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The Conquest of Makkah
Effects of the Previous Campaign
After the Campaign of Mu'tah, the Muslim
army led by Khalid ibn al Walid returned to Madinah neither victorious nor
vanquished, but happy to be able to return at all. Their return affected
the Byzantines, the Muslims of Madinah, and the Quraysh in the most
diverse ways. The Byzantines were glad that the Muslim army, despite its
small size compared to their one or two hundred thousand had withdrawn;
and they gave thanks that the war did not last long. Regardless of whether
the satisfaction of the Byzantines was due to the cessation of a war so
fierce that nine swords had fallen apart in Khalid ibn al Walid's hand, or
to that of a war fought with such strategy that untold forces were thought
to reinforce the Muslim army, the tribes living in the outskirts of al
Sham were left stupefied in admiration of the Muslim exploit. Farwah ibn `Amr
al Judhami, commander of a Byzantine army division, was at the same time
chieftain of one of those tribes. Soon after Mu'tah, he proclaimed his
conversion to Islam. He was arrested by order of Heraclius and accused of
high treason; however, he was told that Heraclius would let him go free if
he were to repent and return to Christianity. Indeed, he was promised the
return to his position as army commander. Farwah refused and insisted on
following the faith of Islam and was hence put to death. As a result of
his execution, Islam spread widely among the tribes adjoining al `Iraq and
al Sham under Byzantine suzerainty.
Spread of Islam in the North
The chaos and insecurity attending the
Byzantine Empire further encouraged the people to convert to the new faith
of Islam. Its situation was truly chaotic. Entrusted by the emperor with
paying the members of the armed forces their wages, one of Heraclius'
governors discharged the soldiers with the announcement that the emperor
had no money. Adding insult to injury, he said: "My Emperor has
neither money nor food to distribute among his dogs." It was natural
that such men would become disillusioned regarding Heraclius and his state
and that the new order of Islam would shine with more brilliant light in
their eye. It is no wonder that such men felt more inclined to it and thus
followed the new guidance to divine truth. The foregoing explains, though
necessarily only in part, the conversion to Islam of thousands from the
tribe of Sulaym, under the leadership of al `Abbas ibn Mirdas; of the
tribes of Ashja` and Ghatafan, the old allies of the vanquished Jews of
Khaybar; and of those of `Abs, Dhubyan and Fazarah. Thus, it may be said
that the campaign of Mu'tah caused the consolidation of the Muslim front
north of Madinah all the way to the frontiers of al Sham.
The effect of that Campaign upon the
morale of the Muslims in Madinah, however, was different. We may recall
that as soon as Khalid and the army returned to Madinah without the proofs
of victory, they were called deserters. Many soldiers and commanders felt
so humiliated that they stayed at home in order not to be seen and
insulted in public. The campaign of Mu'tah gave the Quraysh the impression
that the Muslims and their power had now been destroyed and that both
their dignity and the fear they previously inspired in others had all but
disappeared. This made the Quraysh incline strongly to the conditions
prevalent before the Treaty of Hudaybiyah. They thought that they could
now launch a war against which the Muslims were incapable of defending
themselves, not to speak of counter-attacking or making retaliation.
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Quraysh's Violation of Her Treaty
The Treaty of Hudaybiyah prescribed that
any non-Makkans wishing to join the camp of Muhammad or that of the
Quraysh may do so without obstruction. On the basis of this provision, the
tribe of Khuza'ah joined the ranks of Muhammad, and that of Band
Bakr joined the Quraysh. Between Khuza'ah and Banu Bakr a number of old
unsettled blood feuds had to be suspended on account of the new
arrangement. With the Quraysh now believing that Muslim power had
crumbled, Band al Dil, a clan of Banu Bakr, thought that the occasion had
come to avenge themselves aganist Khuza'ah. In this, they were encouraged
by Quraysh, especially by `Ikrimah ibn Abu Jahl and others who furnished
them with arms and equipment. While Khuza'ah tribesmen were camping one
day near a well of theirs called al Watir, Banu Bakr launched a surprise
attack against them. The Khuza'ah party fled to Makkah and took refuge in
the house of Budayl ibn Warqa', complaining that the Quraysh and their
Band Bakr allies violated their treaty with the Prophet. After running in
full haste toward Madinah, `Amr ibn Salim al Khuza'i related to Muhammad
and the Muslims in the mosque what had happened and asked for assistance.
The Prophet of God answered
"Certainly, 0 `Amr ibn Salim, we
shall come to your rescue." Another group of Khuza'ah tribesmen
followed him to Madinah together with their Makkan host, Budayl ibn Warqa',
and confirmed their predecessor's report. Realizing that this flagrant
violation by the Quraysh of their treaty was forcing his hand to conquer
Makkah, the Prophet sent word to the Muslims all over the Peninsula to
mobilize at once. The objective, however, he kept as a secret.
Quraysh's Fears
The wise elders of Quraysh realized the
danger to which `Ikrimah and his youthful companions had exposed Makkah
for their action was a clear violation of the Hudaybiyah Treaty. Should
Muhammad decide to avenge his Khuza'ah allies against the Makkans, the
holy city would be exposed to the strongest danger. What should they do?
