CHAPTER II.
STUDY OF
THE LIFE OF
MUHAMMAD CONSIDERED AS A
PREACHER OF ISLAM.
it is
not proposed in this chapter to add another to the already
numerous biographies of Muḥammad, but rather to make a study of
his life in one of its aspects only, viz. that in which the Prophet is
presented to us as a preacher, as the apostle unto men of a new
religion. The life of the founder of Islam and the inaugurator
of its propaganda may naturally be expected to exhibit to us the true
character of the missionary activity of this religion. If the life of
the Prophet serves as the standard of conduct for the ordinary believer,
it must do the same for the Muslim missionary. From the pattern, therefore, we may hope
to learn something of the spirit that would
animate those who sought to copy it,
and of the methods they might be expected to adopt. For the missionary spirit of Islam is no
after-thought in its history; it interpenetrates the religion from its very commencement, and in the following sketch it is
desired to show how this is so, how
Muḥammad the Prophet is the type of the
missionary of Islam. It is therefore beside the purpose to describe his early history, or the influences
under which he grew up to manhood, or
to consider him in the light either
of a statesman or a general: it is as the preacher alone that he will demand our attention.
When, after long internal conflict and
disquietude, Muḥammad was at length
convinced of his divine mission, his earliest efforts were
directed towards persuading his own family of the truth of
the new doctrine. The unity of God, the abomination of idolatry,
the duty laid upon man of submission to the will of his Creator,—these
were the simple truths to which he claimed their allegiance. The first convert was his faithful and loving wife, Kha'dījah,
—she who fifteen years
before had offered her hand in marriage to the poor kinsman that had so successfully traded with her merchandise as a hired
agent,—with the words,
" I love thee, my cousin, for thy kinship with me, for the respect with which thy people
regard thee, for thy honesty,
for the beauty of thy character and for the truthfulness of thy speech." (1)She had lifted him out of poverty, and enabled him to live up to the
social position to which he
was entitled by right of birth; but this was as nothing to the fidelity and loving devotion with
which she shared his mental
anxieties, and helped him with tenderest sympathy and encouragement in the hour of his
despondency.
Up to her death in a.d. 619 (after a wedded life of five and
twenty years) she was always ready with sympathy, consolation and encouragement
whenever he suffered from the persecution of his enemies or was
tortured by doubts and misgivings. "So Khadījah
believed," says the biographer of the Prophet," and
attested the truth of that which came to him from God and aided
him in his undertaking. Thus was the Lord minded to lighten the
burden of His Prophet; for whenever he heard anything that grieved
him touching his rejection by the people, he would return
to her and God would comfort him through her, for she reassured
him and lightened his burden and declared her trust in him
and made it easy for him to bear the scorn of men." (2)
Among the earliest believers were his
adopted children Zayd and 'Alī, and his bosom friend Abū Bakr, of whom
Muḥammad would often say in
after years, " I never invited any to the faith who displayed
not hesitation, perplexity and vacillation —excepting only Abū
Bakr; who when I told him of Islam tarried not, neither was perplexed."
He was a wealthy merchant, much respected by his fellow citizens for
the integrity of his character and for his intelligence and
ability. After his conversion he expended the greater part
of his fortune on the purchase of Muslim slaves who were persecuted
by their masters on account of their adherence to the teaching of Muḥammad.
Through
his influence, to a great extent, five of the earliest converts
were added to the number of believers, Sa‘d b. Abī Waqqās, the
future conqueror of the Persians; al-Zubayr b. al-'Awwām, a
relative both of the Prophet and his wife; Ṭalḥah,
famous as a warrior in after days; a wealthy merchant 'Abd
al-Rahmān b. 'Awf, and 'Uthmān, the third Khalīfah.
The last was early exposed to persecution; his uncle seized and
bound him, saying, "Dost thou prefer a new religion to
that of thy fathers? I swear I will not loose thee until thou givest
up this new faith thou art following after." To which
'Uthmān replied, "By the Lord, I will never abandon it!"
Whereupon his uncle, seeing the firmness of his attachment
to his faith, released him.
With
other additions, particularly from among slaves and poor persons;
the Prophet succeeded in collecting round him a little band of
followers during the first three years of his mission.
Encouraged by the success of these private efforts, Muḥammad
determined on more active measures and began to preach in
public. He called his kinsmen together and invited them to embrace
the new faith. "No Arab," he urged," has offered to
his nation more precious advantages than those I bring you. I offer
you happiness in this world and in the life to come. Who among
you will aid me in this task? "All were silent. Only
'Alī, with boyish enthusiasm, cried out, "Prophet of God,
I will aid thee." At this the company broke up with derisive
laughter.
Undeterred by the ill-success of this
preaching, he repeatedly appealed to them on other occasions, but
his message and his warnings received from them nothing but scoffing
and contempt.
More than once the Quraysh tried to
induce his uncle Abū Ṭālib, as head of the clan of the Banū Hāshim, to
which Muḥammad belonged, to
restrain him from making such attacks upon their ancestral
faith, or otherwise they threatened to resort to more violent
measures. Abū Ṭālib accordingly appealed to his nephew not
to bring disaster on himself and his family. The Prophet replied: "Were
the sun to come down on my right hand and the moon on my left,
and the choice were offered me of abandoning my mission until God
himself should reveal it, or perishing in the achievement of it, I would not abandon
it." Abū Ṭālib was moved and
exclaimed, " Go and say whatever thou
wilt: by God! I will never give thee up unto thy enemies."
The Quraysh viewed the progress of the
new religion with increasing dissatisfaction and hatred. They adopted all
possible means, threats and promises, insults and offers of
worldly honour and aggrandisement to induce Muḥammad
to abandon the part he had taken up. The violent abuse with which he was
assailed is said to have been the indirect cause
of drawing to his side one important convert in the person of his uncle, Ḥamzah, whose chivalrous soul
was so stung to sudden sympathy by a
tale of insult inflicted on and patiently
borne by his nephew, that he changed at once from a bitter enemy into a staunch
adherent. His was not the only
instance of sympathy for the sufferings of the Muslims being aroused at the sight of the persecutions they had to endure, and many, no doubt,
secretly favoured the new religion
who did not declare themselves until
the day of its triumph.
The
hostility of the Quraysh to the new faith increased in bitterness as they
watched the increase in the numbers of its adherents. They
realised that the triumph of the new teaching meant the
destruction of the national religion and the national worship,
and a loss of wealth and power to the guardians of the sacred Ka'bah.
Muḥammad himself was safe under the protection of Abū Ṭālib
and the Banū Hāshim, who, though they had no sympathy for the doctrines
their kinsman taught, yet with the strong clan-feeling peculiar to the Arabs, secured
him from any attempt upon his life, though
he was still exposed to continual insult
and annoyance. But the poor who had no protector, and the slaves, had to endure the cruelest
persecution, and were imprisoned and
tortured in order to induce them to
recant. It was at this time that Abū Bakr purchased the freedom of Bilāl, (3)an
African slave, who was called by Muhammad
"the first-fruits of Abyssinia." He had been cruelly tortured by
being exposed, day after day, to the scorching rays of the sun, stretched out on his back,
with an enormous stone on his stomach; here he was told he would have to stay
until either he died or renounced Muḥammad and worshipped idols, to which
he would reply only,
" There is but one God, there is but one God." Two persons died under the tortures they
had to undergo. The
constancy of a few gave way under the trial,
but persecution served only to re-kindle the zeal of others. 'Abd Allāh b. Mas'ūd
made bold to recite a passage of the Qur'an within the precincts of the Ka'bah itself,—an act of
daring that none of the
followers of Muḥammad had ventured upon before. The assembled Quraysh attacked
him and smote him on the
face, but it was some time before they compelled him to desist. He returned to his companions, prepared to bear witness to his faith
in a similar manner on
the next day, but they dissuaded him, saying, "This is enough for thee, since thou hast
made them listen to what
they hated to hear."
