The Prophet of Islam
In or about the year 570 the child who would be named
Muhammad and who would become the Prophet of one of the world’s great religions,
Islam, was born into a family belonging to a clan of Quraish, the ruling tribe
of Mecca, a city in the Hijaz region of northwestern Arabia.
Originally the site of the
Kaabah, a shrine of ancient origins, Mecca had, with the decline of southern
Arabia, become an important center of sixth-century trade with such powers as
the Sassanians, Byzantines, and Ethiopians. As a result, the city was dominated
by powerful merchant families, among whom the men of Quraish were
preeminent.
Muhammad’s father, “Abd Allah
ibn” Abd al-Muttalib, died before the boy was born; his mother, Aminah, died
when he was six. The orphan was consigned to the care of his grandfather, the
head of the clan of Hashim. After the death of his grandfather, Muhammad was
raised by his uncle, Abu Talib. As was customary, the child Muhammad was sent
to live for a year or two with a Bedouin family. This custom, followed until
recently by noble families of Mecca, Medina, Taif, and other towns of the Hijaz,
had important implications for Muhammad. In addition to enduring the hardships
of desert life, he acquired a taste for the rich language so loved by the Arabs,
whose speech was their proudest art, and also learned the patience and
forbearance of the herdsmen, whose life of solitude he first shared, and then
came to understand and appreciate.
About the year 590, Muhammad,
then in his twenties, entered the service of a merchant widow named Khadijah as
her factor, actively engaged with trading caravans to the north. Sometime later
he married her, and had two sons, neither of whom survived, and four daughters
by her.
In his forties, he began to
retire to meditate in a cave on Mount Hira, just outside Mecca, where the first
of the great events of Islam took place. One day, as he was sitting in the
cave, he heard a voice, later identified as that of the Angel Gabriel, which
ordered him to:
“Recite: In the name of thy Lord who
created, Created man from a clot of blood.” (Quran 96:1-2)
Three times Muhammad pleaded his
inability to do so, but each time the command was repeated. Finally, Muhammad
recited the words of what are now the first five verses of the 96th chapter of
the Quran - words which proclaim God to be the Creator of man and the Source of
all knowledge.
At first Muhammad divulged his
experience only to his wife and his immediate circle. But, as more revelations
enjoined him to proclaim the oneness of God universally, his following grew, at
first among the poor and the slaves, but later, also among the most prominent
men of Mecca. The revelations he received at this time, and those he did later,
are all incorporated in the Quran, the Scripture of Islam.
Not everyone accepted God’s
message transmitted through Muhammad. Even in his own clan, there were those
who rejected his teachings, and many merchants actively opposed the message.
The opposition, however, merely served to sharpen Muhammad’s sense of mission,
and his understanding of exactly how Islam differed from paganism. The belief
in the Oneness of God was paramount in Islam; from this all else follows. The
verses of the Quran stress God’s uniqueness, warn those who deny it of impending
punishment, and proclaim His unbounded compassion to those who submit to His
will. They affirm the Last Judgment, when God, the Judge, will weigh in the
balance the faith and works of each man, rewarding the faithful and punishing
the transgressor. Because the Quran rejected polytheism and emphasized man’s
moral responsibility, in powerful images, it presented a grave challenge to the
worldly Meccans.
The Hijrah
After Muhammad had preached
publicly for more than a decade, the opposition to him reached such a high pitch
that, fearful for their safety, he sent some of his adherents to Ethiopia.
There, the Christian ruler extended protection to them, the memory of which has
been cherished by Muslims ever since. But in Mecca the persecution worsened.
Muhammad’s followers were harassed, abused, and even tortured. At last, seventy
of Muhammad’s followers set off by his orders to the northern town of Yathrib,
in the hope of establishing a news stage of the Islamic movement. This city
which was later to be renamed Medina (“The City”). Later, in the early fall of
622, he, with his closest friend, Abu Bakr al-Siddeeq, set off to join the
emigrants. This event coincided with the leaders in Mecca plotting, to kill
him.
In Mecca, the plotters arrived at
Muhammad’s home to find that his cousin, ‘Ali, had taken his place in bed.
Enraged, the Meccans set a price on Muhammad’s head and set off in pursuit.
Muhammad and Abu Bakr, however, had taken refuge in a cave, where they hid from
their pursuers. By the protection of God, the Meccans passed by the cave
without noticing it, and Muhammad and Abu Bakr proceeded to Medina. There, they
were joyously welcomed by a throng of Medinans, as well as the Meccans who had
gone ahead to prepare the way.