It occurred to them to send Abu Sufyan to Madinah to reaffirm the peace
treaty and seek a prolongation of its two-year term to ten. Abd Sufyan,
chief statesman and leader of Makkah, proceeded to Madinah to conduct
negotiations. On his way there, he met Budayl ibn Warqa' and his
companions near `Usfan, and feared that Muhammad might have preceded him
to this place with an army bent on revenge, thus making his mission all
the more difficult. Budayl denied that he had seen Muhammad before, but
the shrewd Abu Sufyan could tell from the refuse of Budayl's horse that he
had recently been in Madinah. He therefore decided that upon arrival to
Madinah, he had better see his daughter, Umm Habibah, the Prophet's wife,
rather than Muhammad himself.
The Failure of Abu Sufyan's Efforts
Umm Habibah knew well the Prophet's
emotions regarding the Quraysh, though she did not know of his plans for
Makkah. Such was the case with all Muslims in Madinah. Entering into his
daughter's quarters, Abu Sufyan was about to sit upon the mattress of the
Prophet when Umm Habibah moved it away. When he asked her whether she had
done so in order to save her father from the mattress or the mattress from
her father, she replied: "This is the mattress of the Prophet of God
May God's peace and blessing be upon him. You are an associationist and
hence impure. You may not therefore be allowed to sit on the Prophet's
mattress." Abu Sufyan was enraged by this reply and left the house,
saying to his daughter, "By God, after you left my house, you must
have become utterly mad." His strategy exposed, he proceeded to see
Muhammad. The Prophet, however, refused to give him an audience. Abu
Sufyan decided to go to Abu Bakr and ask him to intervene with the
Prophet. Again, his request was turned down. He then approached `Umar ibn
al Khattab, who rejected him with the harsh rebuke: "Do you expect me
to intervene with the Prophet of God for you? By God, if nothing is left
for me but the sand of the desert, I will still fight you." Abu
Sufyan went to `Ali ibn Abu Talib and talked to him in the presence of his
wife Fatimah. `Ali spoke to him gently and apologized that nobody could
change the mind of Muhammad once it was made up. Finally, the mighty
delegate of Quraysh begged Fatimah to allow him to use her son, al Hasan,
in his search for support among the people of Madinah as a means of
convincing Muhammad to prolong the peace. Fatimah answered that nobody
could dissuade the Prophet of God by this method. As the gates closed in
the face of Abu Sufyan one after another, he returned to `Ali and sought
his advice. `Ali replied that he knew of no measure which would alleviate
the situation. He told him, however, that since he was the chief of Banu
Kinanah, he could invoke his own tribal connections for a while and
quickly return home. `Ali informed Abu Sufyan that he did not think even
that measure would work but that Abu Sufyan could turn to it faute de
mieur. Abu Sufyan went to the Mosque and there proclaimed on behalf of
his tribe his willingness to make peace with the people. He then mounted
his horse and returned to Makkah. His heart was full of sorrow and his
pride badly wounded, partly by his own daughter and partly by the
rejection of those who, prior to their emigration from Makkah, had longed
for the least bit of consideration or compassion from the great and mighty
leader.
Abu Sufyan returned to Makkah and
reported to his people the frustration of his efforts. He informed them of
his proclamation in the Mosque of Madinah and of Muhammad's refusal to
come to any terms of peace. The Makkans chastised him for allowing himself
to be so contemptuously treated and continued their deliberations on the
fate of their city.
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Muslim Preparations for War
It was Muhammad's plan not to give the
Quraysh the time to prepare for war. Armed by his confidence in Muslim
power and in God's assistance, he sought to surprise the enemy before they
could build up their defenses. His aim was to conquer without bloodshed.
He therefore first commanded the people to get ready and informed them of
his plans for Makkah later. He asked the Muslims to hurry and prayed that
Quraysh would not find out his plan before it was too late.
While the Muslim army prepared to leave
Madinah, Hatib ibn Abu Balta'ah wrote a letter informing the Quraysh about
the Muslim move and gave it to a woman called Sarah, a client of some
members of the house of Banu `Abd al Muttalib. He commanded her to take it
to Makkah and to hand it over to the Quraysh leaders. Hatib was one of the
foremost Muslims. How then could he now turn informant for the enemy?
Apparently, there are sides of the human soul which remain weak despite
the great strength achieved by other sides, and man remains forever at the
mercy of his weaknesses despite his conscious effort to overcome them. At
any rate, Muhammad, soon learned of Hatib's attempt and sent `Ali ibn Abu
Talib and al Zubayr ibn al `Awwam to intercept the messenger. The latter
was arrested and her horse and saddle searched, but no letter was found.
