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The Campaign of Khaybar and Missions to Kings
Muhammad and the Muslims returned from
al Hudaybiyah to Madinah three weeks after the signing of the treaty with
Quraysh and the agreement that they would not enter Makkah that year but
the following year. Many of them returned with wounded pride. They
continued to feel dejected and despondent until arch "al Fath,"[1]
revealed on the road to Madinah, alleviated their despondency. While in
Hudaybiyah as well as after the return to Madinah, Muhammad thought about
what he should do to strengthen the faith of his companions and to spread
the message of Islam. He thought of sending messengers to Heraclius,
Chosroes, the Archbishop of Alexandria, the Negus of Abyssinia, King al
Harith of Ghassan, and the satrap of Chosroes in Yaman. He also pondered
the necessity of eliminating Jewish influence in the Arabian Peninsula
once and for all.
Crystallization of the Islamic Call
In fact, the Islamic message had by this
time reached a high level of crystallization and comprehensiveness. The
time was ripe for its dissemination among mankind. Besides the doctrine of
the unity of God and its implications for worship and ethics, the Islamic
message developed so widely as to include within its purview all aspects
of social activity and human relations. These it sought to regulate and
infuse with its ethos and spirit. It attached such importance to man's
social relations that it put its precepts for social behavior on a level
with the doctrine of the unity of God. The system of principles Islam
elaborated came nearer than any other to enable man to attain perfection
and to realize the absolute, or the highest ideals in space-time. Hence, a
large number of specific proscriptions were revealed during this period to
regulate man's social relationships.
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The Proscription of Alcohol
Biographers of the Prophet have
disagreed regarding the time of the prohibition of alcohol. Some assert
that it took place in the fourth year A.H. Most of them; however,
agree that it took place in the same year as the Hudaybiyah pact. The
purpose of the prohibition of alcohol was purely a social one, unrelated
to the unity of God as a purely theological doctrine. The evidence for
this is the fact that the Qur'an remained silent on this problem for a
period of approximately twenty years after Muhammad's commission to
prophethood. Throughout this period, the Muslims continued to use alcohol.
Further evidence to this effect comes from the fact that the prohibition
itself was not categorically laid down all at once, but was revealed
progressively and at intervals. There was a series of prohibitions, each
prescribing a limitative measure of use. Total abstinence was not demanded
until near the end of the Madinese period of the revelation. It is told
that `Umar ibn al Khattab inquired about the drinking of wine and prayed
for God to show the Muslims His will in this regard, and that it was in
this connection that the verse was revealed saying, "When they ask
you about drinking wine and gambling, answer that they constitute great
evil as well as advantage to the people but that their evil is greater
than their good." [Qur'an, 2:219] Despite the
indication this verse gave, the Muslims who were in the habit of drinking
did not stop. Some of them in a state of drunkenness would pray without
knowing what they were reciting. Again `Umar prayed God to show more of
His will in this matter. The common Arabic saying, "Alcohol causes
the loss of both mind and money," is attributed by tradition to him.
Later, another step toward prohibition was taken with the following
revelation: "O Men who believe, do not hold the prayers while you are
in a state of drunkenness. Recover yourselves first until you become fully
conscious of what you are about to recite." [Qur'an, 4:43]
From that day on, the town crier of the Prophet proclaimed at the times of
prayer: "Let no drunken man come to prayer." Despite this new
limitation upon alcohol, `Umar continued to pray to God to send down yet
clearer revelation concerning it. Personally, `Umar was quite opposed to
alcohol because the Arabs often drank to the point of losing decorum,
pulling one another's beards and hitting one another. It so happened that
at a banquet which included Muhajirun and Ansar, a member of the former
group boasted of his peoples' superiority over the latter group. A member
of al Ansar, equally intoxicated, wounded the former in the nose by
hitting him with a skull bone. Under the influence of liquor, the two
groups quarreled, fought, and generated all kinds of hatred toward one
another until they almost destroyed their previous harmony and mutual
esteem. On this occasion, God said in a special revelation
"O men who believe, alcohol,
gambling, idols, and divination arrows are an abomination of Satan's
handiwork. Avoid them, therefore, that you may be felicitous. Satan wishes
to infuse enmity and hatred among you through alcohol and gambling. He
wishes to keep you intoxicated that you may not remember God, and hence
fail to hold prayer. Will you not listen and stop being his tools ?"[Qur'an,
5:90-91]
On the day this revelation was made and
the prohibition of alcohol was instituted, Anas, the wine seller and
server, spilled all the alcohol in his possession. Other men who were not
pleased by the new legislation asked: "Could alcohol be a real
abomination even though it was consumed by some of the martyrs of Uhud and
Badr?" In response to them, the following verse was revealed:
"Those who believed and did the good may not be blamed for what they
consumed, inasmuch as they feared God, believed, and did good works. For
God loves the virtuous. [Qur'an, 5:93]
By commanding mercy and compassion, the
doing of good works, disciplining the soul and character by means of
worship, and eliminating false pride by means of kneeling and prostration
in prayer, Islam became the natural perfection of all previous
religions, the religion to which all men are called.