The
virulence of the opposition of the Quraysh is probably the
reason why in the fourth year of his mission Muḥammad
took up
his residence in the house of al-Arqam, one of the early converts. It was in a central situation, much frequented by pilgrims and strangers, and here
peaceably and without interruption he
was able to preach the doctrines of
Islam to all enquirers that came to him. Muḥammad's stay in this house marks an important epoch in the
propagation of Islam in Mecca, and many Muslims dated their conversion from the days when the Prophet preached
in the house of al-Arqam.
As
Muḥammad was unable to relieve his
persecuted followers, he advised them to take refuge in
Abyssinia, and in the fifth year of his mission (a.d. 615), eleven men and four
women crossed over to Abyssinia, where they received a
kind welcome from the Christian king of the country. Among
them was a certain Muṣ'ab b. 'Umayr whose history is interesting as
of one who had to endure that most bitter trial of the new
convert—the hatred of those he loves and who once loved him. He
had been led to embrace Islam through the teaching he had listened to
in the house of al-Arqam, but he was afraid to let the fact of his
conversion become known, because his tribe and his mother, who
bore an especial love to him, were bitterly opposed to the
new religion; and indeed, when they discovered the fact, seized and imprisoned
him. But he succeeded in effecting his escape to Abyssinia.
The hatred of the Quraysh is said to
have pursued the fugitives even to Abyssinia, and an embassy was sent
to demand their extradition from the king of that country. But
when he heard their story from the Muslims, he refused to withdraw
from them his protection. In answer to his enquiries as to their
religion, they said: " O King, we were plunged in the
darkness of ignorance, worshipping idols, and eating carrion;
we practised abominations, severed the ties of kinship and
maltreated our neighbours; the strong among us devoured the weak;
and so we remained until God sent us an apostle, from among ourselves,
whose lineage we knew as well as his truth, his trustworthiness and
the purity of his life. He called upon us to worship the One God
and abandon the stones and idols that our fathers had worshipped
in His stead. He bade us be truthful in speech, faithful to our
promises, compassionate and kind to our parents and neighbours, and
to desist from crime and bloodshed. He forbade to do
evil, to lie, to rob the orphan or defame women. He enjoined
on us the worship of God alone, with prayer, almsgiving and
fasting. And we believed in him and followed the teachings that
he brought us from God. But our countrymen rose up against us and
persecuted us to make us renounce our faith, and return to the worship
of idols and the abominations of our former life. So when they
cruelly entreated us, reducing us to bitter straits and
came between us and the practice of our religion, we took refuge in
your country; putting our trust in your justice, we hope that
you will deliver us from the oppression of our enemies." Their
prayer was heard and the embassy of the Quraysh returned
discomfited. (4)
Meanwhile, in Mecca, a fresh attempt was
made to induce the Prophet to abandon his work of preaching
by promises of wealth and honour, but in vain.
While the
result of the embassy to Abyssinia was being looked for in Mecca
with the greatest expectancy, there occurred the conversion of a man, who
before had been one of the most bitter enemies of Muḥammad,
and had opposed him with the utmost persistence and fanaticism— a
man whom the Muslims had every reason then to look on
as their most terrible and virulent enemy, though afterwards
he shines as one of the noblest figures in the early history of Islam,
viz. 'Umar b. al-Khaṭṭāb. One day, in a fit of rage
against the Prophet, he set out, sword in hand, to slay him. On the way, one of his relatives met him and
asked him where he was going. "I
am looking for Muḥammad," he
answered," to kill the renegade who has brought discord
among the Quraysh, called them fools, reviled their religion and
defamed their gods." "Why
dost thou not rather punish those of thy own family, and set
them right? " "And who are
these of my own family?" answered 'Umar. "Thy brother-in-law Sa'īd and thy
sister Fātimah, who have become Muslims and followers of Muḥammad." 'Umar at once rushed off to the house of
his sister, and found her with her husband and Khabbāb,
another of the followers of Muḥammad,
who was teaching them to recite a chapter of the Qur'ān. 'Umar burst into the room: "What
was that sound I heard?" "It was nothing," they
replied. "Nay, but I heard you, and I have learned that
you have become followers of Muḥammad."Whereupon
he rushed upon Sa'īd and struck him. Fāṭimah threw herself
between them, to protect her husband, crying, " Yes, we are
Muslims; we believe in God and His Prophet: slay us if you will." In the struggle his sister was wounded, and
when 'Umar saw the blood on her face, he was softened and
asked to see the paper they had been reading: after some
hesitation she handed it to him. It
contained the 20th Sūrah of the Qur'ān. When
'Umar read it, he exclaimed, "How beautiful, how sublime it
is!" As he read on, conviction
suddenly overpowered him and he cried, "Lead me
to Muhammad that I may tell him of my conversion." (5)
The conversion of 'Umar is a turning-point in the history of Islam: the Muslims were now able to take up a
bolder attitude. Muḥammad left the house of al-Arqam and the believers publicly performed their devotions
together round the Ka'bah. The situation might thus be expected to give the aristocracy of Mecca just cause for
apprehension. For they had no longer
to deal with a band of oppressed and despised outcasts, struggling for a
weak and miserable existence. It was rather a
powerful faction, adding daily to its strength by the accession of
influential citizens and endangering the
stability of the existing government by an alliance with a powerful
foreign prince.
The Quraysh resolved accordingly to make a determined effort to check the further growth of the new
movement in their city. They put the
Banū Hāshim, who through ties of kindred protected the Prophet, under
a ban, in accordance with which the Quraysh agreed that they would not marry
their women, nor give their own in marriage to them; they would sell nothing to them, nor buy aught from
them—that dealings with them of every kind should cease. For three years the Banū Hāshim are said to have been confined to
one quarter of the city, except during the sacred months, in which all war
ceased throughout Arabia and a truce was
made in order that pilgrims might visit the sacred Ka'bah, the centre of the national religion.
Muḥammad used to
take advantage of such times of pilgrimage to
preach to the various tribes that flocked to Mecca and the adjacent fairs. But with no success, for his uncle
Abū Lahab used to dog his footsteps,
crying with a loud voice, "He is an impostor who wants to draw you away from the faith of your fathers to the false
doctrines that he brings, wherefore
separate yourselves from him and hear
him not." They would taunt him with the words: " Thine own
people and kindred should know thee best: wherefore do they not believe and
follow thee?" But at length the
privations endured by Muḥammad and his kinsmen
enlisted the sympathy of a numerous section of the Quraysh and the ban was withdrawn.
In the same year the loss of Khadījah,
the faithful wife who for twenty-five years
had been his counsellor and support, plunged Muḥammad
into the utmost grief and despondency; and a little later the
death of Abū Ṭālib deprived him of his
constant and most powerful protector and exposed him afresh to insult and
contumely.
Scorned
and rejected by his own townsmen, to whom he had delivered his
message with so little success for ten years, he resolved to see
if there were not others who might be more ready to listen,
among whom the seeds of faith might find a more receptive and
fruitful soil. With this hope he set out for Ṭā'if, a city
about seventy miles from Mecca. Before an assembly of the chief men of the
city, he expounded
his doctrine of the unity of God and of the mission he had received as the Prophet of God to proclaim this faith; at the same time he besought their
protection against his persecutors in
Mecca. The disproportion between his high claims (which moreover were
unintelligible to the heathen people
of Ṭā'if) and his helpless condition only excited their ridicule and scorn, and pitilessly stoning him with stones they drove him from their city.
On
his return from Ṭā'if the prospects of the success of Muḥammad
seemed more hopeless than ever, and the agony of his soul gave
itself utterance in the words that he puts into the mouth of
Noah: " O my Lord, verily I have cried to my people night
and day; and my cry only makes them flee from me the more. And verily,
so oft as I cry to them, that Thou mayest forgive them, they thrust
their fingers into their ears and wrap themselves in their
garments, and persist (in their error), and are disdainfully disdainful."