`Ali threatened her that unless she produced the letter voluntarily, he
would be forced to search her own person and to unveil her body in the
process. When the woman realized how serious `Ali was, she unloosened her
pigtails, brought out the letter and handed it over to `Ali. The woman was
returned to Madinah, and Hatib was called to account. In his own defense,
Hatib said: "0 Prophet of God, by God I swear that I am still a
believer in God and in His Prophet. My faith has not changed by one jot or
title. But I am a man here in the Muslim camp devoid of relatives, family
or clan, whereas in Makkah, I have children, family, and relatives whom I
want no evil to befall." Upon hearing his reply, `Umar ibn al Khattab
asked the Prophet's permission to strike his neck on the grounds that he
had apostatized. The Prophet answered: "0 `Umar, perhaps God has
looked favorably on the men who fought at Badr and has permitted them to
do whatever they wish; for their merit with God is truly great."
Hatib was one of those who fought at Badr. In this connection, the
following verse was revealed: "0 Men who believe, do not take My and
your enemies as friends. Show such people no amity." [Qur'an, 60:1]
The Muslims' March on Makkah
The Muslim army proceeded from Madinah
to Makkah bent upon conquering that city and seizing the sanctuary which
God had declared a place of peace, security, and religious sanctification
to all mankind. This army had more men than Madinah had ever seen before,
since the tribes of Sulaym, Muzaynah, Ghatafan, and others had joined the
Muhajirun and the Ansar in such numbers and with such armaments that the
wide expanses of the desert were filled with them. As the force moved
forward it covered the desert from horizon to horizon and no end of it
could be seen. They moved fast, and at every station many more tribes
joined their ranks and added to their armaments and equipment. Every soul
was filled with the faith of Islam and entertained no doubt that God's
help will bring them victory. Muhammad led this army at the forefront. His
greatest concern was to seize the holy house without shedding any
unnecessary blood. By the time the army arrived at al Zahran, four miles
from Makkah, its number had reached ten thousand. Until then, the Quraysh
knew nothing about it, and its leaders continued to consult with one
another, to agree and to disagree regarding the measures to be taken by
them to meet Muslim anger. Al `Abbas ibn `Abd al Muttalib, uncle of the
Prophet, withdrew from the conversation of the Quraysh leaders, took all
members of his family, and went out in the direction of Madinah. At al
Juhfah he met Muhammad and converted to Islam. [Some
biographers relate that al 'Abbas met the Muslim army at Rabigh. Others assert
that al 'Abbas had reached Madinah before Muhammad resolved to march against
Makkah, that he converted to Islam in Madinah and accompanied the Muslim army on
its march. This latter view, however, is refuted by the historians as a
fabrication injected into the biography of Muhammad in order to please the 'Abbasi
rulers during whose reign the biographies of the Prophet were first written
down. The refutation of the historians is confirmed by the fact that if the
claim were true, al Abbas, as the last notable of Makkah to join the ranks of
Islam, would have been the first to be visited by Abu Sufyin for the purpose of
extending the Treaty of Hudaybiyah. It would seem that despite his defense of
his nephew when the latter was at Makkah, al 'Abbas did not join Islam. A1 'Abbas
was a Makkan tradesman and, like all other tradesmen of the city, feared the
disastrous consequences Islam would bring to his business.]
It is rather likely that a group of the Banu Hashim heard a rumor
regarding the Prophet's new expedition and sought to join him before the
battle began. Two other Makkans came to join the ranks of the Muslims at
Niq al `Uqab, both cousins of the Prophet: Abu Sufyan ibn al Harith ibn `Abd
al Muttalib and `Abdullah ibn Abu Umayyah ibn al Mugbirah. The Prophet,
however, refused to grant them their request, replying to Umm Salamah, who
approached him on their behalf, that he had no need for either cousin. The
first had previously injured the Prophet, and the second, the Prophet's
brother-in-law, had broadcast all sorts of libels and calumnies about him.
When a report of the Prophet's decision reached the ears of Abu Sufyan, he
swore that either Muhammad would grant him this permission or he would
take his son and strike out aimlessly into the desert and perish of thirst
and hunger. Muhammad felt compassion toward him and his son, and permitted
them to be received within the Muslim ranks. They entered his audience and
were converted to Islam.
Al `Abbas ibn `Abd al Muttalib saw that
the armies of his nephew were disturbingly preponderant in power and
numbers. Although a Muslim, he felt quite apprehensive for what might
befall his own native city should this hitherto unrivalled army advance on
it with hostile intention. After all, the city he had just left behind was
full of his own people, friends and relatives, and he did not consider
those relationships terminated by his entry into Islam. Perhaps he
intimated some of these fears to the Prophet when he asked, "What
would the Prophet do in case Quraysh asked for a guarantee of its own
security?" And perhaps Muhammad was pleased that al 'Abbas had
broached the subject with him. It might even be conjectured that the
Prophet thought of using al 'Abbas as a delegate to the Quraysh that his
apprehensiveness might be transmitted to the Makkans. Such measure would
prevent the shedding of blood and enable the Muslims to enter Makkah
without war. The sanctity of the city would thus be saved and its picture
in the Arab mind as a place of security, refuge, and peace would be
preserved. In fact, al 'Abbas was soon sent back to Makkah, riding on the
Prophet's own white mule. When he approached the locality of al Arak, al 'Abbas
looked for anyone from Makkah, be it a lumberman or herdsmen, with whoa)
he might send a message informing the Makkan leadership of the Muslim's
preponderant armies and advising them to come out to meet the Prophet and
reconcile themselves to him before he should take Makkah by storm.