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The Persian and Byzantine Empires
Heraclius and Chosroes were at the time
the chiefs of the Roman and Persian empires, the greatest states of the
age and the makers and arbiters of world policy and world destiny. Between
them war was continual, as we have had occasion to see. The Persians were
at first victorious and conquered Palestine and Egypt. They governed
Jerusalem from where they moved away the cross of Christ. Later, the arm
of destiny moved, and it was the Roman flag that flew over Egypt, Syria,
and Palestine. Heraclius recovered the cross and put it back in its
original place after a pilgrimage to Jerusalem on foot in fulfillment of a
vow he had taken before victory. One can easily appreciate the position of
the two empires if one remembers the tremendous fear which their very
names inspired in any person who fell within their reach. Men were so awed
by the two empires that no state or community could think of opposing
them, and every man kept on good terms with their authorities and
representatives as essential to survival. Since the world of the time was
one divided between the spheres of influence of these two giants, it was
natural for the Arabian Peninsula to fall within the one or the other.
`Iraq was under Persia while Egypt and al Sham were under the influence of
Rome. Hijaz and the entire remainder of the Arabian Peninsula were divided
between the two. Whatever prosperity the Arabs enjoyed depended wholly
upon trade between Yaman and al Sham. It was absolutely essential,
therefore, that the Arabs enjoy the friendship of Khosrau as well as of
Heraclius if their trade was to be successful. The Arab population
consisted of tribes, sometimes mutually hostile, sometimes peaceful, but
never related to one another by a bond constituting a political structure
capable of counteracting the influence of either of the two great powers.
It was hence amazing that Muhammad would think of sending his messengers
to the two great kings, as well as to Ghassan and Yaman, to Egypt and
Abyssinia, and to call them all to his religion without fear of the
consequences of such deeds for the Arabian Peninsula as a whole, or
without fear that Roman and Persian influence in Arabia might actually be
transformed into a solid yoke of subjugation.
The Prophet's Delegates
Muhammad, however, did not hesitate to
call all these men to the religion of truth. One day, addressing his
companions, Muhammad said: "O men, God has sent me to be a Prophet of
mercy to all mankind. Do not, therefore, disagree and divide as the
disciples of Jesus, son of Mary, did after him." When his companions
asked him to explain, he replied: "Jesus had called his disciples to
the same truth to which I have called you. Those of them whom he sent to
places close by accepted and observed the truth that Jesus had conveyed;
those whom he sent to faraway places did not like that truth and could not
accept it." Muhammad mentioned to them that he was planning to send
messengers to Heraclius, the Archbishop of Alexandria; to al Harith of
Ghassan, King of al Hirah; to al Harith of Himyar, King of Yaman; and to
the Negus of Abyssinia, calling them all to Islam. The companions approved
and made for him a seal out of silver which read "Muhammad, the
Prophet of God." Muhammad sent letters to these chiefs, an example of
which is the message sent to Heraclius. It read as follows: "In the
name of God, the Merciful, the Compassionate. From Muhammad ibn `Abdullah
to Heraclius, Emperor of Byzantium. Peace be upon the rightly guided. I
call you to the religion of Islam. If you convert, you will be saved and
God will double your reward. If you do not convert, responsibility for the
salvation of your subjects rests with you. [Recognizing
that there has been a large variety of views regarding the voweling and meaning
of the term "al arisiyyin,"
the author appended a footnote in which he preferred
its meaning as "subjects." This view was based on the Nihayat
of Ibn al Athir and other dictionaries of the Arabic
language, q.v. Rum. Another
meaning of the term, which does not at all seem improbable, is
"Arians." In this case the Prophet would seem to be giving Heraclius
the alternative of accepting the monotheism of Islam or of remaining a
trinitarian Christian. In the latter case, the emperor would fall under a new
indictment of heresy regarding the truth of Jesus Christ which Islam was
teaching in consonance with Arianism. -Tr.]
`O People of the Book, come now to a fair principle, common to both of us,
namely, that we worship only God, that we do not associate aught with Him
and that we do not take one another as lords besides God. But if they
refuse, then say, "Take note that we are Muslims." "' The
Prophet gave this message to Dihyah ibn Khalifah al Kalb! and asked him to
convey it to Heraclius. He dictated a similar letter to Chosroes and asked
`Abdullah ibn Hudhafah al Sahmi to convey it to him. Another letter
addressed to the Negus was handed to `Umar ibn Umayyah al Damri. A letter
to the Archbishop of Alexandria was handed to Hatib ibn abu Balta'ah; to
the King of Yamanah, to Salit ibn `Amr ; to the King of Bahrayn, to al
`Ala' ibn al Hadrami ; to al Harith of Ghassan, King of the Approaches of
al Sham, to Shuja` ibn Wahb al Asadi; to al Harith of Himyar, King of
Yaman, to Ibn Umayyah al Makhzumi. All these men went out each to the
destination assigned to him by the Prophet. Most historians affirm that
they started their journeys in various directions at the same time. Some,
however, assert that they were sent at different intervals.