This was the Hijrah - anglicized
as Hegira - usually, but inaccurately, translated as “Flight” - from which the
Muslim era is dated. In fact, the Hijrah was not a flight, but a carefully
planned migration that marks not only a break in history - the beginning of the
Islamic era - but also, for Muhammad and the Muslims, a new way of life.
Henceforth, the organizational principle of the community was not to be mere
blood kinship, but the greater brotherhood of all Muslims. The men who
accompanied Muhammad on the Hijrah were called the Muhajiroon - “those
that made the Hijrah” or the “Emigrants” - while those in Medina who became
Muslims were called the Ansar, or “Helpers.”
Muhammad was well acquainted with
the situation in Medina. Earlier, before the Hijrah, various of its inhabitants
came to Mecca to offer the annual pilgrimage, and as the Prophet would take this
opportunity to call visiting pilgrims to Islam, the group who came from Medina
heard his call and accepted Islam.. They also invited Muhammad to settle in
Medina. After the Hijrah, Muhammad’s exceptional qualities so impressed the
Medinans that the rival tribes and their allies temporarily closed ranks as, on
March 15, 624, Muhammad and his supporters moved against the pagans of
Mecca.
The first battle, which took
place near Badr, now a small town southwest of Medina, had several important
effects. In the first place, the Muslim forces, outnumbered three to one,
routed the Meccans. Secondly, the discipline displayed by the Muslims brought
home to the Meccans, perhaps for the first time, the abilities of the man they
had driven from their city. Thirdly, one of the allied tribes which had pledged
support to the Muslims in the Battle of Badr, but had then proved lukewarm when
the fighting started, was expelled from Medina one month after the battle.
Those who claimed to be allies of the Muslims, but tacitly opposed them, were
thus served warning: membership in the community imposed the obligation of total
support.
A year later the Meccans struck
back. Assembling an army of three thousand men, they met the Muslims at Uhud, a
ridge outside Medina. After initial successes, the Muslims were driven back and
the Prophet himself was wounded. As the Muslims were not completely defeated,
the Meccans, with an army of ten thousand, attacked Medina again two years later
but with quite different results. At the Battle of the Trench, also known as
the Battle of the Confederates, the Muslims scored a signal victory by
introducing a new form of defense. On the side of Medina from which attack was
expected, they dug a trench too deep for the Meccan cavalry to clear without
exposing itself to the archers posted behind earthworks on the Medina side.
After an inconclusive siege, the Meccans were forced to retire. Thereafter
Medina was entirely in the hands of the Muslims.
The Conquest of Mecca
The Constitution of Medina -
under which the clans accepting Muhammad as the Prophet of God formed an
alliance, or federation - dates from this period. It showed that the political
consciousness of the Muslim community had reached an important point; its
members defined themselves as a community separate from all others. The
Constitution also defined the role of non-Muslims in the community. Jews, for
example, were part of the community; they were dhimmis, that is,
protected people, as long as they conformed to its laws. This established a
precedent for the treatment of subject peoples during the later conquests.
Christians and Jews, upon payment of a nominal tax, were allowed religious
freedom and, while maintaining their status as non-Muslims, were associate
members of the Muslim state. This status did not apply to polytheists, who
could not be tolerated within a community that worshipped the One God.
Ibn Ishaq, one of the earliest
biographers of the Prophet, says it was at about this time that Muhammad sent
letters to the rulers of the earth - the King of Persia, the Emperor of
Byzantium, the Negus of Abyssinia, and the Governor of Egypt among others -
inviting them to submit to Islam. Nothing more fully illustrates the confidence
of the small community, as its military power, despite the battle of the Trench,
was still negligible. But its confidence was not misplaced. Muhammad so
effectively built up a series of alliances among the tribes that, by 628, he and
fifteen hundred followers were able to demand access to the Kaaba. This was a
milestone in the history of the Muslims. Just a short time before, Muhammad
left the city of his birth to establish an Islamic state in Medina. Now he was
being treated by his former enemies as a leader in his own right. A year later,
in 629, he reentered and, in effect, conquered Mecca, without bloodshed and in a
spirit of tolerance, which established an ideal for future conquests. He also
destroyed the idols in the Kaabah, to put an end forever to pagan practices
there. At the same time ‘Amr ibn al-’As, the future conqueror of Egypt, and
Khalid ibn al-Walid, the future “Sword of God,” accepted Islam, and swore
allegiance to Muhammad. Their conversion was especially noteworthy because
these men had been among Muhammad’s bitterest opponents only a short time
before.
In one sense Muhammad’s return to
Mecca was the climax of his mission. In 632, just three years later, he was
suddenly taken ill and on June 8 of that year, with his third wife Aisha in
attendance, the Messenger of God “died with the heat of noon.”