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Abu Sufyan's Audience with the Prophet
The Quraysh, for their part, felt
gravely apprehensive ever since the Muslims arrived at al Zahran. They
sent Abu Sufyan, Budayl ibn Warqa', and Hakim ibn Hazzam, the relative of
Khadijah, to reconnoiter the field and assess the danger. While riding in
the area on the Prophet's white mule, al `Abbas overheard a conversation
between Abu Sufyan and Budayl ibn Warqa'. To Abu Sufyan's exclamation that
he had never seen any lights or encampments as wide and great as those
which he had just beheld that night, Budayl answered that the said lights
and encampments must belong to Khuza'ah tribe, now aroused to do battle.
Abu Sufyan rejected this view of Budayl, affirming that Khuza'ah was known
to 'be much fewer in number and much poorer than to afford all such lights
and camps. Overhearing the voice of Abu Sufyan and recognizing it for what
it was, al `Abbas called out to him using his title "Abu Hanzalah".
Abu Sufyan, who recognized the voice, answered by using the title of al 'Abbas,
"Abu al Fadl". Al `Abbas said: "Watch out, O Abu Sufyan !
What you see is the Prophet of God leading his people. Woe to the Quraysh
tomorrow morning, when his armies storm their city." Abu Sufyan
answered: "Oh the misery of it! What shall we do?" Al `Abbas
invited him to mount on his mule, sent his companions back to Makkah and
returned with him to the Muslim camp. As the Muslims recognized the mule
of the Prophet, they let it pass unhurt with Abu Sufyan on its back. It
ran between rows of thousands of Muslims who had built enormous bonfires.
As the mule passed by the fire of `Umar ibn al Khattab, `Umar recognized
Abu Sufyan and surmised that al `Abbas was about to take Abu Sufyan under
his protection. He hurried to the tent of the Prophet and asked the latter
to permit him to strike the neck of Abu Sufyan. Al `Abbas entered the tent
of the Prophet saying: "O Prophet of God, I have extended my
protection to this man on account of the urgent need of this hour of the
night." After what must have been a hot discussion between `Umar and
al `Abbas, Muhammad said: "O `Abbas, take your guest to your tent and
bring him over in the morning."
On the next day, Abu Sufyan was brought
to the Prophet and, in front of a court composed of the elders of the
Muhajirun and al Ansar; the following conversation took place. Addressing
himself to Abu Sufyan, the Prophet said: “Is it not time for you to know
that there is no God but God, O Abu Sufyan?” Abu Sufyan answered:
"How great, noble, and generous you are, O Prophet of God! By God I
swear that if God had an associate, such had ample time to prove himself.
But he didn't." The Prophet said: "Woe to you, 0 Abu Sufyan, is
it not time for you to learn that I am the Prophet of God?" Abu
Sufyan answered: "How great, noble and generous you are, O Prophet of
God! While I entertain no more doubt that God has any associate, I am
still not so sure about this claim." At this point, al `Abbas
intervened and asked Abu Sufyan to convert to Islam and to witness, before
he was put to death, that there is no God but God and that Muhammad is the
Prophet of God. Faced with the threat, Abu Sufyan converted and recited
the confession of faith. Al `Abbas then turned to the Prophet God's peace
be upon him and said: "O Prophet of God, Abu Sufyan is a proud man.
Would you not grant him some privilege?" The Prophet answered:
"Yes, indeed! Whoever enters the house of Abu Sufyan shall be secure;
whoever remains in his own house shall also be secure; and whoever enters
the Mosque shall be secure."
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The Historians' Estimate of These Reports
The veracity of the foregoing event is
agreed upon by all historians and biographers. Some of them question
whether these events took place accidentally or by previous arrangement.
They point to the fact that when al `Abbas sought the Prophet, he meant to
travel to Madinah, but we find him confronting the Muslim army at al
Juhfah. They also point to the fact that Budayl ibn Warqa’ and Abu
Sufyan ibn Harb left Makkah in order to reconnoiter, whereas we do know
that the same Budayl had gone to Madinah and related to the Prophet how he
encountered Khuza’ah on the road and learned from the Prophet that the
Banu Khuza’ah had become the Prophet’s allies. How, then, is this
consistent with the view that Abu Sufyan had left Makkah without prior
knowledge that Muhammad and his army were already on the road to Makkah?
