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Men from Yathrib





They came performing the pilgrimage (Hajj) from Yathrib, a city more than two hundred miles away, which has since become world-famous as al-Medina, “the City” par excellence.  Yathrib was fortunate in its location in a pleasant oasis, famous even to this day for the excellence of its dates, but unfortunate in every other way.  The oasis had been the scene of almost unceasing tribal strife.  Jews fought Jews and Arabs fought Arabs; Arabs allied themselves with Jews and fought other Arabs allied with a different Jewish community.  While Mecca prospered, Yathrib lived in wretchedness.  It was in need of a leader capable of uniting its people.





At Yathrib, there were Jewish tribes with learned rabbis who had often spoken to the pagans of a Prophet soon to come among the Jews, with whom, when he came, the Jews would destroy the Arabs as the tribes of ‘Aad and Thamud had been destroyed of old for their idolatry.





The Prophet Muhammad, may the mercy and blessings of God be upon him, at that stage in his call was secretly visiting different tribes in the outskirts of Mecca to convey them the message of Islam.  Once, he overheard a group of men at Aqaba, a place outside Mecca, and he asked to sit with them to which they gladly welcomed.  When the men from the tribe of Khazraj from Yathrib heard what Muhammad had to say, they recognized him as the Prophet whom the Jews had described to them, and all six men accepted Islam.  They also hoped that Muhammad, through this new religion, could be the man who would unite them with their brother tribe, the Aws, a tribe in Yathrib with whom they shared common ancestry, but distraught with years of war and animosity.  They determined to return to Yathrib and spread the religion of Muhammad.  As a result, not a house existed in Yathrib except that it heard the message Islam, and the next season of pilgrimage, in the year 621, a deputation came from Yathrib purposely to meet the Prophet.





First Pact of Aqaba





This deputation was composed of twelve men, five of those present the previous year, and two members of the Aws.  They met the Prophet again at Aqaba and pledged in their own names and in those of their wives, to associate no other creation with God (to become Muslim), neither to steal nor to commit adultery nor to kill their infants, even in dire poverty; and they undertook to obey this man in all things just.  This is known as the First Pledge of Aqaba.  When they returned to Yathrib, the Prophet sent with them his first ambassador, Mus’ab ibn ‘Umair, to teach the new converts the rudiments of the faith and further spread the religion to those who had not yet embraced Islam.





Mus’ab preached the message of Islam until almost every family in Yathrib had a Muslim in their midst, and before the Hajj of the following year, 622, Mus’ab returned to the Prophet and told him the good news of his mission, and of the goodness and strength of Yathrib and its people.





Second Pact of Aqaba





In  622, pilgrims from Yathrib, seventy-five of them Muslims, from them two women, came to perform the Hajj.  During the latter part of one night, while all were asleep, the Muslims from amongst the Yathribite pilgrims secretly crept into the place whether they had previously arranged to meet the Prophet, at the rocks at Aqaba, to vow allegiance to the Prophet and invite him to their city.  At Aqaba, they met the Prophet, and with him was his uncle, then still a pagan but one who defended his nephew due to familial bonds.  He spoke and warned the Muslims about the dangers of their task, and against proving untrue to their commitment if they undertook it.  Another person from the pilgrims who was present the previous two years also stood and warned against the danger of their commitment and their preparedness to uphold it.  In their staunch determination and love of the Prophet, they swore to defend him as they would defend their own selves, their wives and children.  It was then that the Hijrah, the emigration to Yathrib, was decided.





This is known as the Pledge of War, because it involved protecting the person of the Prophet, by arms if necessary; and soon after the emigration to Yathrib, the Quranic verses permitting war in defense of the religion were revealed.  These verses are crucial in the history of Islam:





“Permission is given unto those who fight because they have been wronged, and God is indeed able to give them victory; those who have been driven from their homes unjustly only because they said -- Our Lord is God!  For were it not that God repels some people by means of others, monasteries and churches and synagogues and mosques in which the name of God is extolled would surely have been destroyed…” (Quran 22:39-40)





A turning-point had come for Prophet Muhammad, for the Muslims, and for the world.  It was Prophet Muhammad’s destiny, and an aspect of his prophetic function, that he should demonstrate the alternatives open to the persecuted and the oppressed; on the one hand, forbearance; on the other, what is called by Christians the ‘just war’, but for which, in the words of a later Quranic revelation – “corruption would surely overwhelm the earth” (Quran 2:251).  For almost thirteen years, he and his followers had suffered persecution, threats and insults without raising a hand in self-defense.  They had proved that this was humanly possible.  Circumstances were now changing and called for a very different response if the religion of Islam was to survive in the world.  Peace has its seasons, but so has war, and the Muslim never forgets that every man born is born to struggle in one form or another, at one level or another; if not physically, then spiritually.  Those who try to ignore this fact are, sooner or later, enslaved.