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Persia and Byzantium
That Muhammad sent such missions to the
kings of the world is truly surprising. More surprising still is the fact
that within barely thirty years of the time he sent those missions, the
kingdoms of these kings were conquered by the Muslims and most of their
inhabitants converted to Islam. The surprise, however, is dissipated when
one remembers that the two great empires disputing the leadership of the
world and dividing it between their two civilizations were really
disputing only the material possessions of the world. In both of them,
spiritual power had long been decaying. Persia, for its part, was divided
between paganism and Zoroastrianism. The Christianity of Byzantium, on the
other hand, was rife with dispute and controversy between various sects.
There was no single conviction, neither faith nor world view, to inspire
the hearts and satisfy the minds of the people. Rather, religion had
become a series of rites and superstitions by which the Church was
exercising its control and exploitation of the masses of mankind. As for
the new call of Muhammad, it was purely spiritual, raising man to the
highest levels of his humanity. Wherever matter contends with spirit,
wherever care for the present contends with the hope for eternity, matter
and concern for the present are sure to lose.
Furthermore, despite their greatness,
both Persia and Byzantium had lost the power of initiative, creativity,
and culture-building. In thought, feeling and action, the two empires had
declined to the level of ancestor-imitation where every novelty was looked
upon as misguidance and abomination. But human society, like individual
men and all living organisms, must renew itself every day. Either it
remains youthful renewing itself, recreating, reconstructing, and always
adding to its life, or it reaches old age and, being incapable of
recreation and reconstruction, spends its own life-capital. Its ensuing
history is a continuing reduction and downfall toward a tragic end. Any
human society which has thus fallen is susceptible to renewal and
recreation by another society youthful enough to instill new life into
anything it touches. Such a new element, full of life power and youth and
growing in close proximity to Persia and Byzantium was Muhammad. His
mission was so new and vigorous that it breathed new life into the masses
of mankind whose spirit had been destroyed internally by the vacuitous
rites and superstitions of the decaying societies in the great empires.
The fire of the new faith which illumined the soul of the Prophet and the
indomitable power of his soul explain the fact of his calling the kings of
the earth to Islam, the religion of truth and perfection, the religion of
God-May He be revered! The great kings were called to the religion which
liberated the mind to reason and the heart to see for itself. Islam was
the religion which gave man, whether in the life of worship or in the
ordering of society, general principles which harmonized the powers of
spirit and matter and made possible the highest levels of life on earth.
Where such harmony prevails, there is neither weakness nor false pride.
After going through all the stages of necessary development, human society
can reach the highest possible level of existence designed for it.
Elimination of Jewish Influence in Arabia
But would Muhammad send his missions to
the foreign kings while his own domain was threatened by the treacherous
Jews who were still living to the north of Madinah? It is true that the
Treaty of Hudaybiyah had secured his southern flank, especially from
Quraysh. But what about the north, where both Heraclius and Chosroes might
attack Madinah in cooperation with the Jews of Khaybar who were anxious
for an opportunity to take revenge upon Muhammad? It would be relatively
easy for either emperor to remind the Jews of the fate of their
co-religionists, the Banu Qurayzah, Banu al Nadir, and Banu Qaynuqa`, who
had previously been expelled from their dwellings after blockade,
fighting, and war, and to incite them to new ventures against Muhammad.
For their enmity and bitterness surpassed that of Quraysh. They were more
attached to their religion, more intelligent, and more learned. On the
other hand, it was n6t possible to reconcile them with a peace treaty like
that of Hudaybiyah since the covenant of Madinah had been violated by them
much to their own detriment. Were help to come to them from the side of
Byzantium, their natural inclination to rise again against Muhammad could
not be contained. Hence, it was thought necessary to put a final end to
their influence in the Arabian Peninsula, and to do so quickly without
giving them the time to forge any new alliances with Ghatafan or any of
other tribe hostile to Muhammad.
And such Muhammad did. He had hardly
spent fifteen days after his return from al Hudaybiyah-a month according
to another version-when he commanded the people to prepare for the
campaign of Khaybar, restricting the call to arms to those who had
accompanied him to al Hudaybiyah. His purpose was to leave behind all
those interested in booty, and to go out with the truly loyal followers
who sought service for the sake of God. The Muslims marched forth one
thousand and six hundred strong, including a cavalry of one hundred. They
were confident of God's assistance and victory, and recalled surah
"al Fath" which was revealed shortly after the signing of the
Hudaybiyah treaty; "When you go forth and booty lies ahead of you,
those who remained behind and did not participate in the previous campaign
will ask to accompany you that they might share in the spoils. Thus they
seek to change the decrees of God. Say to them, `It is not given to you to
accompany us, for that is the decree of God which has been given.' They
will accuse you of jealousy and envy, but their understanding is meager
and their intelligence is dim." [Qur'an,
48:15]
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The March against Khaybar
Muhammad and his men crossed the
distance between Khaybar and Madinah in three days. Khaybar did not learn
of their move until the Muslims' forces stood in front of their
fortifications. In the morning, when the Khaybar workmen went out of their
homes to go to their plantations, they saw the Muslim army for the first
time and ran away shouting to one another, "There is Muhammad and his
army." When Muhammad heard them, he said: "Khaybar is doomed;
whenever we enter the enemy's land, the fate of that enemy is
sealed."