Some historians therefore suggest that some prearrangement, whether little
or much, must have taken place before these events unfolded, and that it
was under some such prearrangement that al `Abbas went out to meet
Muhammad. They point out that such an arrangement between Makkans and
Muslims is implicit in the meeting of al `Abbas and Abu Sufyan in the
night. Abu Sufyan stood in need of no argument to convince al `Abbas that
Quraysh had no more means to stop Muhammad, especially since he had been
in Madinah seeking to extend the term of the Hudaybiyah Treaty without
success. These historians and biographers suggest that Abu Sufyan must
have thought that if he could cooperate with the Prophet and prepare for
the Muslim conquest of Makkah, his position of leadership in Makkan
society would be safeguarded. That such a prearranged agreement did not go
beyond Muhammad and the few persons concerned, the evidence of `Umar's
request to kill Abu Sufyan eloquently proves. At any rate, it is
conjecture for us to judge. But we certainly may decide, and do so with
utmost conviction, that regardless of whether these events took place
incidentally or by previous arrangement, they prove beyond doubt
Muhammad's skill, sure insight, and precision in winning the greatest
victory of Islamic history without war or bloodshed.
The March on Makkah Continued
The conversion of Abu Sufyan did not
dissuade Muhammad from taking all necessary precautions before entering
Makkah. Although understood that victory is a gift of God granted to
whomsoever He pleases, it is still true that God does not grant His gift
except to those who prepare for it perfectly and who avail themselves of
every possible precaution to achieve it. Only in this way can it be
explained why the Prophet ordered that Abu Sufyan be held at the gate of
the valley in the outskirts of Makkah. He deemed it desirable that Abu
Sufyan watch the Muslim armies at close range and describe them to his
people accurately. But he was careful not to give the enemy any time to
mobilize an army or to prepare any kind of opposition before the Muslims
had entered the city. As the tribes passed by Abu Sufyan, he was in no way
so much impressed as by the "green company" in which Muhammad
stood surrounded by the Muhajirun and al Ansar. So close were their ranks
and so well equipped that all one could see was a solid mass of iron.
After they passed, Abu Sufyan said to al `Abbas : "O Abu al Fadl, no
force can stand in the face of this. By God, the dominion of your nephew
has become truly great." He then rushed toward Makkah calling to his
people at the top of his voice: "O men of Quraysh, here comes
Muhammad with an army such as you have never seen before. Put up no
resistance. Whoever enters into my house shall be secure; whoever remains
in his own house shall be secure; and whoever enters the Mosque shall be
secure." Muhammad advanced with the army until he reached Dhu Tuwa.
From there he realized that Makkah lay in front of him devoid of any army
to give him battle. He stopped his forces, stood over this mount, and bent
himself in prayers and thanksgiving. He was grateful to God that he had
enabled him to conquer the first theatre of revelation. The sanctuary of
the holy House was now to be opened to all the Muslims in peace and
security. At the same time, Abu Quhafah who had not yet been converted to
Islam like his son, asked a granddaughter of his to take him over to the
mount of Abu Qubays. Being blind, he asked his granddaughter what she saw
once they got to the top. She answered, "A black mass is all I
see." He said, "That must be the cavalry." She said,
"By God the black mass is spreading out." He said, "The
cavalry must have been given orders to march over Makkah, Take me quickly
to my home." Before they reached Makkah, however, the Muslim cavalry
had entered the city and intercepted him on the road.
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Deployment of the Muslim Forces
Muhammad praised God and thanked him for
the conquest of Makkah. Nonetheless, he continued to take every
precaution. He had divided the army into four groups and commanded them
all not to engage in any fighting or shed any blood except in cases of
extreme emergency. He gave the command of the left wing to al Zubayr ibn
al 'Awwam and ordered him to enter Makkah from the north. He gave the
command of the right to Khalid ibn al Walid and ordered him to enter
Makkah from the south. He gave the command of the Madinese to Sa'd ibn 'Ubadah
and ordered him to enter Makkah from the west. As for Abu 'Ubaydah ibn al
Jarrah, he gave him the command of the Muhajirun and ordered him to enter
Makkah from the north near Hind Mountain and joined his own company to the
Muhajirun. While about to march, Sa'd ibn 'Ubadah was heard saying:
"Today is the day of battle, the day of the great war, the day when
all taboos will be lifted." Had he been permitted to proceed, this
general would have violated the Prophet's commandment that no blood should
be shed in Makkah. Hence, as soon as the Prophet learned of his attitude,
he relieved him of the command of the forces and appointed his son, Qays,
to replace him. The son was less active than the father on account of his
voluminous size, but he was of a far more gentle disposition. The armies
entered and occupied Makkah without opposition. Only the front assigned to
Khalid ibn al Walid put up any resistance. That area, the south of Makkah,
was populated by the most hostile and antagonistic members of Quraysh.
Many of them were among the attackers of Khuza'ah who, together with their
Banu Bakr allies, had violated the Treaty of Hudaybiyah. Not moved by the
call of Abu Sufyan, they prepared for battle. Those of them ready to fight
were led by Safwan, Suhayl, and `Ikrimah ibn Abu Jahl. When Khalid's army
entered their quarter, they showered it with arrows. Khalid, however,
quickly dispersed them, losing two of his men and killing thirteen of the
enemy, according to one version, and twenty-eight according to another. It
is even said that the two soldiers missing from Khalid's army were not
lost in battle but had strayed into the wilderness and lost their way.
