might have taken
the caravan before the relief force started from Makkah.
Did the Prophet ever intend
to raid the caravan? In Ibn Hisham, in the account of the Tabuk expedition, it
is stated that the Prophet on that one occasion did not hide his real objective.
The caravan was the pretext in the campaign of Badr; the real objective was the
Makkan army.
He had received command to
fight his persecutors, and promise of victory, he was prepared to venture
against any odds, as was well seen at Badr. But the Muslims, ill-equipped for
war, would have despaired if they had known from the first that they were to
face a well-armed force three times their number.
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The
victory of Badr gave the Prophet new prestige among the Arab
tribes
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The army of Quraysh had
advanced more than half-way to Yathrib before the Prophet set out. All three
parties – the army of Quraysh, the Muslim army and the caravan – were heading
for the water of Badr. Abu Sufyan, the leader of the caravan, heard from one of
his scouts that the Muslims were near the water, and turned back to the
coast-plain. And the Muslims met the army of Quraysh by the water of Badr.
Before the battle the Prophet
was prepared still further to increase the odds against him. He gave leave to
all the Ansar (natives of Yathrib) to return to their homes unreproached, since
their oath did not include the duty of fighting in the field; but the Ansar were
only hurt by the suggestion that they could possibly desert him at a time of
danger. The battle went at first against the Muslims, but ended in a signal
victory for them.
The victory of Badr gave the
Prophet new prestige among the Arab tribes; but thenceforth there was the feud
of blood between Quraysh and the Islamic State in addition to the old religious
hatred. Those passages of the Qur’an which refer to the battle of Badr give
warning of much greater struggles yet to come.
In fact in the following
year, an army of three thousand came from Makkah to destroy Yathrib. The
Prophet’s first idea was merely to defend the city, a plan of which Abdullah ibn
Ubeyy, the leader of “the Hypocrites” (or lukewarm Muslims), strongly approved.
But the men who had fought at Badr and believed that God would help them against
any odds thought it a shame that they should linger behind walls.
The Battle on Mt.
Uhud
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The peak of
Mt. Uhud
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The Prophet,
approving of their faith and zeal, gave way to them, and set out with an army of
one thousand men toward Mt. Uhud , where the enemy were encamped. Abdullah ibn
Ubeyy was much offended by the change of plan. He thought it unlikely that the
Prophet really meant to give battle in conditions so adverse to the Muslims, and
was unwilling to take part in a mere demonstration designed to flatter the
fanatical extremists. So he withdrew with his men, a fourth or the army.
Despite the heavy odds, the
battle on Mt. Uhud would have been an even greater victory than that at Badr for
the Muslims but for the disobedience of a band of fifty archers whom the Prophet
set to guard a pass against the enemy cavalry. Seeing their comrades victorious,
these men left their post, fearing to lose their share of the spoils. The
cavalry of Quraysh rode through the gap and fell on the exultant Muslims.
The Prophet himself was
wounded and the cry arose that he was slain, till someone recognized him and
shouted that he was still living. a shout to which the Muslims rallied.
Gathering round the Prophet, they retreated, leaving many dead on the hillside.
On the following day the
Prophet again sallied forth with what remained of the army, that Quraysh might
hear that he was in the field and so might perhaps be deterred from attacking
the city. The stratagem succeeded, thanks to the behavior of a friendly Bedouin,
who met the Muslims and conversed with them and afterwards met the army of
Quraysh. Questioned by Abu Sufyan, he said that Muhammad was in the field,
stronger than ever, and thirsting for revenge for yesterday’s affair. On that
information, Abu Sufyan decided to return to Makkah.
Massacre of Muslims
The reverse which they had
suffered on Mt. Uhud lowered the prestige of the Muslims with the Arab tribes
and also with the Jews of Yathrib. Tribes which had inclined toward the Muslims
now inclined toward Quraysh. The Prophet’s followers were attacked and murdered
when they went abroad in little companies. Khubayb, one of his envoys, was
captured by a desert tribe and sold to Quraysh, who tortured him to death in
Makkah publicly.