Plot to Murder the Prophet





In small groups, the Muslims slipped out of Mecca and took the road to Yathrib.  The Hijrah (‘emigration’) had begun.





For Quraish the limits of what was bearable had been passed.  Enemies within the city were bad enough, but now these enemies were setting up a rival centre to the north.  The death of Abu Talib had removed Muhammad’s chief protector.  Restrained hitherto by principles inherited from their bedouin forefathers and by the fear of causing a troublesome blood feud, the leaders finally decided that Muhammad must die.  Abu Jahl proposed a simple plan.  Young men should be chosen from different clans, each one to strike a mortal blow, so that Muhammad’s blood would be upon all of them.  Hashim could not seek retribution from all the other clans.





The Hijrah (23 September, 622 C.E.)





Meanwhile, the Prophet, with a few intimates, had been awaiting the divine command to join the other Muslims in Yathrib.  He was not free to emigrate until this command came to him.  At last the command came.  He gave his cloak to Ali, bidding him lie down on the bed so that anyone looking in might think Muhammad lay there.  The slayers were to strike him as he came out of the house, whether in the night or early morning.  He knew they would not injure Ali.  The assassins were already surrounding his house when Prophet Muhammad slipped out unseen.  He went to Abu Bakr’s house and called to him, and they both went together to a cavern in a desert hill, hiding there until the hue and cry was past.  Abu Bakr’s son and daughter and his herdsman brought them food and tidings after nightfall.  Once, a search party came so near to them in their hiding-place that they could hear their words.  Abu Bakr was afraid and said, “O Messenger of God, Were one of them to look down towards his feet, he would see us!” The Prophet replied:





“What do you think of two people with whim God is the Third? Do not be sad, for indeed God is with us.” (Saheeh Al-Bukhari)





When the search party had departed their presence, , Abu Bakr had the riding-camels and the guide brought to the cave at night, and they set out on the long ride to Yathrib.





After traveling for many days on unfrequented paths, the fugitives reached a suburb of Yathrib called Qubaa, where, for weeks past, the people of the city heard that the Prophet had left Mecca, and hence they been setting out to the local hills every morning, watching for the Prophet until heat drove them to shelter.  The travelers arrived in the heat of the day, after the watchers had retired.  A Jew who was out and about saw him approaching and called out to the Muslims that he whom they expected had at last arrived, and the Muslims set out to the hills before Qubaa to greet him.





The Prophet stayed in Qubaa for some days, and there he built the first mosque of Islam.  By that time, Ali, who had left Mecca by foot three days after the Prophet, has also arrived.  The Prophet, his companions from Mecca, and the “Helpers” of Qubaa led him to Medina, where they had been eagerly anticipating his arrival.





The inhabitants of Medina never saw a brighter day in their history.  Anas, a close companion of the Prophet, said:





I was present the day he entered Medina and I have never seen a better or brighter day than the day on which he came to us in Medina, and I was present on the day he died, and I have never seen a day worse or darker than the day on which he died” (Ahmed)





Every house in Medina wished that the Prophet would stay with them, and some tried to lead his camel to their home.  The Prophet stopped them and said:





“Leave her, for she is under (Divine) Command.”