Safwan, Suhayl, and `Ikrimah took to flight as soon as they realized the
futility of their stand, leaving their own men whom they had incited to
resistance at the mercy of Muslim arms. Standing with a group of Muhajirun
on a Makkan height and surveying the various quarters of the city he had
just conquered without violence, Muhammad noticed toward the south the
shining of swords in battle with the local inhabitants. The Prophet became
angry and repeated his command that there should be no fighting. He was
soon told the facts of the case and accepted God's judgment in the matter.
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The Muslims Enter Makkah
The Prophet camped on a height opposite
the mountain of Hind and in the proximity of the graves of Abu Talib and
Khadijah. He was asked whether he wanted to rest in his old house in
Makkah and answered, "No! They have leveled it." The Prophet
then retired to his tent grateful to God for this glorious and victorious
return, and for bringing to its knees the cruel city which had tortured
and banished him. For a moment, he turned his gaze toward the valley of
Makkah as well as to the surrounding hills. He recalled that in those
hills he often found refuge from the persecution of Quraysh; that one of
them, Hira', was the scene of his periodical retreats. Vividly, he
represented to himself the moment when, in the cave of that same mountain,
the first verses of the Qur'an were revealed; he could hear the holy words
resound in his ears
"Read! Read in the Name of your
Lord, Who created man from a clot! Read! For your Lord is the Most
gracious. He has taught man to read and to write! He has taught man that
which he does not know!” [Qur'an,
96:1-5]
The Prophet was naturally attracted by
the view of Makkah spread out in expanding circles before him between
these hills, at the center of which stood the sanctuary and its holy
House. Muhammad, moved by the sight of Makkah and by the remembrance of
God's revelation, let tears fall from his eye as he thanked God, praised
Him, and witnessed that there is no truth and no power except in Him. He
felt that his task as leader was coming to a natural conclusion. So
agitating were all these feelings that he was unable to settle down to
rest or, indeed, even to restrain himself within the tent. Mounting his
she camel, al Qaswa', he rode toward the Ka'bah where he circumambulated
the House without dismounting. He then dismounted and called upon `Uthman
ibn Talhah to open the Ka'bah for him. Muhammad stood at the door
surrounded by the many worshippers who had found their way to the holy
House. He delivered a speech to the people present in which he said,
quoting the Qur'an
"O men, We have created you from
male and female and constituted you into peoples and tribes that you might
know and cooperate with one another. In the eye of God, highest among you
is the most virtuous. God is omniscient and all wise." [Qur'an,
49:13]
He continued: "0 Men of Quraysh, what do you think I am about to do
with you?" "Everything good," they answered, "for you
are a noble brother and a noble nephew of ours." Muhammad went on:
"Rise, then, and go. For you are free."
With this word, Muhammad gave a general
amnesty to all Quraysh and all the Makkans.
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The Prophet's General Amnesty
Oh, the beauty of pardon and forgiveness
on the part of the mighty and powerful! How great is the soul of Muhammad
which rose above hatred and above revenge, which denied every human
feeling and ascended to heights of nobility man had never reached before!
There were the Quraysh among whom were people whom Muhammad well knew had
plotted to kill him, had persecuted him, and inflicted upon him and his
companions all kinds of injury and harm, who fought him at Badr and at
Uhud, who blockaded him in the Campaign of al Khandaq, who incited the
Arab tribes to rise against him, and who would even then tear him apart if
only they had the power. There, the whole of Quraysh stood totally under
Muhammad's hand, indeed under his feet, totally subject to his command.
Indeed, their very life depended upon the first word emerging from his
lips. All these thousands of men, of Muslims in battle array, stood on the
ready waiting for that one word to wipe out the whole of Makkah and its
people within minutes. Muhammad, however, was no less than Muhammad! He
was no less than the Prophet of God! No alienation, antagonism, or
hostility could find any permanent abode in his heart. His heart was
absolutely free of injustice, of malice, of tyranny or false pride. In the
most decisive moment, God gave him power over his enemy. But Muhammad
chose to forgive, thereby giving to all mankind and all the generations
the most perfect example of goodness, of truthfulness, of nobility and
magnanimity.
Cleansing the Ka'bah of Its Images
When Muhammad entered the Ka'bah, he saw
that its walls were painted with pictures of angels and prophets. His eyes
fell upon a picture of Ibrahim holding the divination arrows and a pigeon
made out of twigs. He seized the pigeon, broke it into pieces and threw it
to the ground and, looking at the picture of Ibrahim, he said:
"Accursed be the Makkans ! They have made our ancestor an idolater
and a diviner. What does Ibrahim have to do with divination arrows? He was
neither a Jew nor a Christian nor yet an associationist, but a hanif, and
a Muslim." On the walls of the Ka'bah, the angels were pictured as
beautiful women. Turning to them, Muhammad denied that angels had any such
bodily forms, that they were either male or female. He commanded the
obliteration of all pictures and images. Attached with lead to the walls
of the Ka'bah were the idols which the Quraysh worshipped as the
associates of God; the idol Hubal stood in the center of the Ka'bah.
