The next year, thirteenth of Prophethood, June 622
A.D., during the pilgrimage season, over seventy converts from Madinah came in the trail
of their polytheist people to perform the rituals of pilgrimage in Makkah. The
oft-repeated question amongst them was "Isnt it high time we protect Muhammad
instead of leaving him forsaken, deserted and stumbling in the hillocks of
Makkah?"
Shortly after arrival, they conducted clandestine
contacts with the Prophet [pbuh] and agreed to meet him secretly at night in mid Tashreeq
Days (the 11th, 12th and 13th days of Dhul Hijja) in a hillock at Al-Aqabah, the
last years meeting place.
One of the leaders of the Ansâr (Helpers),
Kab bin Malik Al-Ansari, gave an account of the historic
meeting which changed the whole course of the struggle between Islam and paganism, he
said:
We set out for pilgrimage and struck a rendezvous in
mid Tashreeq Days. We were accompanied by a celebrity and a notable of ours
called Abdullah bin Amr bin Haram, who was still a polytheist. We disclosed to
him our intention of meeting Muhammad [pbuh] and exhorted him to join our ranks and give
up polytheism lest he should serve as wood for Hell in the Hereafter. He promptly embraced
Islam and witnessed the serious meeting at Al-Aqabah.
That very night we slept with our people in our
camps. After a third of the night had elapsed, we began to leave stealthily and met in a
hillock nearby. We were seventy three men and two women Nusaibah bint Kab from the
Najjars and Asma bint Amr from Bani Salamah. We waited for the Messenger of
Allâh [pbuh] until he came in the company of his uncle Al-Abbas bin Abdul
Muttalib who (though himself not a Muslim), adjured us not to draw his nephew away from
the protection of his own kindred unless we were fully prepared to defend him even at the
risk of our lives. He was the first to speak:
"O you people of
the Khazraj the Arabs used to call the Ansâr (Helpers) Khazraj, whether
from Khazraj or Aws you all know the position that Muhammad holds among us. We have
protected him from our people as much as we could. He is honoured and respected among his
people. He refuses to join any party except you. So if you think you can carry out what
you promise while inviting him to your town, and if you can defend him against the
enemies, then assume the burden that you have taken. But if you are going to surrender him
and betray him after having taken him away with you, you had better leave him now because
he is respected and well defended in his own place." [Ibn Hisham 1/440-442]
Kab replied: "We have heard your words,
and now O Messenger of Allâh, it is for you to speak and take from us any pledge that you
want regarding your Lord and yourself."
It was a definite stance showing full determination,
courage and deep faith to shoulder the daunting responsibility and bear its serious
consequences.
The Messenger of Allâh then preached the Faith, and
the pledge was taken. Al-Imam Ahmad, on the authority of Jabir, gave the following
details:
The Ansâr (Helpers) asked the Messenger of
Allâh about the principles over which they would take a pledge. The Prophet answered:
- To listen and obey in all sets of circumstances.
- To spend in plenty as well as in scarcity.
- To enjoin good and forbid evil.
- In Allâhs service, you will fear the censure of none.
- To defend me in case I seek your help, and debar me from anything you
debar yourself, your spouses and children from. And if you observe those precepts,
Paradise is in store for you. [Mukhtasar Seerat Ar-Rasool p.155; Ibn
Hisham 1/454]
In another version narrated by Kab, he said:
The Prophet [pbuh] began to speak, recited some
Qurânic verses, called people unto Allâh, exhorted them to enter the fold of Islam
and concluded saying: "I give you my pledge that you debar me from whatever you debar
your women and children from." Here Al-Bara bin Marur, caught him by
hand, and said: "Oh yes, we swear by Allâh, Who sent you as a Prophet in Truth, that
we will debar you from whatever we debar our women from. Have confidence in us, O
Messenger of Allâh. By Allâh, we are genuine fighters and quite reliable in war, it is a
trait passed down to us from our ancestors."
Then Abul Haitham At-Taihan interrupted and
said: "O Prophet of Allâh! Between us and the Jews, there are agreements which we
would then sever. If Allâh grants you power and victory, should we expect that you would
not leave us, and join the ranks of your people (meaning Quraish)?" The Prophet
[pbuh] smiled and replied:
"Nay, it
would never be; your blood will be my blood. In life and death I will be with you and you
with me. I will fight whom you fight and I will make peace with those with whom you make
peace." [Ibn Hisham 1/442]
After the negotiations concerning the conditions of
allegiance had ended, and all of the audience were unanimously agreed to ratify it, two
men of the early generation of converts who had embraced Islam in the eleventh and twelfth
years rose to their feet to apprise the others of the serious step they were about to take
so that they could give their pledge fully aware of the whole affair and consequently be
ready for the sacrifice they were expected to make. Al Abbas bin Ubada bin
Nadlah,
in this context, remarked: "O you people of Khazraj! Do you know the significance of
the pact that you are entering into with this man? You are in fact avowing that you will
fight against all and sundry. If you fear that your property will be at stake or the lives
of your nobles will be endangered, then leave him now, because if you do this after the
pledge, it will be degrading for you both in this world and the world to come. But if you
think that you can carry out what you are called upon to do in spite of the loss of
precious lives and property, then undertake this heavy responsibility, and I swear by
Allâh, that herein lies the good of this world and that of the next."