Expulsion of Bani
Nadhir
And the Jews, despite their
treaty, now hardly concealed their hostility. They even went so far in flattery
of Quraysh as to declare the religion of the pagan Arabs superior to Islam. The
Prophet was obliged to take punitive action against some of them. The tribe of
Bani Nadhir were besieged in their strong towers, subdued and forced to
emigrate. The Hypocrites had sympathized with the Jews and secretly egged them
on.
The War of the Trench
| The trench the
Muslims dug was the first of its kind in Arab warfare
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In the fifth year of the
Hijrah the idolaters made a great effort to destroy Islam in the War of the
Clans or War of the Trench, as it is variously called; when Quraysh with all
their clans and the great desert tribe of Ghatafan with all their clans, an army
of ten thousand men rode against Al-Madinah (Yathrib). The Prophet (by the
advice of Salman the Persian, it is said) caused a deep trench to be dug before
the city, and himself led the work of digging it.
The army of the clans was
stopped by the trench, a novelty in Arab warfare. It seemed impassable for
cavalry, which formed their strength. They camped in sight of it and daily
showered their arrows on its defenders. While the Muslims were awaiting the
assault, news came that Bani Qurayzah, a Jewish tribe of Yathrib which had till
then been loyal, had gone over to the enemy. The case seemed desperate. But the
delay caused by the trench had damped the ardor of the clans, and one who was
secretly a Muslim managed to sow distrust between Quraysh and their Jewish
allies, so that both hesitated to act. Then came a bitter wind from the sea,
which blew for three days and nights so terribly that not a tent could be kept
standing, not a fire lighted, not a pot boiled. The tribesmen were in utter
misery. At length, one night the leader of Quraysh decided that the torment
could be borne no longer and gave the order to retire. When Ghatafan awoke next
morning they found Quraysh had gone and they too took up their baggage and
retreated.
Punishment of Bani
Qurayzah
On the day of the return from
the trench the Prophet ordered war on the treacherous Bani Qurayzah, who,
conscious of their guilt, had already taken to their towers of refuge. After a
siege of nearly a month they had to surrender unconditionally. They only begged
that they might be judged by a member of the Arab tribe of which they were
adherents. The Prophet granted their request. But the judge, upon whose favor
they had counted, condemned their fighting men to death, their women and
children to slavery.
Early in the sixth year of
the Hijrah the Prophet led a campaign against the Bani al-Mustaliq, a tribe who
were preparing to attack the Muslims.
Al-Hudaybiyah
In the same year the Prophet
had a vision in which he found himself entering the holy place at Makkah
unopposed, therefore he determined to attempt the pilgrimage. Besides a number
of Muslims from Yathrib (which we shall henceforth call Al-Madinah) he called
upon the friendly Arabs, whose numbers had increased since the miraculous (as it
was considered) discomfiture of the clans to accompany him, but most of them did
not respond. Attired as pilgrims, and taking with them the customary offerings,
a company of fourteen hundred men journeyed to Makkah. As they drew near the
holy valley they were met by a friend from the city, who warned the Prophet that
Quraysh had put on their leopards-skins (the badge of valor) and had sworn to
prevent his entering the sanctuary; their cavalry was on the road before him. On
that, the Prophet ordered a detour through mountain gorges and the Muslims were
tired out when they came down at last into the valley of Makkah and encamped at
a spot called Al-Hudaybiyah; from thence he tried to open negotiations with
Quraysh, to explain that he came only as a pilgrim.
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“Never have I seen a man honored as Muhammad is honored by his
comrades.”
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The first messenger he sent
towards the city was maltreated and his camel hamstrung. He returned without
delivering his message. Quraysh on their side sent an envoy which was
threatening in tone, and very arrogant. Another of their envoys was too familiar
and had to be reminded: sternly of the respect due to the Prophet. It was he
who, on his return to the city, said: “I have seen Caesar and Chosroes in their
pomp, but never have I seen a man honored as Muhammad is honored by his
comrades.”
The Prophet sought some
messenger who would impose respect. Othman was finally chosen because of his
kinship with the powerful Umayyad family. While the Muslims were awaiting his
return the news came that he had been murdered. It was then that the Prophet,
sitting under a tree in Al-Hudaybiyah, took an oath from all his comrades that
they would stand or fall together. After a while, however, it became known that
Othman had not been murdered. A troop which came out from the city to molest the
Muslims in their camp was captured before they could do any hurt and brought
before the Prophet, who forgave them on their promise to renounce hostility.