(lxxi. 5-6.)
It
was the Prophet's habit at the time of the annual pilgrimage
to visit the encampments of the various Arab tribes and
discourse with them upon religion. By some his words were
treated with indifference, by others rejected with scorn.
But consolation came to him from an unexpected quarter. He met a
little group of six or seven persons whom he recognised as
coming from Medina, or, as it was then called, Yathrib.
"Of what tribe are you?" said he, addressing them. "We
are of Khazraj," they answered. "Friends of the
Jews?" "Yes." "Then will you not sit
down awhile, that I may talk with you?" "Assuredly," replied they. Then they
sat down with him, and he proclaimed unto
them the true God and preached Islam and recited to them the Qur'ān. Now so it was, in that God wrought
wonderfully for Islam that there were found in their country Jews, who possessed scriptures and wisdom, while they themselves were heathen and idolaters.
Now the Jews ofttimes suffered
violence at their hands, and when
strife was between them had ever said to them, "Soon will a Prophet arise
and his time is at hand; him will we
follow, and with him slay you with the slaughter of 'Ād and of Iram." When now the apostle of God was speaking with these men and calling on them to
believe in God, they said one to
another: "Know surely that this is
the Prophet, of whom the Jews have warned us; come let us now make haste and be the first to join
him." So they embraced Islam,
and said to him, "Our countrymen have long been engaged in a most
bitter and deadly feud with one another;
but now perhaps God will unite them together
through thee and thy teaching. Therefore we will preach to them and make known to them this religion, that we have received from thee." So, full
of faith, they returned to their own
country. (6)
Such
is the traditional account of this event which was the
turning-point of Muḥammad's mission. He had now met with a people whose
antecedents had in some way prepared their
minds for the reception of his teaching and whose present circumstances, as afterwards appeared, were
favourable to his cause.
The
city of Yathrib had been long occupied by Jews whom some national
disaster, possibly the persecution under Hadrian, had driven from their own
country, when a party of wandering emigrants, the two Arab clans of Khazraj
and Aws, arrived at Yathrib and were admitted to
a share in the territory. As their numbers increased they
encroached more and more on the power of the Jewish rulers,
and finally, towards the end of the fifth century, the government of the city
passed entirely into their hands.
Some
of the Arabs had embraced the Jewish religion, and many
of the former masters of the city still dwelt there in the
service of their conquerors, so that it contained in Muḥammad's
time a considerable Jewish population. The people of Yathrib
were thus familiar with the idea of a Messiah who was to come,
and were consequently more capable of understanding the claim of Muḥammad
to be accepted as the Prophet of God, than were the idolatrous Meccans
to whom such an idea was entirely foreign and especially
distasteful to the Quraysh, whose supremacy over the other tribes and
whose worldly prosperity arose from the fact that they were the
hereditary guardians of the national collection of idols kept
in the sacred enclosure of the Ka'bah.
Further,
the city of Yathrib was distracted by incessant civil discord
through a long-standing feud between the Banū Khazraj
and the Banū Aws. The citizens lived in uncertainty
and suspense, and anything likely to bind the conflicting parties
together by a tie of common interest could not but prove a boon to the city. Just as
the mediæval republics of Northern Italy
chose a stranger to hold the chief
post in their cities in order to maintain some balance of power between
the rival factions, and prevent, if possible, the
civil strife which was so ruinous to commerce and the general welfare, so the Yathribites would
not look upon the arrival of a
stranger with suspicion, even though he was likely to usurp or gain permission to assume the vacant authority.
On
the contrary, one of the reasons for the warm welcome which
Muḥammad received in Medina would seem to
be that the adoption of Islam appeared to the more thoughtful of
its citizens to be a remedy for the disorders from which their
society was suffering, by its orderly discipline of life and
its bringing the unruly passions of men under the discipline
of laws enunciated by an authority superior to individual
caprice. (7)
These
facts go far to explain how eight years after the Hijrah
Muḥammad could, at the head of 10,000
followers, enter the city in which he had laboured for ten
years with so meagre a result.
But
this is anticipating. Muḥammad had proposed to accompany
his new converts, the Khazrajites, to Yathrib himself, but they
dissuaded him therefrom, until a reconciliation could be effected with the Banū
Aws. "Let us, we pray thee, return unto our people, if haply the Lord will
create peace amongst us; and we will come back again unto thee. Let the season
of pilgrimage in the following year be the appointed time." So they
returned to their homes, and invited their people to the faith; and many
believed, so that there remained hardly a family in which mention was not made
of the Prophet.
When
the time of pilgrimage again came round, a deputation from Yathrib, ten
men of the Banū Khazraj, and two of the Banū
Aws, met him at the appointed spot and pledged him their word to obey his
teaching. This, the first pledge of 'Aqabah, so called from the secret spot at
which they met, ran as follows :—" We will not worship any but the one
God; we will not steal, neither will we commit adultery or kill our children;
we will abstain from calumny and slander; we will obey the Prophet in every
thing that is right." These twelve men now returned to Yathrib as
missionaries of Islam, and so well prepared was the ground, and with such zeal
did they prosecute their mission, that the new faith spread rapidly from house
to house and from tribe to tribe.
They
were accompanied on their return by Muṣ'ab b. 'Umayr; though, according to
another account he was sent by the Prophet upon a written requisition from Yathrib.
This young man had been one of the earliest converts, and had lately returned
from Abyssinia; thus he had had much experience, and severe training in the
school of persecution had not only sobered his zeal but taught him how to meet
persecution and deal with those who were ready to condemn Islam without waiting
to learn the true contents of its teaching; accordingly Muḥammad
could with the greatest confidence entrust him with the difficult task of
directing and instructing the new converts, cherishing the seeds of religious
zeal and devotion that had already been sown and bringing them to fruition. Muṣ'ab
took up his abode in the house of As'ad b. Zurārah, and gathered the converts
together for prayer and the reading of the Qur'ān, sometimes here and sometimes
in a house belonging to the Banū Ẓafar, which was situated in a quarter of the
town occupied jointly by this family and that of 'Abd al-Ashhal.
The
heads of the latter family at that time were Sa'd b. Mu'ādh and Usayd b.
Ḥuḍayr. One day it happened that Mus'ab was sitting together with As'ad in this
house of the Banū Ẓafar, engaged in instructing some
new converts, when Sa'd b. Mu'ādh, having come to know of their
whereabouts, said to Usayd b. Ḥuḍayr : " Drive out these fellows who have
come into our houses to make fools of the weaklings among us; I would spare
thee the trouble did not the tie of kinship between me and As'ad prevent my
doing him any harm " (for he himself was the cousin of As'ad). Hereupon
Usayd took his spear and, bursting in upon As'ad and Muṣ'ab, "What are you
doing?" he cried, "leading weak-minded folk astray? If you value your
lives, begone hence." "Sit down and listen," Muṣ'ab answered
quietly, " if thou art pleased with what thou hearest, accept it; if not,
then leave it.” Usayd stuck his spear in the ground and sat down to listen,
while Muṣ'ab expounded to him the fundamental doctrines of Islam and read
several passages of the Qur'ān. After a time Usayd, enraptured, cried,
"What must I do to enter this religion?" "Purify thyself with
water," answered Muṣ'ab, "and confess that there is no god but God
and that Muhammad is the apostle of God." Usayd at once complied and
repeated the profession of faith, adding, "After me you have still another
man to convince" (referring to Sa'd b. Mu'ādh). "If he is
persuaded, his example will bring after him all his people. I will send him to
you forthwith."