Muhammad designated every one of these idols with his stick and recited
the verse of the Qur'an
"Say, the truth is now manifest.
Falsehood is truly confuted. And it is right that it should be." [Qur'an,
17:81]
The idols were then torn down and
broken, and the holy House was purified. That which Muhammad had called
for during the last twenty years was now accomplished before the first day
of the conquest of Makkah was over. That which Makkah had opposed most
strongly was now a fact of history. The destruction of the idols and the
wiping out of paganism in the holy sanctuary was now completed before the
very eyes of Quraysh. The Makkan idols, the objects of reverence and
worship inherited from the ancestors, crumbled to bits under the hammering
blows of Muhammad.
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Al Ansar's Fears and the Prophet's Reassurance
As the Ansar of Madinah witnessed all
this, and as they saw Muhammad on top of al Safa mountain invite the
Makkans to embrace Islam, they feared he might now abandon Madinah and
reestablish himself in his native city. Some of them inquired of one
another, seeking to reassure themselves whether or not this was the case.
Their apprehension was not out of place. Victor in his own hometown where
stood the sanctuary, the holy House of God and center of worship, it was
quite likely that the Prophet would now make Makkah his capital. Muhammad
had hardly finished his prayer and preaching when he inquired concerning
their fears. When, after long hesitancy, they intimated to him their
concern, the Prophet said: "Never, by God! I have covenanted to join
you in life and death. I shall remain true to my covenant."
Evidently, neither relatives, nor native city, nor even the holy sanctuary
itself could dissuade Muhammad from honoring a pledge he once gave to
those who stood by him at his hour of need. His word given at the
conclusion of the Covenant of `Aqabah was to be honored in exemplary
faithfulness and loyalty, and the occasion proved to be just what the
moral teacher needed. When the Ka'bah was purified of its idols, the
Prophet ordered Bilal to mount to its top and from there to recite the adhan,
to give the call to worship. The Muslims gathered and, led by
Muhammad, performed the prayer. From that time until today, for fourteen
long centuries without interruption, Bilal as well as his countless
successors have recited the adhan calling men to prayer five times
a day from that same spot on top of the Ka'bah. For fourteen long
centuries since that day, Muslims all over the globe have worshipped God
and invoked His blessing upon His Prophet, their face turned toward this
holy House which Muhammad cleansed on that day of its images and idols and
reconsecrated to the One Almighty God.
Quraysh, resigned to its fate, felt
reassured by Muhammad's general pardon. They watched the Muslims go about
their city with great surprise, not without a measure of fear and caution.
Seventeen Makkans were excepted from Muhammad's general amnesty and were
ordered executed even if found clutching to the coverings of the Ka'bah.
Some of them went into hiding and others ran away from the city
altogether. They all stood convicted of atrocious crimes they had
committed. One of these men was `Abdullah ibn Abu al Sarh who once
converted to Islam and wrote down the revelation for Muhammad, but who
then apostatized, returned to Quraysh, and there spread tales about his
falsification of the revelation. Another convict was `Abdullah ibn Khatal
who converted to Islam, killed one of his clients, apostatized, and
commanded his two slave women, one of whom was called Fartana, to
castigate Muhammad in song. Both save women were indicted and ordered
executed with their master. Another was `Ikrimah- ibn Abu Jahl, the most
persistent enemy, who could not accept the Muslim conquest of Makkah and
put up strong resistance in the face of Khalid ibn al Walid on the
southern front.
Pardon Extended to the Convicts
As soon as he entered Makkah, Muhammad
ordered that no blood should be shed and that only the seventeen people
would receive their just punishment. While some of the seventeen condemned
hid, others ran away from Makkah with their families. As the situation
settled down and the news of the Prophet's clemency and all embracing
forgiveness became fully known and appreciated by all, some companions
dared to think that even the condemned could also be forgiven. `Uthman ibn
`Affan, brother-in-nursing of Ibn Abu al Sarh, approached the Prophet in
this regard and sought an order for the safe passage of his protege.
Muhammad was silent for a long time sunk in thought, but he then consented
to grant forgiveness. Umm Hakim, daughter of al Harith ibn Hisham and the
wife of `Ikrimah ibn Abu Jahl who ran away to Yaman, converted to Islam
and sought pardon for her husband directly from Muhammad. She was granted
it. She then went to Yaman and returned with her husband. Muhammad also
forgave Safwan ibn Umayyah who accompanied `Ikrimah on his escape toward
the sea and thence to Yaman. Both had been caught just before their ship
was to sail. Muhammad also forgave Hind, wife of Abu Sufyan, who chewed
the liver of Hamzah, uncle of the Prophet, after his martyrdom at the
Battle of Uhud. Indeed, most of the men condemned to death had been
forgiven. Only four were executed
al Huwayrith who tempted Zaynab, the
Prophet's daughter, when she returned from Makkah to Madinah; two Muslims
guilty of murder in Madinah who escaped to Makkah and apostatized; and one
of the slave women of Ibn Khatal who used to castigate the Prophet in
song. The other slave woman ran away, but was brought back and later
forgiven.