Jewish Reaction
Nonetheless, the Jews of Khaybar did in
fact anticipate Muhammad's move and thought of ways and means of escape.
Some leaders advised Khaybar to form a block with the Jews of Wadi al Qura
and Tayma' and to take the initiative in attacking Madinah first. This
group saw no point in depending upon Arab tribes. Other leaders advised
that it was more salutary for them to enter into a new pact with the
Prophet in order to mitigate Muslim hatred and hostility, especially among
al Ansar. This suggestion was particularly appealing after the experience
in Madinah, when Huyayy ibn Akhtab and his party had instigated the Arab
tribes to attack Madinah and sack its fortification in the Campaign of al
Khandaq. The truth is, however, that neither Jews nor Muslims were ready
for any conciliation, especially since the Muslims had killed Sallam ibn
Abu al Huqayq and al Yasir ibn Razzam, two Khaybar chieftains, before
venturing out on their present expedition against Khaybar. As a
consequence, the Jews were constantly in touch with the tribe of Ghatafan
and sent to them for help as soon as they discovered Muhammad's army in
their domain. Historians differ regarding Ghatafan's answer to Khaybar's
call, whether they actually did come to Khaybar's rescue or whether the
Muslim army prevented any such assistance from reaching Khaybar.
The Two Armies
Regardless of whether Ghatafan had
actually helped the Jews or not, it soon renounced its attachment to them
and became neutral as early as Muhammad promised it a share in the spoils
of war. The campaign of Khaybar was one of the greatest. The masses of
Jews living in Khaybar were the strongest, the richest, and the best
equipped for war of all the peoples of Arabia. The Muslims, for their
part, were certain that as long as the Jews held any power in the
Peninsula, the two religions would have to compete with each other
endlessly. That is why they advanced so resolutely and fought so
valiantly. The Quraysh as well as the whole Arabian Peninsula watched the
campaign and awaited its results. Some Quraysh tribesmen wagered with one
another concerning its outcome; many believed that the tables would now be
turned against the Muslims, knowing how fortified were the dwellings, how
impregnable the city stood perched over rocks and mountains, and how
experienced its people were in the arts of war.
The Muslims' Blockade
The Muslims, on the other hand, brought
to Khaybar all the equipment and preparation they could muster. After
consulting one another and listening to Sallam ibn Miskham, their chief,
the Jews decided to assemble their wealth and children in the fortified
quarters of al Watih and al Sulalim, to place their ammunition at Na'im,
and to deploy their fighting men at Natat where Sallam ibn Mishkam would
lead them in battle to the bitter end. The two armies met at Natat and
fought each other strongly. The encounter, however, was not decisive.
There were fifty wounded among the Muslims on the first day and probably
many more than this among the Jews. When Sallam ibn Mishkam was killed, al
Harith ibn Abu Zaynab took over the leadership of the Jewish forces.
Charging from the fortress of Na'im, the new leader attacked the Muslim
army at the flank, but he was soon repulsed by Banu al Khazraj, who were
deployed in that area. As a result of this engagement, the Muslims
tightened their encirclement of Khaybar. Realizing that this was their
last stand in Arabia, the Jews fought desperately. As the days went by,
the Prophet sent Abu Bakr with a contingent and a flag to the fortress of
Na'im ; but he was not able to conquer it despite heavy fighting. The
Prophet then sent `Umar ibn al Khattab on the following day, but he fared
no better than Abu Bakr. On the third day, the Prophet called `Ali ibn Abu
Talib and, blessing him, commanded him to storm the fortress. `Ali led his
force and fought valiantly. In the engagement, he lost his armor and,
shielding himself with a portal he had seized, he continued to fight until
the fortress was stormed by his troops. The same portal was used by `Ali
as a little bridge to enable the Muslim soldiers to enter the houses
within the fortress. The fortress of Na'im fell after the Jewish leader,
al Harith ibn Abu Zaynab, was killed in battle. Evidently, both Jews and
Muslims were determined to fight it out to the end.
Having stormed the fortress of Na'im,
the Muslims then directed their attention to the fortress of al Qamus
which they stormed after equally strenuous fighting. Provisions were
becoming rather scarce within the Muslim army, and many began to approach
Muhammad personally to ask him for something with which to stave off their
hunger. Unable to find provisions, Muhammad permitted them to eat horse
meat. Later on, a Muslim soldier noticed a herd of goats entering one of
the fortifications of the Jews, launched an immediate attack, and seized
two animals which were immediately killed and consumed. Not until after
they had conquered the fortress of al Sa'b ibn Mu'adh was their shortage
relieved. For within that fortress, they found large stores of food that
enabled them to continue the blockade of other fortresses. Throughout this
campaign, the Jews would not give up a single inch of territory without
putting up a heroic struggle for it. Whenever they retreated, it was only
before preponderant Muslim forces. At one stage in the campaign, Marhab
came out of one of the fortresses fully covered with his military attire
and singing the following verses
"Khaybar knows that I am Marhab,
that I am an experienced hero fully prepared for war. I deal blows to my
enemies and I strike them. Even the lions I face with drawn sword. The
ground I hold is unassailable. Even the most experienced in war dares not
approach it." Muhammad asked his companions, "Who will rise to
meet him?" Muhammad ibn Maslamah rose and said, "Send me, 0
Prophet of God. For I am the angry bereaved who lost his brother
yesterday." The Prophet permitted him and he sprang to meet Marhab.