It passed many houses until it cam to a halt and knelt at the land of Banu Najjaar.  The Prophet did not descend until the camel had risen and gone on a little, then it turned and went back to its original place and knelt again.  Upon that, the Prophet descended from it.  He was pleased with its choice, for Banu Najjaar were his maternal uncles, and he also desired to honor them.  When individuals from the family has were soliciting him to enter their houses, a certain Abu Ayyoub stepped for ward to his saddle and took it into his house.  The Prophet said:





“A man goes with his saddle.” (Saheeh Al-Bukhari, Saheeh Muslim)





The first task he undertook in Medina was to build a Mosque.  The Prophet, may the mercy and blessings of God be upon him, sent for the two boys who owned the date-store and asked them to name the price of the yard.  They answered, “Nay, but we shall make thee a gift of it, O Prophet of God!”  The Prophet however, refused their offer, paid them its price and built a mosque from there,he himself taking part in its erection.  While working, he was heard saying:





“O God!  There is no goodness except that of the Hereafter, so please forgive the Helpers and the Emigrants.” (Saheeh Al-Bukhari)





The mosque served as a place of worship for Muslims.  The prayer which was previously an individual act performed in secret now became a public affair, one which epitomizes a Muslim society.  The period in which Muslims and Islam was subordinate and oppressed was over, now the adthaan, the call to prayer, would be called aloud, booming and penetrating the walls of every house, calling and reminding Muslims to fulfill their obligation to their Creator.  The mosque was a symbol of the Islamic society.  It was a place of worship, a school where Muslims would enlighten themselves about the truths if the religion, a meeting place whether the differences of various warring parties would be resolved, and an administration building from which all matters concerning the society would emanate, a true example of how Islam incorporates all aspects of life into the religion.  All these tasks were undertaken in a place built upon the trunks of date-palm trunks roofed with its leaves.





When the first and most important task was complete, he also made houses on both sides of the mosque for his family, also from the same materials.  The Prophet’s Mosque and house in Medina stands today in that very place.





The Hijrah had been completed.  It was 23 September 622, and the Islamic era, the Muslim calendar, begins the day on which this event took place..  And from this day on Yathrib had a new name, a name of glory: Madinat-un-Nabi, the City of the Prophet, in brief, Medina.





Such was the Hijrah, the emigration from Mecca to Yathrib.  The thirteen years of humiliation, of persecution, of limited success, and of prophecy still unfulfilled were over.





The ten years of success, the fullest that has ever crowned one man’s endeavor, had begun.  The Hijrah makes a clear division in the story of the Prophet’s Mission, which is evident from the Quran.  Till then he had only been a preacher.  Thenceforth he was the ruler of a State, at first a very small one, but which grew in ten years to become the empire of Arabia.  The kind of guidance which he and his people needed after the Hijrah was not the same as that which they had needed before.  The Medina chapters differ, therefore, from the Meccan chapters.  The latter give guidance to the individual soul and to the Prophet as Warner: the former give guidance to a growing social and political community and to the Prophet as example, lawgiver, and reformer.





Prophet Muhammad’s main meal was usually a boiled gruel, with dates and milk, his only other meal of the day being dates and water; but he frequently went hungry, sometimes even binding a flat stone against his belly to alleviate his discomfort.  One day a woman gave him a cloak - something he badly needed - but the same evening someone asked for it to make a shroud, and he promptly gave it as charity.  He was brought food by those who had a small surplus, but he never seemed to keep it long enough to taste it, as there was always someone in greater need.  With diminished physical strength - now fifty-two years old - he struggled to build a nation based upon the true religion of Islam out of the varied assortment of people God had given him as his raw material.





By force of character combined with extraordinary diplomatic skill, Prophet Muhammad began to reconcile the warring factions of Medina.  With his other companions also emigrating, a support system for the newcomers was of essential importance.  To unite the ‘emigrants’ (Muhājirūn) with the local Muslims, the ‘helpers’ (Ansār), he established a system of personal relationships: each ‘helper’ took an ‘emigrant’ as his brother, to be treated as such under all circumstances and to stand in order of inheritance along with members of the natural family.  With a few exceptions, the ‘emigrants’ had lost everything they possessed and were completely dependent upon their new brothers.  The Helpers sometimes went so far as to give their Emigrant brothers half of whatever they possessed in the form of houses, assets, lands and groves.  Such was the enthusiasm of the Helpers to share everything with their brothers-in-faith that they divided everything into two parts to draw lots for allocating their share.  In most cases, they tried to give the Emigrants the fairer portion of their property.