The death of Muhammad was a
profound loss. To his followers this simple man from Mecca was far more than a
beloved friend, far more than a gifted administrator, far more than the revered
leader who had forged a new state from clusters of warring tribes. Muhammad was
also the exemplar of the teachings he had brought them from God: the teachings
of the Quran, which, for centuries, have guided the thought and action, the
faith and conduct, of innumerable men and women, and which ushered in a
distinctive era in the history of mankind. His death, nevertheless, had little
effect on the dynamic society he had created in Arabia, and no effect at all on
his central mission: to transmit the Quran to the world. As Abu Bakr put it:
“Whoever worshipped Muhammad, let him know that Muhammad is dead, but whoever
worshipped God, let him know that God lives and dies not.”
The Caliphate of Abu Bakr and Umar
With the death of Muhammad, the
Muslim community was faced with the problem of succession. Who would be its
leader? There were four persons obviously marked for leadership: Abu Bakr
al-Siddeeq, who had not only accompanied Muhammad to Medina ten years before,
but had been appointed to take the place of the Prophet as leader of public
prayer during Muhammad’s last illness; Umar ibn al-Khattab, an able and trusted
Companion of the Prophet; Uthman ibn ‘Affan, a respected early convert; and ‘Ali
ibn Abi Talib, Muhammad’s cousin and son-in-law. There piousness and ability to
govern the affairs of the Islamic nation was uniformly par excellence. At a
meeting held to decide the new leadership, Umar grasped Abu Bakr’s hand and gave
his allegiance to him, the traditional sign of recognition of a new leader. By
dusk, everyone concurred, and Abu Bakr had been recognized as the khaleefah of
Muhammad. Khaleefah - anglicized as caliph - is a word meaning “successor”, but
also suggesting what his historical role would be: to govern according to the
Quran and the practice of the Prophet.
Abu Bakr’s caliphate was short,
but important. An exemplary leader, he lived simply, assiduously fulfilled his
religious obligations, and was accessible and sympathetic to his people. But he
also stood firm when some tribes, who had only nominally accepted Islam,
renounced it in the wake of the Prophet’s death. In what was a major
accomplishment, Abu Bakr swiftly disciplined them. Later, he consolidated the
support of the tribes within the Arabian Peninsula and subsequently funneled
their energies against the powerful empires of the East: the Sassanians in
Persia and the Byzantines in Syria, Palestine, and Egypt. In short, he
demonstrated the viability of the Muslim state.
The second caliph, Umar -
appointed by Abu Bakr - continued to demonstrate that viability. Adopting the
title Ameer al-Mumineen, or Commander of the Believers, Umar extended Islam’s
temporal rule over Syria, Egypt, Iraq, and Persia in what, from a purely
military standpoint, were astonishing victories. Within four years after the
death of the Prophet, the Muslim state had extended its sway over all of Syria
and had, at a famous battle fought during a sandstorm near the River Yarmuk,
blunted the power of the Byzantines - whose ruler, Heraclius, had shortly before
refused the call to accept Islam.
Even more astonishingly, the
Muslim state administered the conquered territories with a tolerance almost
unheard of in that age. At Damascus, for example, the Muslim leader, Khalid ibn
al-Walid, signed a treaty which read as follows:
This is what
Khalid ibn al-Walid would grant to the inhabitants of Damascus if he enters
therein: he promises to give them security for their lives, property and
churches. Their city wall shall not be demolished; neither shall any Muslim be
quartered in their houses. Thereunto we give them the pact of God and the
protection of His Prophet, the caliphs and the believers. So long as they pay
the poll tax, nothing but good shall befall them.
This tolerance was typical of
Islam. A year after Yarmook, Umar, in the military camp of al-Jabiyah on the
Golan Heights, received word that the Byzantines were ready to surrender
Jerusalem. Consequently, he rode there to accept the surrender in person.
According to one account, he entered the city alone and clad in a simple cloak,
astounding a populace accustomed to the sumptuous garb and court ceremonials of
the Byzantines and Persians. He astounded them still further when he set their
fears at rest by negotiating a generous treaty in which he told them: “In the
name of God ... you have complete security for your churches, which shall not
be occupied by the Muslims or destroyed.”
This policy was to prove
successful everywhere. In Syria, for example, many Christians who had been
involved in bitter theological disputes with Byzantine authorities - and
persecuted for it - welcomed the coming of Islam as an end to tyranny. And in
Egypt, which Amr ibn al-As took from the Byzantines after a daring march across
the Sinai Peninsula, the Coptic Christians not only welcomed the Arabs, but
enthusiastically assisted them.