The pair fought valiantly and, at one stage, Marhab almost killed the
Muslim. Ibn Maslamah, however, intercepted the falling sword with his
shield which bent under its weight and was cut so that the sword could not
be pulled out and disengaged. Muhammad ibn Maslamah seized the opportunity
and gave Marhab a fatal blow. This war between Muslim and Jew was a hard
and savage struggle, and the fortifications of the Jews made it even more
so.
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Jewish Despair and Collapse
The Muslims then directed their
attention to the fortress of al Zubayr and surrounded it for a long time,
waging a number of harsh attacks without being able to storm it. At one
stage, they seized the water supply of the fortress and stopped its flow.
The Jews were forced to come out and engage the Muslims in battle but,
faced with preponderant Muslim forces, they fled. Their fortresses fell
one after another into Muslim hands, the last of them being those of al
Watih and al Sulalim in the al Katibah area. Only then did the Jews become
truly desperate, and they begged for peace. The Prophet had already seized
most of their possessions at the fortresses of al Shaqq, Natat, and al
Katibah. In the circumstances, they had only their own skins to seek to
save. Muhammad accepted their plea and permitted them to stay on their
land whose title now passed to him by right of conquest. The terms of
their surrender provided that they would be given half their crops in
compensation for their labor.
The Jews of Khaybar were thus treated
differently from those of Banu Qaynuqa` and Banu al Nadir who were forced
to evacuate their lands altogether. With the fall of Khaybar, Jewish power
no more threatened Islam or the Muslims. Moreover, Khaybar had large areas
of orchards and groves of date trees whose maintenance needed an
experienced labor force. Although al Ansar, the Muslims of Madinah, were
agriculturalists, they were needed back home to tend their own gardens and
orchards. The Prophet also needed his men for the purpose of war and could
not afford to demobilize his army for the sake of agriculture. The Jews of
Khaybar were hence allowed to continue to work their own groves after
their political dominion had been destroyed. Despite Muhammad's
sharecropping arrangement, the agricultural economy of Khaybar
retrogressed after the destruction of Jewish political power. `Abdullah
ibn Rawahah, Muhammad's deputy for the division of the Khaybar crops,
dealt justly with the Jews, following in this regard the instructions of
the Prophet himself. So honorable was his conduct that he returned to them
copies of the Torah seized by the Muslims in the course of the
hostilities. This is in direct contrast to the manner in which the Romans
treated the Jews when they conquered Jerusalem and burned all the sacred
writings they found in the temple and trampled them under foot. It is also
far from the Christian persecution of the Jews in Spain where every Torah
seized was put to the torch.
As the Jews of Khaybar pleaded for peace
while the Muslims blockaded al Watih and al Sulalim at Khaybar, the
Prophet sent a message to the Jews of Fadak asking them to surrender their
properties and wealth or accept his terms. The people of Fadak were so
panic-stricken at the news of Khaybar that they agreed to give up half
their wealth without fighting. The wealth of Khaybar was to be distributed
among the members of the Muslim armed forces according to rule because
they had fought to secure it. The wealth of Fadak, on the other hand, fell
to Muhammad, [Not personally, but as chief of state. -Tr.] as no Muslims and no fighting were involved in its
acquisition.
The Prophet prepared to return to
Madinah by way of Wadi al Qura where the Jews of that area prepared to
fight the Muslims. Some fighting did indeed take place, but the Jews
realized the futility of their resistance and pleaded for peace as Khaybar
and Fadak had done before. As for the Jews of Tayma', they accepted to pay
the jizyah without fighting. Thus, all the Jews of the Peninsula
submitted to the authority of the Prophet and their political influence
was brought to an end. The northern flank of Muslim power, namely the
whole area north of Madinah, was now as secure as the south had become
through the Treaty of al Hudaybiyah. With the collapse of Jewish political
power, Muslim hatred of the Jews mellowed, and this was especially true of
the Ansar of Madinah who even closed their eyes when a number of Jews
returned to Madinah to resume their normal trades and professions. Indeed,
the Prophet himself sympathized with such Jewish returnees and joined with
them in mourning `Abdullah ibn Ubayy by presenting condolences to his son.
Moreover, the Prophet took especial care to instruct Mu'a,dh ibn Jabal not
to sway the Jews from their religion but to allow them to practice it as
they had done before. He did not impose any jizyah on the Jews of
al Bahrayn despite the conservatism of the latter and their attachment to
the faith of their forefathers. The Prophet also reconciled the Jews of
Banu Ghaziyah and Banu `Arid and offered them his covenant and protection
provided they agree to pay jizyah. On the whole, the Jews of the
Peninsula lost their political power and fell under that of the Muslims.