Truce of
Al-Hudaybiyah
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“Victory” or “An-Nasr” was revealed during the return journey from Al-Hudaybiyah
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Then proper envoys came from
Quraysh. After some negotiation, the truce of Al-Hudaybiyah was signed. For ten
years there were to be no hostilities between the parties. The Prophet was to
return to Al-Madinah without visiting the Ka‘bah, but in the following year he
might perform the pilgrimage with his comrades, Quraysh promising to evacuate
Makkah for three days to allow of his doing so. Deserters from Quraysh to the
Muslims during the period of the truce were to be returned; not so deserters
from the Muslims to Quraysh. Any tribe or clan who wished to share in, the
treaty as allies of the Prophet might do so, and any tribe or clan who wished to
share in the treaty as allies of Quraysh might do so.
There was dismay among the
Muslims at these terms. They asked one another: “Where is the victory that we
were promised?” It was during the return journey from Al-Hudaybiyah that the
Surah entitled “Victory” was revealed. This truce proved, in fact, to be the
greatest victory that the Muslims had till then achieved. War had been a barrier
between them and the idolaters, but now both parties met and talked together,
and the new religion spread more rapidly. In the two years which elapsed between
the signing of the truce and the fall of Makkah the number of converts was
greater than the total number of all previous converts. The Prophet traveled to
Al-Hudaybiyah with 1400 men. Two years later, when the Makkans broke the truce,
he marched against them with an army of 10,000.
The Campaign of
Khaybar
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One of the
forts of Khaybar, which is over 100 kms outside
Madina
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In the seventh year or the
Hijrah the Prophet led a campaign against Khaybar, the stronghold of the Jewish
tribes in North Arabia , which had become a hornets’ nest of his enemies. The
forts of Khaybar were reduced one by one, and the Jews of Khaybar became
thenceforth tenants of the Muslims until the expulsion of the Jews from Arabia
in the ‘Caliphate of Omar.’ On the day when the last fort surrendered Ja`far son
of Abu Talib, the Prophet’s first cousin, arrived with all who remained of the
Muslims who had fled to Abyssinia to escape from persecution in the early
days.
They had been absent from Arabia fifteen years. It was at Khaybar that
a Jewess prepared for the Prophet poisoned meat, of which he only tasted a
morsel without swallowing it, and then warned his comrades that it was poisoned.
One Muslim, who had already swallowed a mouthful, died immediately, and the
Prophet himself, from the mere taste of it, derived the illness which eventually
caused his death. The woman who had cooked the meat was brought before him. When
she said that she had done it on account of the humiliation of her people, he
forgave her.
Pilgrimage to Makkah
In the same year the
Prophet’s vision was fulfilled: he visited the holy place at Makkah unopposed.
In accordance with the terms of the truce the idolaters evacuated the city, and
from the surrounding heights watched the procedure of the Muslims. At the end of
the stipulated three days the chiefs of Quraysh sent to remind the Prophet that
the time was up. He then withdrew, and the idolaters reoccupied the city.
Mu’tah Expedition
In the eighth year of the
Hijrah, hearing that the Byzantine emperor was gathering a force in Syria for
the destruction of Islam, the Prophet sent three thousand men to Syria under the
command of his freedman Zayd. The campaign was unsuccessful except that it
impressed the Syrians with a notion of the reckless valor of the Muslims. The
three thousand did not hesitate to join battle with a hundred thousand. When all
the three leaders appointed by the Prophet had been killed, the survivors obeyed
Khalid ibn al-Walid, who, by his strategy and courage, managed to preserve a
remnant and return with them to Al-Madinah.
Truce Broken by
Quraysh
In the same year Quraysh
broke the truce by attacking a tribe that was in alliance with the Prophet and
massacring them even in the sanctuary at Makkah. Afterwards they were afraid
because of what they had done. They sent Abu Sufyan to Al-Madinah to ask for the
existing treaty to be renewed and, its term prolonged. They hoped that he would
arrive before the tidings of the massacre. But a messenger from the injured
tribe had been before him, and his embassy was fruitless.
