It was the most significant and the fiercest battle
during the lifetime of the Messenger of Allâh [pbuh], a preliminary and a prelude to the
great conquests of the land of the Christians. It took place in Jumada Al-Ula 8 A.H. /
September 629 A.D. Mutah is a village that lies on the borders of geographical
Syria.
The Prophet [pbuh] had sent Al-Harith bin
Umair Al-Azdi on an errand to carry a letter to the ruler of Busra. On his way, he
was intercepted by Sharhabeel bin Amr Al-Ghassani, the governor of Al-Balqa
and a close ally to Caesar, the Byzantine Emperor. Al-Harith was tied and beheaded by
Al-Ghassani.
Killing envoys and messengers used to be regarded as
the most awful crime, and amounted to the degree of war declaration. The Prophet [pbuh]
was shocked on hearing the news and ordered that a large army of 3000 men be mobilized and
despatched to the north to discipline the transgressors. [Za'd Al-Ma'ad 2/155; Fath Al-Bari 7/511] It was the largest
Muslim army never mobilized on this scale except in the process of the Confederates
Battle.
Zaid bin Haritha was appointed to lead the army.
Jafar bin Abi Talib would replace him if he was killed, and Abdullah bin
Rawaha would succeed Jafar in case the latter fell.[Sahih Al-Bukhari 2/611] A white banner
was raised and handed over to Zaid. [Mukhtasar Seerat Ar-Rasool p.327]
The Prophet [pbuh] recommended that they reach the
scene of Al-Hariths murder and invite the people to profess Islam. Should the latter
respond positively, then no war would ensue, otherwise fighting them would be the only
alternative left.
He ordered them:
"Fight the
disbelievers in the Name of Allâh, neither breach a covenant nor entertain treachery, and
under no circumstances a new-born, woman, an ageing man or a hermit should be killed;
moreover neither trees should be cut down nor homes demolished. [Mukhtasar Seerat Ar-Rasool p.327; Rahmat-ul-lil'alameen
2/271]"
At the conclusion of the military preparations, the
people of Madinah gathered and bade the army farewell. Abdullah bin Rawaha began to
weep at that moment, and when asked why he was weeping, he swore that it was not love for
this world nor under a motive of infatuation with the glamour of life but rather the Words
of Allâh speaking of Fire that he heard the Prophet [pbuh] reciting:
"There is not one
of you but will pass over it (Hell); this is with your Lord, a Decree which must be
accomplished." [Al-Qur'an 19:71]
The Muslim army then marched northward to
Maân, a town bordering on geographical Syria. There news came to the effect that
Heraclius had mobilized a hundred thousand troops together with another hundred thousand
men of Lakham, Judham and Balqain Arabian tribes allied to the Byzantines. The
Muslims, on their part had never thought of encountering such a huge army. They were at a
loss about what course to follow, and spent two nights debating these unfavourable
conditions. Some suggested that they should write a letter to the Prophet [pbuh] seeking
his advice. Abdullah bin Rawaha was opposed to them being reluctant and addressed
the Muslims saying: "I swear by Allâh that this very object which you hold in
abhorrence is the very one you have set out seeking, martyrdom. In our fight we dont
count on number of soldiers or equipment but rather on the Faith that Allâh has honoured
us with. Dart to win either of the two, victory or martyrdom." In the light of these
words, they moved to engage with the enemy in Masharif, a town of Al-Balqa, and then
changed direction towards Mutah where they encamped. The right flank was led by
Qutba bin Qatadah Al-Udhari, and the left by Ubadah bin Malik Al-Ansari.
Bitter fighting started between the two parties, three thousand Muslims against an enemy
fiftyfold as large.
Zaid bin Haritha, the closest to the
Messengers heart, assumed leadership and began to fight tenaciously and in matchless
spirit of bravery until he fell, fatally stabbed. Jafar bin Abi Talib then took the
banner and did a miraculous job. In the thick of the battle, he dismounted, hamstrung his
horse and resumed fighting until his right hand was cut off. He seized the banner with his
left hand until this too was gone. He then clasped the banner with both arms until a
Byzantine soldier struck and cut him into two parts. he was posthumously called "the
flying Jafar" or "Jafar with two wings" because Allâh has
awarded him two wings to fly wherever he desired there in the eternal Garden. Al-Bukhari
reported fifty stabs in his body, none of them in the back. [Sahih Al-Bukhari 2/611]
Abdullah bin Rawaha then proceeded to hold up
the banner and fight bravely on his horseback while reciting enthusiastic verses until he
too was killed. Thereupon a man, from Bani Ajlan, called Thabit bin Al-Arqam took
the banner and called upon the Muslims to choose a leader. The honour was unanimously
granted to Khalid bin Al-Waleed, a skilled brave fighter and an outstanding strategist. It
was reported by Al-Bukhari that he used nine swords that broke while he was relentlessly
and courageously fighting the enemies of Islam. He, however, realizing the grave situation
the Muslims were in, began to follow a different course of encounter, revealing the super
strategy-maker, that Khalid was rightly called. He reshuffled the right and left flanks of
the Muslim army and introduced forward a division from the rear in order to cast fear into
the hearts of the Byzantine by deluding them that fresh reinforcements had arrived. The
Muslims engaged with the enemies in sporadic skirmishes but gradually and judiciously
retreating in a fully organized and well-planned withdrawal.
The Byzantines, seeing this new strategy, believed
that they were being entrapped and drawn in the heart of the desert. They stopped the
pursuit, and consequently the Muslims managed to retreat back to Madinah with the
slightest losses. [Fath-Al-Bari
7/513, 514; Za'd Al-Ma'ad 2/156]
The Muslims sustained twelve martyrs, whereas the
number of casualties among the Byzantines was unknown although the details of the battle
point clearly to a large number. Even though the battle did not satisfy the Muslims
objective, namely avenging Al-Hariths murder, it resulted in a far-ranging impact
and attached to the Muslims a great reputation in the battlefields. The Byzantine Empire,
at that time, was a power to be reckoned with, and mere thinking of antagonizing it used
to mean self-annihilation, let alone a three-thousand-soldier army going into fight
against 200,000 soldiers far better equipped and lavishly furnished with all luxurious
conveniences. The battle was a real miracle proving that the Muslims were something
exceptional not then familiar. Moreover, it gave evidence that Allâh backed them and
their Prophet, Muhammad, was really Allâhs Messenger. In the light of these new
strategic changes, the archenemies among the desert bedouins began to reconcile themselves
with the new uprising faith and several recalcitrant tribes like Banu Saleem, Ashja,
Ghatfan, Dhubyan, Fazarah and others came to profess Islam out of their own sweet free
will.
Mutah Battle, after all, constituted the
forerunner of the blood encounter to take place with the Byzantines subsequently. It
pointed markedly to a new epoch of the Islamic conquest of the Byzantine empire and other
remote countries, to follow at a later stage.
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