So much had their prestige deteriorated, however, that they soon found
themselves having to emigrate from a land which once felt their influence.
According to some versions, this Jewish emigration took place during the
lifetime of the Prophet; according to others, shortly after his death.
Jewish acquiescence in their fate under
the dominion of Islam did not take place at one and the same time or
immediately after their military defeat, for they were exceedingly
resentful and full of hatred for their Muslim fellows. Zaynab, daughter of
al Harith, and wife of Sallam ibn Mishkam, cooked a goat and presented it
to Muhammad after the peace treaty with Khaybar and Jewish-Muslim
relations returned to normal. Muhammad sat down at the table with his
companions to eat of this Jewish prepared food. Taking the first mouthful,
he realized that the taste was strange. Bishr ibn al Bar&' likewise
had the same realization and could hardly swallow the first mouthful. As
he threw his away, the Prophet said: "I have a premonition that this
dish is poisoned." He then called Zaynab and questioned her, and she
confessed. In defense of herself, she said to the Prophet: "You know
what has befallen my people at your hand, and you can appreciate my
resentment and hatred. In pondering the whole event, I arrived at the
conclusion that if you, the source of all the evil, were a king like other
kings, then to put an end to your life would bring peace to me and my
people. If, on the other hand, you are a true prophet, then surely you
would find out that the food was poisoned and you would not eat." The
one mouthful which Bishr ate was fatal to him. The chroniclers disagree
regarding the fate of Zaynab. Most of them agree that the Prophet
appreciated her defense, forgave her, and sympathized with her loss of
father and husband. Others relate that she was killed in revenge for the
life of Bishr.
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Muhammad's Marriage to Safiyyah
This treacherous deed of Zaynab
adversely affected the attitudes of the Muslims. It destroyed whatever
confidence they still had in the Jews. Indeed, it confirmed their
presentiment that there could be no peace with the Jews as long as they
were not finally destroyed. Safiyyah, daughter of Huyayy ibn Akhtab of
Banu al Nadir, was one of the captives the Muslims had seized inside the
fortresses of Khaybar. Her husband, Kinanah ibn al Rabi`, was known by the
Muslims to have been the guardian of all the wealth of Banu al Nadir. When
the Prophet had asked Kinanah about his treasure, the latter solemnly
declared that he did not know where it was hidden. Muhammad threatened him
that in case the treasure was found hidden in his place he would be put to
death. Kinanah agreed. One day when Kinanah was seen moving about an
uninhabited house in the outskirts, his movement was reported to the
Prophet. After the Prophet ordered the inside of the house be dug out,
part of the treasure was revealed. Kinanah was killed as a result. When a
companion learned of Safiyyah's captivity, he approached the Prophet with
the suggestion that, since she was the lady of Banu Qurayzah and Banu al
Nadir, she was fit to become the wife of the Prophet alone. The Prophet
granted her her freedom and then married her, following the example of the
great conquerors who married the daughters and wives of the kings whom
they had conquered, partly in order to alleviate their tragedy and partly
to preserve their dignity. Abu Ayyub Khalid al Ansari, however, feared
that Safiyyah's tragic loss of father, husband, and people might incite
her to avenge herself against the Prophet. He therefore spent the night
near Muhammad's tent where the wedding had taken place, with sword drawn.
When the morning came and the Prophet saw him in that state, he asked him
for an explanation. Abu Ayyub answered that he feared for the Prophet that
this woman, who until very recently had been a non-Muslim, might attack
him. The truth, however, was otherwise. Safiyyah remained loyal to
Muhammad throughout his life. In his last illness, when the Prophet was
surrounded by his wives, Safiyyah came forward and said: "O Prophet
of God, I surely wish that that from which you suffer might be in me
rather than in you." Muhammad's wives winked at one another and the
Prophet, observing their reaction, said: "Go on and wink at one
another! By God, I know that Safiyyah is truthful and loyal."
Safiyyah, who survived Muhammad, lived until the time of the caliphate of
Mu'awiyah. She was buried at al Baqi`.