One is tempted to describe as a ‘miracle’ the fact that this situation seems to have caused no resentment whatever among those who were so suddenly obliged to take complete strangers into their families.  This bond of brotherhood broke all ties of ancestry, color, nationality and other factors previously regarded as a standard of honor.  The only ties which now mattered were religious.  Seldom has the power of religious faith to change men been more clearly demonstrated.





The Meccan Muslims, however, had not forgotten their old skills.  An ‘emigrant’ who when his new brother said to him, ‘O poorest of the poor, how can I help you?  My house and my funds are at your disposal!’ replied: ‘O kindest of kind friends, just show me the way to the local market.  The rest will take care of itself.’  This man, it is said, started by selling cheese and clarified butter, and soon became rich enough to pay the dower of a local girl and, in due course, was able to equip a caravan of 700 camels.





Such enterprise was encouraged, but there were also those who had neither the ability to do so nor did they have family or property.  They would spend the day in the Mosque and at night, the Prophet would place them with various individuals of the Helpers.  They came to be known as ‘Ahl us-Suffa.’  Some were fed at the Prophet’s own table, when there was any to spare, and with roasted barley from the community chest.





In the first year of his reign at Yathrib, the Prophet made a solemn covenant of mutual obligation between his people and the Jews tribes of Medina and its surrounding areas, in which it was agreed that they would have equal status as citizens of a state and full religious liberty, and that each would defend the other if attacked.





But their idea of a Prophet was one who would give them dominion, and a Jewish prophet, not an Arabian one.  The Jews had also profited greatly from the infighting between Arab tribes, as it was through this instability of the region that they had gained the upper hand in trade and commodities.  Peace among the tribes of Medina and its surrounding areas was a threat to the Jews.





Also, from among the inhabitants of Medina were those who resented the newcomers, but held their peace for the time being.  The most powerful of them, Abdullah ibn Ubayy ibn Salool, was extremely resentful of the arrival of the Prophet, as it was he who was the de facto the leader of Yathrib prior to the Prophet.  He accepted Islam as a matter of formality, though he would later betray the Muslims as the leader of the ‘hypocrites.’





Due to this common hatred of the Prophet, the Muslims, and the new state of affairs of Yathrib, the alliance between the Jews and the ‘hypocrites’ of Medina was almost inevitable.  Throughout the history of Muslims in Medina, they tried to seduce the followers of the new religion, constantly plotting and planning against them.  Due to this, there is frequent mention of the Jews and hypocrites in the Medina chapters of the Quran.





The Qiblah





The Qiblah (the direction toward which the Muslims pray) until this point had been Jerusalem.  The Jews imagined that the choice implied a leaning toward Judaism and that the Prophet stood in need of their instruction.  The Prophet longed for the Qiblah to be changed to the Kaaba.  The first place on earth built for the worship of God, and rebuilt by Abraham.  In the second year after the migration, The Prophet received command to change the Qiblah from Jerusalem to the Kaaba at Mecca.  A whole portion of Surah al-Baqara 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 the Quraish had sworn to make an end of his religion.  Enraged that the Prophet had succeeded in migrating to Medina, they increased their torture and persecution of the Muslims who stayed behind in Mecca.  Their evil plots did not stop their.  They also tried to make secret alliances with some polytheists of Medina, such as Abdullah ibn Ubayy previously mentioned, ordering him to kill or expel the Prophet.  The Quraish often sent threatening messages to Muslims of Medina warning of their annihilation, and so much news of the plots and plans of the polytheists reached the Prophet himself that he requested the positioning of security guards around his house.  It was at this time that God had given the Muslims permission to take arms against the disbelievers.





For thirteen years they had been strict pacifists.  Now, however, several small expeditions were sent, led either by the Prophet himself or some other of the emigrants from Mecca for the purpose of reconnoitering the routes which led to Mecca, as well as forming alliances with other tribes.  Other expeditions were led in order to intercept some caravans returning from Syria en route to Mecca, a way that Muslims could place economic pressure of the Quraish in order to quit their harassment of the Muslims, both in Mecca and Medina.  Few of these expeditions ever saw actual battle, but through them, the Muslims established their new position in the Arabian Peninsula, that they were no longer an oppressed and weak people, but rather their strength had grown and were now a formidable force not easily reckoned with.