They replied, "We have already considered the
loss of property and the murder of our notables, yet we pay him allegiance. But what is
our reward if we observe all the items of this pact?" The Prophet replied:
"Paradise is in store for you." Then they asked him to stretch out his hand, and
they all stretched out their hands and took the pledge. Only at that time did Asad
bin Zurarah come to realize the peoples readiness for sacrifice in the cause of
Allâh. [Ibn Hisham 1/446]
On the authority of Jabir, who said: "When we
started to pay allegiance to the Prophet [pbuh], Asad bin Zurarah stood up and gave
the following short address: "Take it easy people of Yathrib! We have not covered
that long distance except because we have had deep belief that he (Muhammad [pbuh]) is the
Messenger of Allâh. We are already convinced that following him entails departure from
the pagan Arabs even if it were at the risk of our life. Should you preserve in this
course, holdfast to it, and your great reward is placed in the Hand of Allâh, but if you
are caught in fear, I admonish you to give it up just now, and then you would be more
excusable by Allâh." [Musnad Ahmad]
With respect to the two women, the pledge was taken
orally for the Prophet [pbuh] had never shaken hands with a strange lady. [Muslim 2/131]
The Prophet [pbuh] then asked the group to appoint
twelve deputies to preach Islam to their people in Madinah, to shoulder the responsibility
of implementing the articles of this pledge and to guide the respective men of their own
tribes in matters relating to the propagation of Islam. The deputies elected were nine
from Al-Khazraj: Asad bin Zurarah bin Ads, Sad bin Ar-Rabi bin
Amr, Abdullah bin Rawahah bin Thalabah, Rafi bin Malik bin
Al-Ajlan, Al-Bara bin Marur bin Sakhr, Abdullah bin Amr bin
Haram, Ubadah bin As-Samit bin Qais, Sad bin Ubadah bin Dulaim and
Al-Mundhir bin Amr bin Khunais. Three others were from Al-Aws: Usaid bin Hudair bin
Sammak, Sad bin Khaithamah bin Al-Harith and Rifaa bin Abdul Mundhir bin
Zubair. Once again, those twelve men were sworn to act as surety over the affairs of their
people just as the Christs disciples did, and the Prophet would act as surety over
his people, meaning all the Muslims.
Somehow or other, the news of these secret desert
meetings with the Madinese leaked out. The Prophet immediately knew that it was a certain
pudgy ugly devil, inhabited in Al-Aqabah, who discovered their meeting, and he
threatened to settle his account with him as soon as possible.
On hearing this, Al-Abbas bin Nadlah said
"By Allâh, Who has sent you in Truth, we are powerful enough to put the people of
Mina (the Quraishites) to our swords tomorrow, if you desire." The Prophet
[pbuh]
said "We have not been commanded to follow that course. Now, back to your
camps." They went back to sleep till morning. [Ibn Hisham
1/448]
No sooner did Quraish hear of this treaty than a
kind of trouble-provoking tumult began to mushroom in all directions. They realized quite
fully that an allegiance of this sort is bound to produce far-reaching ramifications of
direct impact on their lives and wealth. The following day, a large delegation comprising
the leaders and arch-criminals of Makkah set out for the camp of the Madinese to protest
severely against the treaty. They addressed the Madinese: "O people of
Khazraj, it
transpired to us that you have come here to conclude a treaty with this man (Muhammad) and
evacuate him out of Makkah. By Allâh, we do really hold in abhorrence any sort of fight
between you and us." [Ibn Hisham
1/448]
The Madinese polytheists having known nothing about
the secretly taken pledge, began to swear by Allâh and answered in good faith that there
was no truth in the report. Abdullah bin Ubai bin Salul, a Madinese polytheist,
refuted their allegations denouncing them as null and void, claiming that his people would
never initiate anything unless he gave them clear orders.
The Madinese Muslims, however, remained silent
neither negating nor confirming. The Quraishite leaders seemed to be almost convinced by
the arguments presented by the polytheists, and went back home frustrated. However, they
did not fully acquiesce in the words they heard. They began to scrutinize the smallest
details, and trace the minutest news till it was established beyond a shadow of doubt that
the pact did take place, but that was after the Madinese pilgrims had left
Makkah. In a
fit of rage, they pursued the pilgrims but did not succeed in catching hold of anyone
except Sad bin Ubadah. They subjected him to unspeakable tortures, but he was
later rescued by Al-Mutim bin Adi and Harith bin Harb bin Omaiya with whom he
had trade relations. [Za'd Al-Ma'ad 2/51,52; Ibn Hisham 1/448-450]
That is the story of the Second Aqabah Pledge,
later known as the Great Aqabah Pledge, effected in an atmosphere of love,
allegiance and mutual support between Madinese believers and weak Makkan Muslims. This new
spirit of affection, rapport and cooperation could never be attributable to a fleeing
whim, on the contrary, it totally derived from an already deeply-established approach,
viz. Belief in Allâh, His Messenger and His Book. It was a Belief so rooted in the selves
that it managed to stand immune to all powers of injustice and aggression, and could be
translated into miracles in the practical aspects of action and ideology pursuit. That
sort of Belief was the real instrument for the Muslims to record in the annals of history
unprecedented breakthroughs. We are also sure that the future will always remain wanting
as regards those great achievements carried out by those great men.
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