Delegation to Heraclius
Whatever happened to the messengers whom
Muhammad sent to Heraclius, Chosroes, the Negus, and other kings and men
of power surrounding Arabia? Did they go forth before the Campaign of
Khaybar, or did they participate in that Campaign until Muslim victory had
been achieved and traveled thereafter? Historians differ so widely in this
respect that it is very difficult to reach a conclusion. We are inclined
to think that they did not all go forth at the same time, that some of
them began their travel before the campaign of Khaybar and others
thereafter. More than one chronicler has asserted that Dihyah ibn Khalifah
al Kalbi participated in the operations at Khaybar. Yet it was he who was
commissioned by the Prophet to go to Heraclius. The Prophet's messenger
met Heraclius at the time of the latter's victorious return from the war
with Persia and his recapture of the cross which had been taken by the
Persians when they occupied Jerusalem. The vow which Herachus had made,
namely, to perform a pilgrimage to Jerusalem on foot and return the cross
to its original place, could now be fulfilled. It was on this pilgrimage
of Heraclius, specifically when the imperial procession had reached the
city of Hims [The old city of Emessa in Syria.] that the message of Muhammad was received. Whether
Muhammad's letter was handed to the Emperor by one of the latter's
employees after Dihyah surrendered it to the Byzantine governor of Bosra,
or whether the group of Muslims headed by Dihyah was granted a court
audience at which Dihyah submitted the Prophet's letter in person, is not
known for certain. At any rate, it is known that the Prophet's letter did
reach Heraclius, and that the Emperor was not irritated by it. Instead of
sending an army to conquer Arabia, Heraclius did in fact send a gentle
letter in reply to Muhammad's message. It was this gentle response to
Muhammad's message that a number of historians mistook as meaning that
Heraclius had joined the ranks of Islam.
At the same time, al Harith of Ghassan
sent to Heraclius a message to the effect that he had just received a
letter from Muhammad, a message which Heraclius thought was similar to
what he himself had received from the same source calling him to Islam. Al
Harith applied for permission to send an expeditionary force against this
new "pretender." Heraclius saw otherwise and instructed al
Harith to come to Jerusalem and attend with him the ceremonies at which
the cross would be reinstated. Heraclius was apparently more interested in
the pomp and circumstance of those ceremonies than in the call of a new
religion. He could not imagine that only a few years would pass before
Jerusalem, as well as the whole of al Sham, would fall under Islamic
dominion; that the Islamic capital would move to Damascus; that the
struggle between the Islamic state and the Byzantine Empire would not
subside until the Muslims had conquered Constantinople in 1.453 and
converted its great church [That is, Hagia Sophia. -Tr.] into a mosque in which the name of that
Prophet would be inscribed in honor; and that that same church would
remain a mosque for many centuries until the Muslim Turks would change it
into a museum of Byzantine art in modern times. Such was to be the
influence of this Prophet whose message Heraclius did not think
sufficiently worthy to deserve attention.
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Delegation to Chosroes
As soon as the message of Muhammad was
read out to Chosroes, the Emperor of Persia, he went into a rage,
destroyed the letter, and dictated an order to his satrap in Yaman
commanding him to send forth to the capital the head of his
Prophet-pretender in al Hijaz. Perhaps he was moved to such a decision out
of a need for self-assertion following his defeat by Heraclius. When the
Prophet heard of Chosroes's response, he cursed him as well as his empire.
Bazan, the satrap of Yaman, sent his messengers in search of Muhammad, in
compliance with the command of his emperor. In the meanwhile, however,
Chosroes passed away, and his son, Cyrus, ascended the throne. Knowing the
news of the accession, the Prophet informed the messengers of Bazan and
asked them to carry his call to Islam to Bazan rather than carry
out Bazan's instructions. The people of Yaman had learned of the defeat of
Persia and realized that Persian dominion was on the decline and would
soon pass away. They had heard, also, of the victories Muhammad had scored
over Quraysh and of his total destruction of Jewish power and dominion.
When BAzan's messengers returned and told their master of Muhammad's
response, he immediately converted to Islam and accepted Muhammad's
appointment as governor of Yaman. But what would Muhammad require of Bazan,
as long as enemy Makkah separated the two? Since he did not have much to
fear, but rather everything to gain because Persian dominion was on the
wane, and because the new power rising on the horizon of the Peninsula
could, in fact, demand of him no price in return, Bazan preferred to enter
into friendly relations with Muhammad. Possibly, Bazan did not quite
appreciate the fact that his joining the ranks of Islam gave the latter a
very viable point d'appui in the south corner of the Peninsula, as
events were to show two years later.
Delegation to the Archbishop of Egypt
The Coptic Archbishop of Egypt answered
in a radically different way from his superior Herachus, or from Chosroes.
He informed Muhammad of his belief that a Prophet was indeed to appear in
the world, but in al Sham. He accorded to Muhammad's messenger a good
reception and sent with him a gift to the Prophet consisting of two slave
girls, a white mule, a donkey, some money, and a variety of Egyptian
products. The two slave girls were Mariyyah, whom Muhammad took in
marriage and who gave birth to Ibrahim, and Sirin, who was given in
marriage to Hassan ibn Thabit. The mule was given by the Prophet the name
of Duldul, for its unique whiteness of skin which the Arabian Peninsula
had never seen before. The donkey was called `Ufayr or Ya'fur. The
Archbishop explained that he did not convert to Islam because of his fear
of discharge by his superior, and that were he not a man of authority and
power, he would have been rightly guided to the true faith.
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Delegation to Abyssinia
It was natural that the answer of the
Negus of Abyssinia was favorable, for his country had always been on good
terms with the Muslims. Indeed, some historians assert that the Negus was
converted to Islam-a claim which the Orientalists suspect very strongly.