With
these words he left them, and soon after came Sa'd b. Mu'ādh himself,
hot with anger against As'ad for the patronage he had extended to the
missionaries of Islam. Muṣ'ab begged him not to condemn the new faith unheard,
so Sa'd agreed to listen and soon the words of Muṣ'ab touched him and brought
conviction to his heart, and he embraced the faith and became a Muslim. He went
back to his people burning with zeal and said to them, "Sons of 'Abd
al-Ashhal, say, what am I to you?" "Thou art our lord," they
answered, "thou art the wisest and most illustrious among us." "Then I swear,"
replied Sa'd, "nevermore to speak to any of you until you believe in God
and Muḥammad, His apostle." And from that day, all the descendants of 'Abd
al-Ashhal embraced Islam. (8)
With
such zeal and earnestness was the preaching of the faith pushed forward that
within a year there was not a family among the Arabs of Medina that had not
given some of its members to swell the number of the faithful, with the
exception of one branch of the Banū
Aws, which held aloof under the influence of Abū
Qays b. al-Aslat, the poet.
The
following year, when the time of the annual pilgrimage again came round, a band
of converts, amounting to seventy-three in number, accompanied their heathen
fellow-countrymen from Yathrib to Mecca. They were commissioned to
invite Muhammad to take refuge in Yathrib from the fury of his enemies,
and had come to swear allegiance to him as their prophet and their leader. All
the early converts who had before met the Prophet on the two preceding
pilgrimages, returned to Mecca on this important occasion, and Muṣ'ab their
teacher accompanied them. Immediately on his arrival he hurried to the prophet,
and told him of the success that had attended his mission. It is said that his
mother, hearing of his arrival, sent a message to him, saying: "Ah,
disobedient son, wilt thou enter a city in which thy mother dwelleth, and not
first visit her!" "Nay, verily," he replied, "I will never
visit the house of any one before the Prophet of God." So, after he had
greeted and conferred with Muḥammad, he went to his mother, who thus accosted
him: " Then I ween thou art still a renegade." He answered, "I
follow the prophet of the Lord and the true faith of Islam," " Art
thou then well satisfied with the miserable way thou hast fared in the land of
Abyssinia and now again at Yathrib? "Now he perceived that she was
meditating his imprisonment, and exclaimed, "What! wilt thou force a man
from his religion? If ye seek to confine me, I will assuredly slay the first
person that layeth hands upon me." His mother said, "Then depart
front my presence," and she began to weep. Muṣ'ab was moved, and
said, "Oh, my mother! I give thee loving counsel. Testify
that there is no God but the Lord and that Muḥammad is His
servant and messenger." But she replied, "By the
sparkling stars! I will never make a fool of myself by entering into
thy religion. I wash my hands of thee and thy concerns, and cleave
steadfastly unto mine own faith."
In
order not to excite suspicion and incur the hostility of
the Quraysh, a secret meeting was arranged at 'Aqabah, the
scene of the former meeting with the converts of the year before. Muḥammad came
accompanied only by his uncle 'Abbās, who, though he was still
an idolater, had been admitted into the secret. 'Abbās opened the
solemn conclave, by recommending his nephew as a scion of one of
the noblest families of his clan, which had hitherto afforded
the Prophet protection, although rejecting his teachings; but now
that he wished to take refuge among the people of Yathrib, they should
bethink themselves well before undertaking
such a charge, and resolve not to go back
from their promise, if once they undertook the risk. Then Barā b. Ma'rūr, one
of the Banū Khazraj, protesting that they were firm in their resolve to protect
the Prophet of God, besought him to
declare fully what he wished of them.
Muḥammad
began by reciting to them some portions of the Qur'ān, and exhorted
them to be true to the faith they had professed in the one
God and the Prophet, His apostle; he then asked them to
defend him and his companions from all assailants just as they would
their own wives and children. Then Barā b. Ma'rūr,
taking his hand, cried out, "Yea, by Him who sent thee as His
Prophet, and through thee revealed unto us His truth, we will protect thee as
we would our own bodies, and we swear allegiance to thee as our
leader. We are the sons of battle and men of mail, which
we have inherited as worthy sons of worthy forefathers." So
they all in turn, taking his hand in theirs, swore allegiance to him.
As soon as the Quraysh
gained intelligence of these secret proceedings,
the persecution broke out afresh against the Muslims, and Muḥammad advised them to flee out of the city,
"Depart unto Yathrib; for the Lord hath verily given you brethren in that city, and a home in
which ye may find refuge." So
quietly, by twos and threes they escaped
to Yathrib, where they were heartily welcomed, their co-religionists in that city vying with one
another for the honour of entertaining
them, and supplying them with such
things as they had need of. Within two months nearly all the Muslims except those who were seized and imprisoned and those who could not escape from
captivity had left Mecca, to the
number of about 150. There is a story told of one of these Muslims, by
name Ṣuhayb, whom Muḥammad called "the
first-fruits of Greece" (he had been
a Greek slave, and being set free by his master had amassed considerable wealth by successful
trading); when he was about to
emigrate the Meccans said to him, "Thou camest hither in need and penury; but thy wealth hath increased with us,
until thou hast reached thy present prosperity;
and now thou art departing, not thyself only, but with all thy property. By the Lord, that shall not be;" and he said, "If I relinquish my property,
will ye leave me free to
depart?" And they agreed thereto; so he parted with all his goods. And when that was told unto Muḥammad, he said, "Verily, Ṣuhayb hath made a
profitable bargain."
Muḥammad
delayed his own departure (with the intention, no doubt, of
withdrawing attention from his faithful followers) until a
determined plot against his life warned him that further delay
might be fatal, and he made his escape by means of a
stratagem.
His
first care after his arrival in Yathrib, or Medina as it
was called from this period—Madīnah al-Nabī, the city of
the Prophet—was to build a mosque, to serve both as a place of prayer and
of general assembly for his followers, who
had hitherto met for that purpose in the dwelling-place of one of their number. The worshippers at first
used to turn their faces in the
direction of Jerusalem—an arrangement
most probably adopted with the hope of gaining over the Jews. In many other ways, by constant appeals
to their own sacred Scriptures, by
according them perfect freedom of
worship and political equality, Muḥammad endeavoured
to conciliate the Jews, but they met his advances with scorn and derision. When
all hopes of amalgamation proved fruitless and it became clear that the Jews
would not accept him as their Prophet, Muḥammad bade his followers turn their
faces in prayer towards the Ka'bah in Mecca.
(ii. 144.) (9)
This
change of direction during prayer has a deeper significance than might at first
sight appear. It was really the
beginning of the National Life of Islam: it established the Ka'bah at Mecca as
a religious centre for all the Muslim people, just as from time immemorial it
had been a place of pilgrimage for all the tribes of Arabia. Of similar
importance was the incorporation of the ancient Arab custom of pilgrimage to
Mecca into the circle of the religious ordinances of Islam, a duty that was to
be performed by every Muslim at least once in his lifetime.
There
are many passages in the Qur'ān that appeal to this germ of national feeling
and urge the people of Arabia to realise the privilege that had been granted
them of a divine revelation in their own language and by the lips of one of
their own countrymen.
"Verily
We have made it an Arabic Qur'ān that ye may haply understand. (xliii. 2-3.)
"And
thus We have revealed to thee an Arabic Qur'ān, that thou mayest warn the
mother of cities and those around it.
(xlii. 5.)
"And
if We had made it a Qur'ān in a foreign tongue, they had surely said, ' Unless
its verses be clearly explained (we will not receive it).' (xli. 44.)
"And
verily We have set before men in this Qur'ān every kind of parable that haply
they be monished:
"An
Arabic Qur'ān, free from tortuous (wording), that haply they may fear
(God). (xxxix. 28-29.)
"Verily
from the Lord of all creatures hath this (book) come down, ... in the clear
Arabic tongue. (xxvi. 192, I95.)
"And
We have only made it (i.e. the Qur'ān) easy, in thine own tongue, in order that thou
mayest announce glad tidings thereby to the
God-fearing, and that thou mayest
warn the contentious thereby." (xix. 97.)
