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We have already spoken about six Madinese who
embraced Islam in the pilgrimage season in the eleventh year of Prophethood. They promised
to communicate the Message of Islam to their townsfolk.
The following year, on the occasion of the
pilgrimage, there came a group of twelve disciples ready to acknowledge Muhammad as their
Prophet. The group of men comprised five of the six who had met the Prophet [pbuh] the
year before, the sixth who stayed away was Jabir bin Abdullah bin Reyab, the other
seven were:
- Muadh bin Al-Harith, Ibn Afra, from Khazraj.
- Dhakwan bin Abd Al-Qais, from Khazraj.
- Ubadah bin As-Samit, from Khazraj.
- Yazeed bin Thalabah, from Khazraj.
- Al-Abbas bin Ubadah bin Nadalah, from
Khazraj.
- Abul Haitham bin At-Taihan, from Aws.
- Uwaim bin Saidah, from Aws.
They avowed their faith in Muhammad [pbuh] as a
Prophet and swore: "We will not worship any one but one Allah; we will not steal;
neither will we commit adultery, nor kill our children; we will not utter slander,
intentionally forging falsehood and we will not disobey you in any just matter." When
they had taken the pledge, Muhammad [pbuh] said: "He who carries it out, Allâh will
reward him; and who neglects anything and is afflicted in this world, it may prove
redemption for him in the Hereafter; and if the sin remains hidden from the eyes of the
men and no grief comes to him, then his affair is with Allâh. He may forgive him or He
may not." [Bukhari 1/550; 2/727; 2/1003]
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After the Pledge (in the form of an oath had been
taken) the Prophet [pbuh] sent to Yathrib (Madinah) Musab bin Umair
Al-Abdari [R], the first Muslim ambassador to teach the people there the
doctrines of Islam, give them practical guidance and make attempts at propagating the
Islam among those who still professed polytheism. Asad bin Zurarah hosted him in
Madinah. So prepared was the ground, and so zealous the propagation that the Islam spread
rapidly from house to house and from tribe to tribe. There were various cheerful and
promising aspects of success that characterized Musabs task. One day
Musab and Asad were on their way to the habitations of Bani Abd
Al-Ashhal and Bani Zafar, when they went into the premises of the latter clan. There they
sat near a well conversing with some new converts. Sad bin Muadh and Usaid bin
Hudair, chiefs of the two clans heard of this meeting, so Usaid approached the Muslims
armed with his lance while the other Sad excused himself on grounds that Asad
was his maternal cousin. Usaid came closer cursing and swearing and accused the two men of
befooling people weak of heart, and ordered that they stop it altogether. Musab
calmly invited him to sit saying, "If you are pleased with our talk, you can accept
it; should you hold it in abhorrence, you could freely immunize yourself against what you
hate." "Thats fair," said Usaid, pierced his lance in the sand,
listened to Musab and then heard some verses of the Noble Qurân. His face
bespoke satisfaction and pleasure before uttering any words of approval. He asked the two
men about the procedures pertinent to embracing Islam. They asked him to observe washing,
purge his garment, bear witness to the Truth and then perform two Raka. He
responded and did exactly what he was asked to do, and then said there was a man
(Sad bin Muadh) whose people would never hang back if he followed the Islam.
He then left to see Sad and his people. Sad could immediately understand that
Usaid had changed. To a question posed by Sad, Usaid said that two men were ready to
comply with whatever orders they received. He then managed a certain situation that
provided the two men with a chance to talk with Sad privately. The previous scene
with Usaid recurred and Sad embraced Islam, and directly turned to his people
swearing that he would never talk with them until they had believed in Allâh, and in His
Messenger. Hardly did the evening of that day arrive when all the men and women of that
sept of Arabians embraced Islam with the exception of one, Al-Usairim, who hung back until
the Day of Uhud. On that day he embraced Islam and fought the polytheists but was
eventually killed before observing any prostration in the way of prayer. The Prophet
[pbuh] commented saying: "He has done a little but his reward is great."
Musab stayed in Madinah carrying out his
mission diligently and successfully until all the houses of Al-Ansar (the future
Helpers) had Muslims elements, men and women. One family only stood obdurate to the
Islamic Dawah (Call). They were under the influence of the poet Qais bin
Al-Aslat, who managed to hold them at bay and screen off the Call of Islam from their ears
until the year 5 A.H.
Shortly before the approach of the following
pilgrimage season, i.e. the thirteenth year of Prophethood, Musab bin Umair
returned to Makkah carrying to the Prophet [pbuh] glad tidings about the new fertile soil
of Islam in Madinah, and its environment rich in the prospects of good, and the power and
immunity that that city was bound to provide to the cause of Islam. [Ibn
Hisham 1/435; Za'd Al-Ma'ad 2/51]
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