The Prophet sent to the Negus a second letter asking him to send back the
Muslims who had been living in Abyssinia under his protection. The Negus
provided these Muslims with two ships that carried them to the shore of
Arabia. They were led by Ja'far ibn Abu Talib, and the group included Umm
Habibah, Ramlah, daughter of Abu Sufyan and wife of `Abdullah ibn Jahsh
who went to Abyssinia as a Muslim, converted to Christianity and died
there a Christian. Following her return from Abyssinia, the same Umm
Habibah became one of the wives of the Prophet, a "Mother of the
Believers." Some historians asserted that the Prophet married her in
order to forge a blood relation with the house of Abu Sufyan and to
confirm thereby the Treaty of al Hudaybiyah. Other historians saw in the
marriage of Umm Habibah to Muhammad an attempt on the part of the latter
to punish and annoy Abu Sufyan who was still a pagan.
Explanation to the Kings' Replies
Finally, as for the princes of Arab
tribes and regions, it should be recorded that the Amir of Yaman and `Uman
sent the Prophet a very antagonistic answer. The Amir of al Bahrayn sent a
favorable reply and became a Muslim. The Amir of al Yamamah declared his
preparation to enter into Islam if his chair and office could be secured.
The Prophet cursed him for laying down conditions to his conversion, and
the historians assert that the man lived but one year after the event.
The reader might well pause to consider
the preponderant friendliness and appreciation which most of the kings and
princes showed in response to Muhammad's call. None of Muhammad's
messengers was killed or imprisoned. Every one of them returned to Madinah
with the response with which he had been entrusted. Some of these messages
were coarse and harsh, but most of them were gentle and sweet. Two
questions naturally arise: Why did all these kings receive the new
religion without seeking to destroy the man who called them to it, and why
did they not unite to destroy him? The answer to these questions lies in
the fact that the world of those days was, like the world of today, one in
which matter had come to dominate everything, affluence and luxury had
become the summum bonum, and nations fought and destroyed one
another for the sake of power and in satisfaction of the ambitions of its
king and ruling circles, or in order to increase their affluence and
luxury. In such a world, faith deteriorates to mere ritual, and men
perform these rituals without believing any of the truths which the
rituals were meant to express. In such kingdoms, the masses seldom care
but to belong to such regimes as will provide them with panem et,
circencis, with wealth and luxury. Under such circumstances, a
religion is adhered to only in proportion to the material advantage its
practice promises. When such advantage is not in sight, the masses of
people quickly lose their attachment, and their power of resistance to
another religion evaporates. That is why as soon as these masses heard the
voice of the new religion with its strength and simplicity, its call to
equality before the one God, the only Being worthy of worship and prayer,
and the only One capable of giving true good to man, they began to thirst
after the new faith and the spiritual satisfactions it provides. Verily, a
ray of God's blessing dissipates the fury of all the kings of the earth
combined! The fear of His wrath shakes the human soul to its very depths
even though the kings of the earth might have smothered that soul in
blessings and favors. The hope of God's forgiveness moves every man
deprived of grace to repent, to believe and to do good works. When the
people heard that the author of this new call was capable of vanquishing
the enemies who persecuted him and who inflicted upon him and his
followers all sorts of injustice and suffering, it was not surprising that
they stretched out their necks and lent their ears to see him and hear
him. For them to witness Muhammad's victory over all the material forces
assembled against him and to see his power grow despite his original
weakness, poverty, and deprivation, for them to see this Prophet achieve
that which no one else had ever dreamt of achieving-be it in his own town
or throughout the Arabian Peninsula-all this was enough to incite them to
examine this faith and to want to belong to it. Were it not for their fear
of the immediate consequences, most of them would not have kept themselves
separated from the truth. Hence, the majority of the sovereigns answered
with a consideration and sympathy which reinforced the Muslims' faith and
conviction.
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Muslim Return from Abyssinia
Muhammad returned from Khaybar, and
Ja'far and the Muslims returned from Abyssinia. The messengers of Muhammad
returned from those lands whither Muhammad had sent them. All of them met
again and were reunited in Madinah. Inspiring each of them was the longing
to go to Makkah in the following year and to do so in security, with
shaven heads or short hair, and to perform their pilgrimage without fear.
Muhammad was so pleased to be reunited with Ja'far that he said he could
not tell which was the greater: victory over Khaybar or reunion with
Ja'far. It was in this period that, according to a certain report, a Jew
called Labid charmed Muhammad and put him under a spell. The report is
self-contradictory and highly questionable. The claim that Muhammad did
anything at any time without consciousness or under a spell is a sheer
fabrication and hence devoid of truth.
The Muslims were safe in Madinah where
they led a prosperous and affluent life. During this period they thought
neither of war nor of fighting despite the fact that they had to send some
expeditionary forces to punish those who aggressed upon their lands or
seized any of their property. As the year [The year in question was 7
A.H./629 C.E.
-Tr.] came to a close, in the
month of Dhu al Qi'dah, the Prophet set out with two thousand men to
perform the lesser pilgrimage, in accordance with the provisions of the
Hudaybiyah Treaty, and to satisfy the Muslim longing to visit the holy
sanctuary and to perform the holy ritual.
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