The Campaign of Badr





On one expedition, the Quraishite caravan on route to Syria had escaped the Muslims.  The Muslims were in wait for its return.  Some scouts of the Muslims saw the caravan, led by Abu Sufyan himself, pass by them, and hurriedly informed the Prophet of it and its size.  If this caravan were intercepted, it would have an economic impact of great measure, one which would shake the entire society of the Meccans.  The Muslim scouts reported that the caravan would be halting at the wells of Badr, and the Muslims now prepared themselves to intercept it.





News of these preparations reached Abu Sufyan on his southward journey, and he sent an urgent message to Mecca that an army should be dispatched to deal with the Muslims.  Grasping the catastrophic consequences if the caravan were intercepted, they immediately rounded as much power as possible and departed to encounter the Muslims.  On way to Badr, the army received news that Abu Sufyan managed to escape the Muslims by driving the caravan to an alternative route along the seashore.  The Meccan army, numbering about a thousand men, persisted to Badr in order to teach a lesson to the Muslims, dissuading them from attacking any caravans in the future.





When the Muslims came to know of the advance of the Meccan army, they knew that a daring step must be taken in the matter.  If the Muslims did not encounter them at Badr, the Meccans would continue undermine the cause of Islam with all their ability, possibly even proceeding to Medina desecrating lives property and wealth there.  The Prophet, may the mercy and blessings of God be upon him, held and advisory meeting to determine the course of action.  The Prophet did not want to lead the Muslims, especially the Helpers who were the far majority of the army and were not even bound by the Pledge of Aqaba to fight beyond their territories, into something they did not agree to.





A man from the Helpers, Sa’d ibn Mu’aadh stood reaffirmed their devotion to the Prophet and the cause of Islam.  From his words were the following:





“O Prophet of God!  We believe in you and we bear witness to what you have vouchsafed to us, and we declare in unequivocal terms that what you have brought is the Truth.  We give you our firm pledge of obedience and sacrifice.  We obey you most willingly in whatever you command us, and by God Who has sent you with the Truth, if you were to ask us to plunge into the sea, we will do that most readily, and not a man of us will stay behind.  We do not grudge the idea of encounter with the enemy.  We are experienced in war and we are trustworthy in combat.  We hope that God will show you through our hands those deeds of valor which will please your eyes.  Kindly lead us to the battlefield in the Name of God.





After this show of extreme support and love for the Prophet and Islam by both the Emigrants and the Helpers, the Muslims, numbering a little over 300, made their way as best they could to Badr.  They had only seventy camels and three horses between them, so the men rode by turns.  They went forward to what is known in history as al- Yawm al-Furqan, the Day of Discrimination; discrimination between light and darkness, good and evil, right and wrong.





Preceding the Day of the battle, the Prophet spent the whole night in prayer and supplication.  The battle was fought on 17 Ramadan in the second year of the Hijra; 624 C.E.  It was customary for the Arabs to start the battles with individual duels.  The Muslims gained an advantage in the duels, and some notaries of the Quraish had been killed.  The Quraish enraged, the fell upon the Muslims in order to exterminate them once and for all.  The Muslims kept a strategic defensive position, which in turn produced heavy losses for the Meccans.  The Prophet was beseeching His Lord with all his might by this time, extending his hands so high that his cloak fell off his shoulders.  At that point, he received a revelation promising of the help of God:





“…I will help you with a thousand of the angels one behind another in succession.” (Quran 8:9)





 Upon hearing the good news, the Prophet ordered the Muslims took an offensive.  The great army of Quraish was overwhelmed by the zeal, valor and faith of the Muslims, and after facing heavy losses, they could do nothing but flee.  The Muslims were left alone on the field with a few doomed Meccans, amongst them the arch-enemy of Islam, Abu Jahl.  The Quraish were defeated and Abu Jahl was killed.  The promise of God came true:





“Their multitude will be defeated, and they will turn their backs (in flee).” (Quran 54:45)





 In this, one of the most decisive battles in human history, the total casualties were between only between seventy and eighty.





Mecca reeled under the shock, where Abu Sufyan was left as the dominant figure in the city, and he knew better than anyone that the matter could not be allowed to rest there.  Success breeds success, and the bedouin tribes, never slow to assess the balance of power, were increasingly inclined towards alliance with the Muslims, and Islam gained many new converts in Medina.



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