Conquest of Makkah
Then the Prophet summoned all
the Muslims capable of bearing arms and marched to Makkah. Quraysh were
overawed. Their cavalry put up a show of defence before the town, but were
routed without bloodshed; and the Prophet entered his native city as conqueror.
The inhabitants expected vengeance for their past misdeeds. The Prophet
proclaimed a general amnesty. Only a few known criminals were proscribed, and
most of those were in the end forgiven. In their relief and surprise, the whole
population of Makkah hastened to swear allegiance. The Prophet caused all the
idols which were in the sanctuary to be destroyed, saying: “Truth hath come;
darkness hath vanished away;” and the Muslim call to prayer was heard in Makkah.
Battle of Hunayn
In the same year there was an
angry gathering of pagan tribes eager to regain the Ka‘bah. The Prophet led
twelve thousand men against them. At Hunayn, in a deep ravine, his troops were
ambushed by the enemy and almost put to flight. It was with difficulty that they
were rallied to the Prophet and his bodyguard of faithful comrades who alone
stood firm. But the victory, when it came, was complete and the booty enormous,
for many of the hostile tribes had brought out with them everything that they
possessed.
Conquest of Ta’if
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The
“Declaration of Immunity” marks the end of idol-worship in
Arabia
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The tribe of Thaqif was among
the enemy at Hunayn. After that victory their city of Ta’if was besieged by the
Muslims, and finally reduced. Then the Prophet appointed a governor of Makkah,
and himself returned to Al-Madinah to the boundless joy of the Ansar, who had
feared lest, now that he had regained his native city, he might forsake them and
make Makkah the capital.
The Tabuk Expedition
In the ninth year of the
Hijrah, hearing that an army was again being mustered in Syria , the Prophet
called on all the Muslims to support him in a great campaign. The far distance,
the hot season, the fact that it was harvest time and the prestige of the enemy
caused many to excuse themselves and many more to stay behind without excuse.
Those defaulters are denounced in the Qur’an. But the campaign ended peacefully.
The army advanced to Tabuk, on the confines of Syria , and there learnt that the
enemy had not yet gathered.
Declaration of
Immunity
Although Makkah had been
conquered and its people were now Muslims, the official order of the pilgrimage
had not been changed; the pagan Arabs performing it in their manner, and the
Muslims in their manner. It was only after the pilgrims’ caravan had left
Al-Madinah in the ninth year of the Hijrah, when Islam was dominant in North
Arabia , that the Declaration of Immunity, as it is called, was revealed. The
Prophet sent a copy of it by messenger to Abu Bakr, leader of the
pilgrimage,
with the instruction that Ali was to read it to the multitudes at Makkah. Its
purport was that after that year Muslims only were to make the pilgrimage,
exception being made for such of the idolaters as had a treaty with the Muslims
and had never broken their treaty nor supported anyone against them. Such were
to enjoy the privileges of their treaty for the term thereof, but when their
treaty expired they would be as other idolaters. That proclamation marks the end
of
idol-worship in Arabia .
The Year of
Deputations
The ninth year of the Hijrah
is called the Year of Deputations, because from all parts of Arabia deputations
came to Al-Madinah to swear allegiance to the Prophet and to hear the Qur’an.
The Prophet had become, in fact, the emperor of Arabia , but his way of life
remained as simple as before.
The number of the campaigns
which he led in person during the last ten years of his life is twenty-seven in
nine of which there was hard fighting. The number of the expeditions which he
planned and sent out under other leaders is thirty-eight. He personally
controlled every detail of organization, judged every case and was accessible to
every suppliant. In those ten years he destroyed idolatry in Arabia; raised
women from the status of a cattle to legal equity with men; effectually stopped
the drunkenness and immorality which had till then disgraced the Arabs; made men
in love with faith, sincerity and honest dealing; transformed tribes who had
been for centuries Content with ignorance into a people with the greatest thirst
for knowledge; and for the first time in history made universal human
brotherhood a fact and principle of common law. And his support and guide in all
that work was the Qur’an.
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