But
the message of Islam was not for Arabia only; the whole
world was to share in it. (10 )As there was but one
God, so there was to be but one religion into which all men
were to be invited. This claim to be universal, to hold sway
over all men and all nations, found a practical illustration
in the letters which Muḥammad is said to have sent in the year a.d. 688 (a.h.
6) to the great potentates of that time. An
invitation to embrace Islam was sent in this year to the
Emperor Heraclius, the king of Persia, the governor of Yaman, the
governor of Egypt and the king of Abyssinia. The letter to
Heraclius is said to have been as follows :—" In the name
of God, the Merciful, the Compassionate, Muḥammad, who is the servant of God
and His apostle, to Hiraql the Qayṣar of Rūm.
Peace be on whoever has gone on the straight road. After this I say, Verily
I call you to Islam. Embrace Islam, and God will reward you twofold.
If you turn away from the offer of Islam, then on you be the
sins of your people. O people of the Book, come towards a creed
which is fit both for us and for you. It is this—to worship
none but God, and not to associate anything with God, and
not to call others God. Therefore, O ye people of the Book, if
ye refuse, beware. We are Muslims and our religion is Islam."
However absurd this summons may have seemed to those who then received
it, succeeding years showed that it was dictated by no empty
enthusiasm. (11)
These
letters only gave a more open and widespread expression to the
claim to the universal acceptance which is repeatedly made
for Islam in the Qur'ān.
"Of
a truth it (i.e. the Qur'ān) is no other than an admonition
to all created beings, and after a time shall ye surely know its message.
(xxxviii. 87-88.)
"This
(book) is no other than an admonition and a clear Qur'ān,
to warn whoever liveth; and that against the unbelievers sentence
may be justly given. (xxxvi. 69-70.)
"We
have not sent thee save as a mercy to all created beings.
(xxi. 107.)
"Blessed
is He who hath sent down al-Furqān upon His servant, that he may
be a warner unto all created beings. (xxv. 1.)
"And
We have not sent thee otherwise than to mankind at large, to
announce and to warn. (xxxiv. 27.)
"He
it is who hath sent His apostle with guidance and the
religion of truth, that He may make it victorious over
every other religion, though the polytheists are averse to it."
(lxi. 9.)
In
the hour of his deepest despair, when the people of Mecca
persistently turned a deaf ear to the words of their prophet
(xvi, 23, 114, etc.), when the converts he had made were tortured until
they recanted (xvi. 108), and others were forced
to flee from the country to escape the rage of their persecutors (xvi. 43, 111)—then was delivered the
promise, " One day we will raise
up a witness out of every nation." (xvi. 86.) (12)
This
claim upon the acceptance of all mankind which the Prophet
makes in these passages is further prophetically indicated in the
words " first-fruits of Abyssinia," used by Muḥammad
in reference to Bilāl, and " first-fruits of Greece," to Ṣuhayb; Salmān, the
first Persian convert, was a Christian slave
in Medina, who embraced the new faith in the first year of the Hijrah. Thus long before any career of conquest was so much as dreamed of, the
Prophet had clearly shown
that Islam was not to be confined to the Arab race. The following account of the sending
out of missionaries to preach Islam to all nations, points to the same claim to
be a universal religion:
"The Apostle of God said to his companions, ' Come to me all of you early
in the morning.' After
the morning prayer he spent some time in praising and supplicating God, as was his wont;
then he turned to them and sent forth some in one direction and others in another, and said : ' Be faithful to
God in your dealings with
His servants (i.e. with men), for whosoever is entrusted with any matter that concerns mankind
and is not faithful in
his service of them, to him God shuts the gate of Paradise : go forth and be not like the
messengers of Jesus, the son of Mary, for they went only to those that lived near and neglected those that dwelt in far
countries.' Then each of these
messengers came to speak the language of the people to whom he was sent. When this was told
to the Prophet he said, '
This is the greatest of the duties that they owe to God with respect to His servants.'
" (13)
The
proof of the universality of Islam, of its claim on the
acceptance of all men, lay in the fact that it was the religion
divinely appointed for the whole human race and was now revealed to them anew through
Muhammad, " the seal of the prophets
" (xxxiii. 40), as it had been to former generations by other prophets.
"Men
were of one religion only: then they disagreed one with another and had
not a decree (of respite) previously gone
forth from thy Lord, judgment would surely
have been given between them in the matter wherein they disagree. (x. 20.)
"I
am no apostle of new doctrines, (xlvi. 8.)
"Mankind
was but one people: then God raised up prophets to announce glad
tidings and to warn: and He sent down with them the Book with
the Truth, that it might decide the disputes of men: and none disagreed
save those to whom the book had been given, after
the clear tokens had reached them, through mutual jealousy. And
God guided those who
believed into the truth concerning which they had disagreed, by His will; and God guideth whom He
pleaseth into the straight path. (ii.
209.)
"And We revealed to thee,
' follow the religion of Abraham, the sound in
faith, for he was not of those who join gods with God.' (xvi. 124.)
"Say: As for me, my Lord hath guided me
into a straight path: a true faith, the
religion of Abraham, the sound in
faith; for he was not of those who join gods with God. (vi. 162.)
"Say: Nay, the
religion of Abraham, the sound in faith and not one of those who
join gods with God (is our religion). (ii. 129.)
"Say: God speaketh truth. Follow therefore the religion of Abraham, he being a Ḥanīf and not one of those who join other gods with God.
"Verily the first
temple that was set up for men was that which is in Bakka, blessed
and a guidance for all created beings. (iii. 89, 90.)
"And who hath a
better religion than he who resigneth himself to God, who doth
what is good and followeth the faith of Abraham, the sound in faith? (iv. 124.)
"He hath elected you,
and hath not laid on you any hardship in religion, the faith of your father Abraham. He hath
named you the Muslims." (xx. 77.)
But
to return to Muḥammad in Medina. In order properly to
appreciate his position after the Flight, it is important to remember
the peculiar character of Arab society at that time, as far at least as this part of
the peninsula was concerned. There was an
entire absence of any organised administrative
or judicial system such as in modern times we connect with the idea of a government. Each tribe or clan formed a separate and absolutely
independent body, and this independence extended itself also to the individual members of the tribe, each of whom recognised the
authority, or leadership of his chief
only as being the exponent of a
public opinion which he himself happened to share; but he was quite at liberty to refuse his conformity to the (even) unanimous resolve of his fellow clansmen. Further, there was no regular transmission of the office
of chieftain; but he was generally
chosen as being the oldest member of the richest and most powerful
family of the clan, and as being personally
most qualified to command respect. If such
a tribe became too numerous, it would split up into several divisions, each of which continued to
enjoy a separate and independent
existence, uniting only on some extraordinary
occasion for common self-defence or some more than usually important
warlike expedition. We can thus understand
how Muḥammad could establish himself in Medina at the head of a large and increasing body of adherents who looked up to him as their head and
leader and acknowledged no other authority,—without exciting any feeling of insecurity, or any fear of encroachment
on recognised authority, such as
would have arisen in a city of ancient Greece or any similarly organised
community. Muḥammad thus exercised temporal
authority over his people just as any
other independent chief might have done, the only difference being that
in the case of the Muslims a religious bond
took the place of family and blood ties.
Islam
thus became what, in theory, at least, it has always remained—a political as
well as a religious system.
"It
was Muḥammad's desire to found a new religion, and in
this he succeeded; but at the same time he founded a political system of an
entirely new and peculiar character. At first his only wish was
to convert his fellow-countrymen to the belief in the One
God—Allāh; but along with this he brought about the overthrow of the old system of government in his native city, and in place of the
tribal aristocracy under which the
conduct of public affairs was shared in common by the ruling families, he
substituted an absolute theocratic
monarchy, with himself at the head as vicar of God upon earth.