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Reconsecration of Makkah: The City as Inviolate
Following the conquest of Makkah, the
Khuza'ah tribe discovered a Hudhayl tribesman in their midst who was still
a pagan and killed him. Upon hearing the news, the Prophet was so angry
that he delivered a speech in which he said: "O men, God made Makkah
a holy place on the day heaven and earth were created. Makkah is therefore
holy, holy, holy to the end of time. No man believing in God and the Day
of Judgment may therefore shed any blood or destroy any tree in its
precincts. Makkah has never been desecrated by anyone before me and it
shall never be desecrated by anyone after me. Only for the brief hour of
conquest and because of God's wrath upon its people, it was permitted to
me to enter it with arms. But now Makkah fully enjoys her previous
holiness. Let the present inform the absent. Whoever argues with you that
the Prophet of God fought in Makkah, answer him that God had desanctified
the city for His Prophet but not for anyone else, and surely not for you,
0 Tribesmen of Khuza'ah ! All killing must stop, for it is evil crime and
brings no advantage when indulged in. You have killed a man, and I shall
have to pay his bloodwit to his people. Henceforth, the heirs of a victim
shall have the choice between executing the murderer or receiving bloodwit."
Muhammad immediately paid the bloodwit of the Khuza'ah tribesman to his
people. By his disposal of the case in this manner and his general
proclamation concerning murder and retaliation, Muhammad struck a further
example of clemency and justice. The force of Islam's appeal to the
Makkans became irresistible, and they began to convert. The town crier
proclaimed: "Whoever believes in God and the Day of Judgment will
destroy on this day every idol and vestige of paganism in his home."
The Prophet commissioned some Khuza'ah men to repair the walls of the holy
city, thereby giving further proof of his respect for it. Under the
circumstances, the love and esteem for Muhammad could only increase.
Muhammad told the Makkans that he loved them the most, that they were the
highest in his regard, and that he would have never left them had they
themselves not rejected and banished him. With this praise, the Makkans'
esteem for Muhammad broke all bounds.
Abu Bakr brought his own father, Abu
Quhafah, the old blind man who went up to the mount of Abu Qubays guided
by his daughter to find out what was happening before the Muslims entered
the city, and placed him in the presence of the Prophet. When seeing him,
Muhammad reproached Abu Bakr for bringing the old man over and said that
it was he, Muhammad, that should have come to Abu Quhafah. Paying no
attention to Abu Bakr's rejoinder that it was his father's duty to come to
the Prophet and not vice versa, he asked the man to sit by him, wiped his
face for him and invited him to enter into Islam. Abu Quhafah converted
and became an ardent Muslim. Through this noble behavior of the Prophet,
this magnanimous conduct, Muhammad succeeded in winning over a people who
had nursed for him the strongest hatred. Thereafter, the Makkans revered
the person of Muhammad, embraced Islam, and wholeheartedly subjected
themselves to his rule.
Ibn al Walid and the Tribe of Jadhimah
Muhammad resided in Makkah fifteen days
during which he organized its affairs and instructed its people in Islam.
During this period, he sent forth delegations to call men peaceably to
Islam to destroy the idols without shedding any blood. Khalid ibn al Walid
was sent to Nakhlah to destroy al `Uzza, goddess of Banu Shayban. His task
accomplished, ibn al Walid proceeded to Jadhimah. There, however, the
people took up arms at his approach. Khalid asked them to lay down their
arms on the grounds that all people had accepted Islam. One of the
Jadhimah tribesman said to his people: "Woe to you, Banu Jadhimah!
Don't you know that this is Khalid? By God, nothing awaits you once you
have laid down your arms except captivity, and once you have become
captives you can expect nothing but death." Some of his people
answered: "Do you seek to have us all murdered? Don't you know that
most men have converted to Islam, that the war is over, and that security
is reestablished?" Those who held this opinion continued to talk to
their tribesmen until the latter surrendered their arms. Thereupon, ibn al
Walid ordered them to be bound, and he killed some of them. When he heard
of the news, the Prophet lifted his arms to heaven and prayed: "0
God, I condemn what Khalid ibn al Walid has done." The Prophet gave
funds to `Ali ibn Abu Talib and sent him to look into the affairs of this
tribe, cautioning him to disregard all the customs of pre-Islam. Upon
arrival, `Ali paid the bloodwit of all the victims and compensated the
property owners for their damages. Before leaving, he surrendered the rest
of the money which the Prophet had given him to the tribe just in case
there were any other losses which may have escaped notice at the time.
During the two weeks which Muhammad
spent in Makkah, he wiped out all the traces of paganism in the city. All
the offices attached to the holy House were abolished except two
the sidanah which the Prophet
assigned to `Uthman ibn Talhah, his children, and progeny after him till
the end of days, and the siqayah, which he assigned to his uncle al
`Abbas. Thus Umm al Qura [I.e.,
Makkah. -Tr.] embraced Islam and raised high the torch of
genuine monotheism, illuminating the whole world for generations and
centuries to come.
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