This pattern was repeated
throughout the Byzantine Empire. Conflict among Greek Orthodox, Syrian
Monophysites, Copts, and Nestorian Christians contributed to the failure of the
Byzantines - always regarded as intruders - to develop popular support, while
the tolerance which Muslims showed toward Christians and Jews removed the
primary cause for opposing them.
Umar adopted this attitude in
administrative matters as well. Although he assigned Muslim governors to the
new provinces, existing Byzantine and Persian administrations were retained
wherever possible. For fifty years, in fact, Greek remained the chancery
language of Syria, Egypt, and Palestine, while Pahlavi, the chancery language of
the Sassanians, continued to be used in Mesopotamia and Persia.
Umar, who served as caliph for
ten years, ended his rule with a significant victory over the Persian Empire.
The struggle with the Sassanid realm had opened in 636 at al-Qadisiyah, near
Ctesiphon in Iraq, where Muslim cavalry had successfully coped with elephants
used by the Persians as a kind of primitive tank. Now with the Battle of
Nihavand, called the “Conquest of Conquests,” Umar sealed the fate of Persia;
henceforth it was to be one of the most important provinces in the Muslim
Empire.
His caliphate was a high point in
early Islamic history. He was noted for his justice, social ideals,
administration, and statesmanship. His innovations left an all enduring imprint
on social welfare, taxation, and the financial and administrative fabric of the
growing empire.
The Caliphate of Uthman ibn Affan
Umar ibn Al-Khattab, the second caliph of Islam, was stabbed by a Persian slave
Abu Lu’lu’ah, a Persian Magian, while leading the Fajr Prayer. As Umar was
lying on his death bed, the people around him asked him to appoint a successor.
Umar appointed a committee of six people to choose the next caliph from among
themselves.
This committee comprised Ali ibn
Abi Talib, Uthman ibn Affan, Abdur-Rahman ibn Awf, Sad ibn Abi Waqqas, Az-Zubayr
ibn Al-Awam, and Talhah ibn Ubayd Allah, who were among the most eminent
Companions of the Prophet, may God send His praises upon him, and who had
received in their lifetime the tidings of Paradise.
The instructions of Umar were
that the Election Committee should choose the successor within three days, and
he should assume office on the fourth day. As two days passed by without a
decision, the members felt anxious that the time was running out fast, and still
no solution to the problem appeared to be in sight. Abdur-Rahman ibn Awf
offered to forgo his own claim if others agreed to abide by his decision. All
agreed to let Abdur-Rahman choose the new caliph. He interviewed each nominee
and went about Medinah asking the people for their choice. He finally selected
Uthman as the new caliph, as the majority of the people chose him.
His Life as a Caliph
Uthman led a simple life even
after becoming the leader of the Islamic state. It would have been easy for a
successful businessman such as him to lead a luxurious life, but he never aimed
at leading such in this world. His only aim was to taste the pleasure of the
hereafter, as he knew that this world is a test and temporary. Uthman’s
generosity continued after he became caliph.
The caliphs were paid for their
services from the treasury, but Uthman never took any salary for his service to
Islam. Not only this, he also developed a custom to free slaves every Friday,
look after widows and orphans, and give unlimited charity. His patience and
endurance were among the characteristics that made him a successful leader.
Uthman achieved much during his
reign. He pushed forward with the pacification of Persia, continued to defend
the Muslim state against the Byzantines, added what is now Libya to the empire,
and subjugated most of Armenia. Uthman also, through his cousin Mu'awiyah ibn
Abi Sufyan, the governor of Syria, established an Arab navy which fought a
series of important engagements with the Byzantines.
Of much greater importance to
Islam, however, was Uthman's compilation of the text of the Quran as revealed to
the Prophet. Realizing that the original message from God might be
inadvertently distorted by textual variants, he appointed a committee to collect
the canonical verses and destroy the variant recensions. The result was the
text that is accepted to this day throughout the Muslim world.
Opposition and the End
During his caliphate, Uthman
faced much of hostility from new, nominal Muslims in newly Islamic lands, who
started to accuse him of not following the example Prophet and the preceding
caliphs in matters concerning governance . However, the Companions of the
Prophet always defended him. These accusations never changed him. He remained
persistent to be a merciful governor. Even during the time when his foes
attacked him, he did not use the treasury funds to shield his house or himself.
As envisaged by Prophet Muhammad, Uthman’s enemies relentlessly made his
governing difficult by constantly opposing and accusing him. His opponents
finally plotted against him, surrounded his house, and encouraged people to kill
him.
Many of his advisors asked him to
stop the assault but he did not, until he was killed while reciting the Quran
exactly as the Prophet had predicted. Uthman died as a martyr.
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