"Even
before his death almost all Arabia had submitted to him; Arabia that
had never before obeyed one prince, suddenly exhibits a
political unity and swears allegiance to the will of an absolute
ruler. Out of the numerous tribes, big and small, of a hundred different kinds
that were incessantly at feud with one
another, Muḥammad's word
created a nation. The idea of a common religion under one common head bound the different tribes together
into one political organism which developed its peculiar characteristics with surprising
rapidity. Now only one great
idea could have produced this result, viz. the principle of national life in heathen Arabia.
The clan-system was thus
for the first time, if not entirely crushed—(that would have been
impossible)—yet made subordinate to the feeling of religious unity. The great work succeeded, and when Muḥammad died there prevailed over by
far the greater part of
Arabia a peace of God such as the Arab tribes, with their love of plunder and revenge, had
never known; it was the
religion of Islam that had brought about this reconciliation." (14)
Even
in the case of death, the claims of relationship were set
aside and the bond-brother inherited all the property of
his deceased companion. But after the battle of Badr, when
such an artificial bond was no longer needed to unite his
followers, it was abolished; such an arrangement was only
necessary so long as the number of the Muslims was still
small and the corporate life of Islam a novelty; moreover
Muhammad had lived in Medina for a very short space of time before
the rapid increase in the number of his adherents made so
communistic a social system almost impracticable.
It
was only to be expected that the growth of an independent
political body composed of refugees from Mecca, located in a
hostile city, should eventually lead to an outbreak of hostilities; and, as is
well known, every biography of Muḥammad is largely taken up with
the account of a long series of petty encounters and bloody battles
between his followers and the Quraysh of Mecca, ending in his triumphal
entry into that city in a.d. 630,
and of his hostile relations with numerous other tribes, up to the time
of his death, a.d. 633.
To
give any account of these campaigns is beyond the scope
of the present work, but it is important to show that Muḥammad,
when he found himself at the head of a band of armed followers, was not transformed at
once, as some would have us believe, from a
peaceful preacher into a fanatic,
sword in hand, forcing his religion on whomsoever he could. (15)
It
has been frequently asserted by European writers that from the date
of Muḥammad's migration to Medina, and from the altered
circumstances of his life there, the Prophet appears in an
entirely new character. He is no longer the preacher, the
warner, the apostle of God to men, whom he would persuade of
the truth of the religion revealed to him, but now he appears
rather as the unscrupulous bigot, using all means at his disposal of force and
statecraft to assert himself and his opinions.
But
it is false to suppose that Muḥammad in Medina laid aside his rôle
of preacher and missionary of Islam, or that when he had a large
army at his command, he ceased to invite unbelievers to accept the
faith. Ibn Sa'd gives a number of letters written by the
Prophet from Medina to chiefs and other members of different Arabian tribes, in
addition to those addressed to potentates living beyond the
limits of Arabia, inviting them to embrace Islam; and in
the following pages will be found instances of his having sent
missionaries to preach the faith to the unconverted members
of their tribes, whose very ill-success in some cases is
a sign of the genuinely missionary character of their efforts
and the absence of an appeal to force. A typical example of such an
unsuccessful mission is that sent to preach Islam to the Banū
'Āmir b. Ṣa'ṣa'ah in the year a.h. 4.
The chief of this tribe, Abū Barā 'Āmir, visited Muḥammad
in Medina, listened to his teaching, but declined to become a
convert; he seemed, however, to be favourably disposed towards the new faith
and asked the Prophet to send some of his followers to Najd to
preach to the people of that country. The Prophet sent a party of
forty Muslims, most of them young men of Medina, who were
skilled in reciting the Qur'ān, and had been accustomed to
meet together at night for study and prayer. But in spite of the safe conduct given them by Abū Barā 'Āmir, they were treacherously murdered and three only of the party escaped with their lives. (16 )
The
successes of the Muslim arms, however, attracted every day members of various
tribes, particularly those in the vicinity of Medina, to swell the
ranks of the followers of the Prophet; and "the courteous
treatment which the deputations of these various clans experienced from the Prophet,
his ready attention to their grievances, the wisdom with which he composed
their disputes, and the politic assignments of territory by which he rewarded
an early declaration in favour of Islam, made his name to be popular and spread
his fame as a great and generous prince throughout the
Peninsula." (17 )
It
not unfrequently happened that one member of a tribe would
come to the Prophet in Medina and return home as a missionary of
Islam to convert his brethren; we have the following account of
such a conversion in the year 5 (a.h.).
The
Banū Sa'd b. Bakr sent one of their
number, by name Ḍimām b. Tha'labah as their envoy to the
Prophet. He came and made his camel kneel down at the gate of the mosque
and tied up its fore-leg. Then he went into the mosque, where the
Prophet was sitting with his companions. He went up close to them
and said, "Which among you is the son of 'Abd al-Muṭṭalib? " "I
am," replied the Prophet. "Art thou Muḥammad?"
"Yes," was the answer. "Then, if thou wilt not
take it amiss, I would fain ask thee some weighty
questions." "Nay, ask what thou wilt," answered
the Prophet, "I adjure thee by Allāh, thy God and the God
of those who were before thee and of those who are to come after
thee, hath Allāh sent thee as a prophet unto us?" Muḥammad
answered, "Yea, by Allāh." He continued, "I
adjure thee by Allāh, thy God and the God of those who were
before thee and of those who are to come after thee, hath He
commanded thee to bid us worship Him alone, and to
associate naught else with
Him and to abandon these idols that our fathers worshipped?" Muḥammad answered, "Yea, by
Allāh." Then he
questioned the Prophet concerning all the ordinances of Islam, one after
another, prayer and fasting, pilgrimage, etc., solemnly adjuring him as before. At the end he said, "Then I bear witness
that there is no God save Allāh and I bear witness that Muḥammad is the Prophet of Allāh, and I will observe
these ordinances and shun
what thou hast forbidden, adding nothing thereto, and taking nothing away." Then he
turned away and loosened
his camel and returned unto his own people, and when he had gathered them together, the first words he spoke unto them were : " Vile
things are Lāt and 'Uzzā." They cried out, "Hold! Ḍimām, take heed of leprosy or madness!" "Fie on you!"
he replied. "By Allāh! they can neither work you weal nor woe, for Allāh has sent a Prophet and revealed to him a book,
whereby he delivers you
from your evil plight; I bear witness that there is no God save Allāh alone and that Muḥammad
is His servant and His
Prophet; and I have brought you tidings of what he enjoins and what he forbids." The story goes on
that ere nightfall there
was not a man or woman in the camp who had not accepted Islam. (18 )
Another
such missionary was 'Amr b Murrah, belonging to the tribe of
the Banū Juhaynah, who dwelt between Medina and
the Red Sea. The date of his conversion was prior to the Flight, in the
same year (a.h. 5), and he thus
describes it: "We had an idol that we
worshipped, and I was the guardian of
its shrine. When I heard of the Prophet, I broke it in pieces and set off to Muḥammad, where I accepted Islam and bore witness to the truth, and
believed on what Muḥammad declared
to be allowed and forbidden. And to
this my verses refer : ' I bear witness that God is Truth and that I am the first to abandon the gods
of stones, and I have girded up my
loins to make my way to you over rough
ways and smooth, to join myself to him who in himself and for his ancestry is the noblest of men, the
apostle of the Lord whose throne is above the
clouds.'' He was sent by
Muḥammad to preach Islam to his tribe, and his efforts were crowned with such success that
there was only one man who
refused to listen to his exhortations. (19 )
When
the truce of Ḥudaybiyyah (a.h. 6)
made friendly relations with the people of Mecca possible, many
persons of that city, who had had the opportunity of listening to the teaching of Muḥammad
in the early days of his mission, and among them some men of great influence,
came out to Medina, to embrace the faith of
Islam.
The
continual warfare carried on with the people of Mecca had
hitherto kept the tribes to the south of that city almost entirely
outside the influence of the new religion. But this truce now made
communications with southern Arabia possible, and a small band
from the tribe of the Banū Daws came from the mountains
that form the northern boundary of Yaman, and joined
themselves to the Prophet in Medina. Even before the appearance
of Muḥammad, there were some members of this tribe who had had glimmerings of a higher
religion than the idolatry prevailing around them, and argued that the world
must have had a creator, though they knew not who he was;
and when Muḥammad came forward as the apostle of this
creator, one of these men, by name Tufayl b. 'Amr, came to Mecca to
learn who the creator was.
Though
warned by the Quraysh of the dangerous influence that Muḥammad might
exercise over him if he entered into conversation with him, he
followed the Prophet to his house one day, after watching him at
prayer by the Ka'bah. Muḥammad expounded to him the
doctrines of Islam, and Ṭufayl left Mecca full of zeal for the
new faith. On his return home he succeeded in converting his father and
his wife, but found his fellow-tribesmen unwilling to abandon their
old idolatrous worship. Disheartened at the ill-success of his
mission, he returned to the Prophet and besought him to call down
the curse of God on the Banū Daws;
but Muḥammad encouraged him to persevere in his efforts, saying,
"Return to thy people and summon them to the faith, but
deal gently with them." At the same time
he prayed, " Oh God! guide the Banū
Daws in the right
way." The success of Ṭufayl's propaganda was such that in the year a.h. 7 he came to Medina with between
seventy and eighty families of his tribesmen who had been won over to the faith of Islam, and
after the triumphal entry of Muḥammad into Mecca, Ṭufayl set fire to the block of wood that had hitherto been
venerated as the idol of
the tribe. (20)
In
a.h. 7, fifteen more tribes
submitted to the Prophet, and after the surrender of Mecca in a.h. 8, the ascendancy of
Islam was assured, and those Arabs who had held aloof, saying,
"Let Muḥammad and his fellow-tribesmen fight it out;
if he is victorious, then is he a genuine prophet," (21 )
now hastened to give in their allegiance to the new
religion. Among those who came in after the fall of Mecca were some
of the most bitter persecutors of Muḥammad in the earlier
days of his mission, to whom his noble forbearance and
forgiveness now gave a place in the brotherhood of Islam. The following year
witnessed the martyrdom of 'Urwah b. Mas'ūd,
one of the chiefs of the people of Ṭā'if, which
city the Muslims had unsuccessfully attempted to capture. He had been absent at that time in Yaman, and returned from his journey shortly after the
raising of the siege. He had met the
Prophet two years before at Ḥudaybiyyah,
and had conceived a profound veneration for him, and now came to Medina to embrace the new faith. In the ardour of his zeal he offered to go to Ṭā'if
to convert his fellow-countrymen, and
in spite of the efforts of Muḥammad to dissuade him from so dangerous an
undertaking, he returned to his native city,
publicly declared that he had renounced
idolatry, and called upon the people to follow his example. While he was preaching, he was mortally wounded by an arrow, and died giving thanks to God
for having granted him the glory of
martyrdom. A more successful
missionary effort was made by another follower of the Prophet in Yaman—probably
a year later—of which we have the
following graphic account: "The apostle of God wrote to al-Ḥārith and Masrūḥ, and Nu'aym b. 'Abd al-Kulāl of Ḥimyar: ' Peace be upon You so
long as ye believe on God and His apostle. God
is one God, there is no
partner with Him. He sent Moses with his signs, and created Jesus with his
words. The Jews say, "Ezra is the Son of God," and the Christians say, "God is one of three, and Jesus is the Son of
God." He sent the letter by 'Ayyāsh b. Abī Rabī'ah al-Makhzūmī,
and said: 'When you reach
their city, go not in by night, but wait until the morning; then carefully perform your ablutions,
and pray with two prostrations, and ask God to bless you with success and a friendly reception, and to keep you safe
from harm. Then take my letter in your right
hand, and deliver it with your right
hand into their right hands, and they will receive it. And recite to
them, "The unbelievers among the people of the Book and the polytheists
did not waver," etc. (Sūrah 98),
to the end of the Sūrah; when you
have finished, say, "Muḥammad has believed, and I am the first to believe." And you will be able to
meet every objection they bring
against you, and every glittering book that
they recite to you will lose its light. And when they speak in a foreign tongue, say, "Translate
it," and say to them, "God is sufficient for me; I believe in
the Book sent down by Him, and I am commanded
to do justice among you; God is our
Lord and your Lord; to us belong our works, and to you belong your works; there is no strife between us and you; God
will unite us, and unto Him we must return."
If they now accept Islam, then ask them for their three rods, before which they gather together to pray, one rod of tamarisk that is spotted white and
yellow, and one knotted like a cane,
and one black like ebony. Bring the
rods out and burn them in the market-place.' So I set out," tells 'Ayyāsh, "to do as the
Apostle of God had bid me. When I
arrived, I found that all the people had decked themselves out for a festival: I walked on to see them, and came at last to three enormous curtains
hung in front of three doorways. I
lifted the curtain and entered the middle door, and found people
collected in the courtyard of the building. I
introduced myself to them as the messenger of the Apostle of God, and did as he had bidden me; and they gave heed to my words, and it fell out as he had
said." (22)
In a.h. 9 a deputation of thirteen men from
the Banū Kilāb, a branch of the
Banū 'Āmir b. Ṣa'ṣa'ah, came to the Prophet and informed
him that one of his followers, Ḍaḥḥāk b. Sufyān, had come to them,
reciting the Qur'an and teaching the doctrines of Islam,
and that his preaching had won over their tribe to the new
faith. (23)
Another
branch of the same tribe, the Banū
Ru'ās b. Kilāb, was converted by one of its members, named
'Amr b. Mālik, who had been to Medina and accepted Islam, and then returned
to his fellow tribes and persuaded them to follow his
example. (24)
In
the same year a less successful attempt was made by a
new convert, Wāthilah b. al-Asqa', to induce his clan to
accept the faith that he himself had embraced after an interview
with the Prophet. His father scornfully cast him off, saying,
"By God! I will never speak a word to you again," and none
were found willing to believe the doctrines he preached with
the exception of his sister, who provided him with the
means of returning to the Prophet at Medina. (25)
This
ninth year of the Hijrah has been called the year of the
deputations, because of the enormous number of Arab tribes and cities
that now sent delegates to the Prophet, to give in their
submission. The introduction into Arab society of a new principle
of social union in the brotherhood of Islam had already begun
to weaken the binding force of the old tribal ideal, which erected the
fabric of society on the basis of blood-relationship. The conversion of
an individual and his reception into the new society was a
breach of one of the most fundamental laws of Arab life, and
its frequent occurrence had acted as a powerful solvent on
tribal organisation and had left it weak in the face of a national life so
enthusiastic and firmly-knit as that of the Muslims had become. The
Arab tribes were thus impelled to give in their submission
to the Prophet, not merely as the head of the strongest
military force in Arabia, but as the exponent of a theory of
social life that was making all others weak and ineffective. (26)
Muḥammad
had succeeded in introducing into the anarchical society of his
time a sentiment of national unity, a consciousness of rights and duties
towards one another such as the Arabs had not felt before. (27)
In
this way, Islam was uniting together clans that hitherto had been continually
at feud with one another, and as this great confederacy grew, it
more and more attracted to itself the weaker among the tribes
of Arabia. In the accounts of the conversion of the Arab tribes, there
is continual mention of the promise of security against their enemies,
made to them by the Prophet on the occasion of their submission,
"Woe is me for Muḥammad!" was the cry of one of the Arab tribes on
the news of the death of the Prophet. "So long as he
was alive, I lived in peace and in safety from my enemies;"
and the cry must have found an echo far and wide throughout Arabia.
How
superficial was the adherence of numbers of the Arab tribes to the
faith of Islam may be judged from the widespread apostasy that
followed immediately on the death of the Prophet. Their acceptance
of Islam would seem to have been often dictated more by
considerations of political expediency, and was more frequently a bargain struck under
pressure of violence than the outcome of any enthusiasm
or spiritual awakening. They allowed themselves to be swept into the stream of what had now become a great national movement, and we miss the fervent
zeal of the early converts in the cool, calculating attitude of those
who came in after the fall of Mecca. But even from among these must have come many to swell the ranks of the true believers animated with a genuine zeal for
the faith, and ready, as we have
seen, to give their lives in the effort
to preach it to their brethren.
"These
men were the true moral heirs of the Prophet, the future apostles
of Islam, the faithful trustees of all that Muhammad had revealed unto
the men of God. Into these men, through their constant contact
with the Prophet and their devotion to him, there had really
entered a new mode of thought and feeling, loftier and more civilised than any they
had known before; they had really changed for the better
from every point of view, and later on as statesmen and
generals, in the most difficult moments of the war of conquest they gave magnificent and undeniable proof that the ideas and the doctrines of Muḥammad
had been seed cast on
fruitful soil, and had produced a body of men of the very highest worth. They were the depositaries
of the sacred text of the Qur'ān, which they alone knew by heart; they were the jealous guardians of the
memory of every word and
bidding of the Prophet, the trustees of the moral heritage of Muḥammad. These men formed
the venerable stock of Islam from whom one day was to spring the noble band of the first jurists, theologians
and traditionists of Muslim society." (28)
But
for such men as these, so vast a movement could not have
held together, much less have recovered the shock given
it by the death of the founder. For it must not be forgotten how distinctly
Islam was a new movement in heathen Arabia, and how
diametrically opposed were the ideals of the two societies. (29)For
the introduction of Islam into Arab society did not imply merely the sweeping
away of a few barbarous and inhuman practices, but a complete reversal
of the pre-existing ideals of life.
Herein
we have the most conclusive proof of the essentially missionary
character of the teaching of Muḥammad, who thus comes forward as the
exponent of a new scheme of faith and practice. Whatever may
have been the conditions favourable to the formation of a new
political organisation, Muḥammad certainly did not find the
society of his day prepared to receive his religious teaching and waiting
only for the voice that would express in speech the inarticulate yearnings
of their hearts. But it is just this spirit of expectancy that is
wanting among the Arabs—those at least of the Central Arabia
towards whom Muḥammad's efforts were at first directed. They
were by no means ready to receive the preaching of a new teacher,
least of all one who came with the (to them unintelligible) title
of apostle of God.
Again,
the equality in Islam of all believers and the common brotherhood
of all Muslims, which suffered no distinctions
between Arab and non-Arab, between free and slave, to exist among the faithful, was an idea that ran directly counter to the proud
clan-feeling of the Arab, who grounded his claims to personal consideration on the fame of his ancestors, and in the strength
of the same carried on
the endless blood-feuds in which his soul delighted. Indeed, the fundamental principles
in the teaching of Muhammad
were a protest against much that the Arabs had hitherto most highly valued, and the newly-converted Muslim was taught to consider as
virtues, qualities which hitherto
he had looked down upon with contempt.
To
the heathen Arab, friendship and hostility were as a loan
which he sought to repay with interest, and he prided himself
on returning evil for evil, and looked down on any who
acted otherwise as a weak nidering.
He
is the perfect man who late and early plotteth still
To do a kindness to
his friends and work his foes some ill.
To
such men the Prophet said, "Recompense evil with that
which is better" (xxiii. 98); as they desired the forgiveness of God, they were
to pass over and pardon offences (xxiv. 22),
and a Paradise, vast as the heavens and the earth, was prepared for those who
mastered their anger and forgave
others. (iii. 128.)
The
very institution of prayer was jeered at by the Arabs to whom Muḥammad first
delivered his message, and one of the hardest parts of his task was to induce
in them that pious attitude of mind towards
the Creator, which Islam inculcates
equally with Judaism and Christianity, but which was practically unknown
to the heathen Arabs. This self-sufficiency
and this lack of the religious spirit, joined with their intense pride
of race, little fitted them to receive the
teachings of one who maintained that "The most worthy of honour in the
sight of God is he that feareth Him
most" (xlix. 13). No more could they brook the restrictions that Islam
sought to lay upon the licence of their
lives; wine, women, and song, were among the things most dear to the
Arab's heart in the days of the ignorance, and the Prophet was stern and severe
in his injunctions respecting each of them.
Thus, from the very
beginning, Islam bears the stamp of a missionary religion that seeks to win the
hearts of men, to convert them and persuade them to enter the brotherhood of
the faithful; and as it was in the beginning, so has it continued to be up to the
present day, as will be the object of the following pages to show.
-------------------------------------------
[1] Ibn Isḥāq, p. 120.
2 Id. p. 155.
3-He is famous
throughout the Muhammadan world as the first mu’adhdhin.
4- Ibn Isḥāq, p. 219-220. Ṭabarī makes no mention of this mission and
Caetani (i. p. 278) accordingly suggests that it is a later invention.
5-Ibn Isḥāq. pp. 225-6.
6- Ibn Isḥāq, pp. 286-7.
7- Caetani, vol. i. pp. 334-3.
8- Ibn Isḥāq. p. 291 sq.
9- The appointment of the fast of Ramaḍān (Qur'ān ii. 179-84), is
doubtless another sign of the breaking with the Jews, the fast on the Day of
Atonement being thus abolished.
10- "Aber Gottes Botscbaft ist nicht auf die Araber beschränkt.
Sein Wille gilt für alle Creatur, es heischt unbedingten Gehorsam von aller
Menschheit, und dass Muhammed als sein Bote denselben Gehorsam zu heischen
berechtigt und verpflichtet sei, scheint von Anfang an ein integrirender
Bestandtheil seines Gedankensystem gewesen zu sein." (Sachau, pp. 293-4.)
Goldziher (Vorlesungen übcr den Islam, p. 25 sqq.) and Nöldeke (WZKM, vol. xxi.
pp. 307-8) express a similar opinion. 11-
11- On the doubtful authenticity of these letters, see Caetani, vol.
i. p. 725 sqq.
12- It seems strange that in the face of these passages, Some have
denied that Islam was originally intiended by its founder to be A Universal
religion……. (see rest of cititon in the Book page 29).
13- Ibn Sa'd, § 10. This story may indeed be apocryphal, but is
significant at least of the early realisation of the missionary character of
Islam.
14- A. von Kremer (3), pp. 309, 310.
15- This would seem to be acknowledged even by Muir, when speaking of
the massacre of the Banū Qurayẓah
(A.H.6-): "The ostensible grounds upon which Mahomet proceeded were purely
political, for as yet he did not profess to force men to join Islam, or to
punish them for not embracing it." (Muir (2), vol. iii. p. 282.)
16-Ibn Isḥāq, p. 648 sq.
17-Muir (2), vol. iv. pp. 107-8. See also Caetani, vol. i. p. 663. "Assai più ,'che tutte le prediche del Profeta,
assai più che tutta la bontà delle dottrine islamiche, siffatti vantaggi
militari contribuirono al aumentare il numero dei seguaci. La rapidità della
diffusione dell' Islām divenne in special modo sensibile per il contegno et per
lo spirito di tolleranza, di libertà, e di opportunismo, che diresse il Profeta
nei suoi rapporti con i convertiti."
18- Ibn Isḥāq, p. 943-4. (This
story rests on somewhat doubtful authority, cf. Caetani, vol. i. p. 610.)
19- Ibn Sa’d, § 118
20- Ibn
Isḥāq, pp. 252-4.
21- Caetani, vol. ii. t. i. p. 341.
22- Ibn Sa'd, § 56.
23- Ibn Sa'd, § 85.
24- Id. § 86.
25- Id. §91.
26- See Sprenger, vol. iii. pp. 360-1
27- Caetani, vol. ii. p. 433.
28- Caetani, vol. ii. p. 429.
29- This has been nowhere more fully and excellently brought out than
in the scholarly work of Prof. Ignaz
Goldziher (Muhammedanische Studien, vol.
i.), from which I have derived the following considerations.
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