The Real Cause of Success
In fact the real reason for the success of
that great and unique revolution was very different from what detractors of
Islam have made it out to be. During the earlier years when the Prophet preached
Islam in Mecca, only a small number of people could comprehend its meaning and
significance. It was understood and appreciated only by those who were gifted
with rare powers of intellect and comprehension, who could rise above the
deep-rooted prejudices of the days of ignorance, who could recognize and accept
the truth, who could follow it in practice and who possessed the moral courage
to stake their lives for the sake of the ideals they had adopted. Later, with
the Prophet's migration to Madinah,' the situation changed radically. With the
help of a small group of devoted followers gifted with these qualities and
imbued with this spirit, the Prophet succeeded in establishing an Islamic social
order in Madinah. As the head of a free Islamic state be began to introduce and
implement the entire Islamic scheme of reconstruction and reform and thus
provided a concrete and striking manifestation of the moral, social and
political ideals of the new Faith. People could now see for themselves the peace
and order, the virtue and righteousness, the honesty and integrity, the equity
and justice, the fraternity and equality, that an Islamic society could
establish. They could see how it could resolve economic difficulties and
problems and purify and ennoble the lives of men. No one, except those who
refused to see, could shut his eyes to these glaring realities, which stood in
such sharp contrast to the dismal state of affairs before the advent of Islam,
when the hand of each was against all and society was reeking with all manner of
corruption and immorality. Even those who had at one time pitted themselves
against the Prophet and staked their lives in a bid to crush the new faith in
the cradle began to see the light. Such stalwarts as Khalid bin Walid, Akrimah
bin Abu Jehl and Amr bin Aas were converted to the new religion. Even people
like Abu Sufyan and cannibalistic Hind ultimately recognized that Islam, which
had brought about such radical and revolutionary changes, in Arab society, was
the true religion. The Islamic social order that the Prophet had established was
an irrefutable evidence of the inherent soundness of faith and doctrines upon
which it was founded.
Thanks to this great revolution the Prophet
succeeded in creating the new community with a new code of public morality and a
new pattern of individual character. Their collective life was governed entirely
by the principles and precepts of Islam. Their beliefs and thoughts were purely
Islamic. Their religion was not vitiated by the worship of any deity other than
Allah. Their individual and collective morality had been purged of the evils of
the days of ignorance and caste in the mould of Islamic ethics. The civilization
and culture of that society were perfectly in accord with the spirit of Islam,
and the State was governed exclusively by the laws of Islam. The life of the
community was completely devoted to the cause of Islam and every one of its
members was prepared to die for the sake of his faith, for the ideals he now
lived by. The community pledged to bear the standard of God and uphold His cause
in the world. This became the collective ideal of the community. And it was
generally believed that the very purpose of the establishment of the Islamic
State was to enforce the principles of Islam in the territories under its sway
and to strive to spread the Faith to other parts of the world. The propagation
of Islam was the mission of the new community. The State it had succeeded in
setting up was a living embodiment of the principles and ideals of Islam and was
also the standard bearer of the Faith in the world.
The formation of the first Muslim community
and the establishment of the first Islamic state were followed, during the
period of the right-guided Caliphate, by a phenomenal expansion of Islam which
may well be described as an explosion. Within the span of a few years the tide
of Islamic expansion had overwhelmed a vast part of the globe extending from
Turkistan and Afghanistan to Northern Africa. This wonderful phenomenon is bound
to set any intelligent student of history thinking about its causes. It should
be easy to see that it could not be attributed to physical power or material
superiority. The people of Arabia were not endowed with any extraordinary
physical or material strength, and their land lacked even ordinary natural
resources. Indeed, with the exception of the recently discovered oil, Arabia is
still miserably poor in resources. Its population, does not exceed ten million
even now; during the rightly guided Caliphate it must have been merely a
fraction of what it is today. The causes of the phenomenon must therefore be
sought in factors other than material. It is obvious that the power that led
Islam to triumph was the character and conduct of its votaries as reflected in
the behavior of each one of them in peace and war, in the administration of
conquered lands and in the treatment of the vanquished enemies. It lay in their
unflinching faith and spot-
less character. When power was tempered with
justice, authority imbued with virtue, and leadership crowned with morality, a
new historic force was released -a force that conquered not merely lands but
hearts and souls. This is how the miracle was accomplished.
The subjects of the Iranian and Roman Empires,
which Islam over-ran and vanquished, could not ,have shut their eyes to the
radical difference between the character and conduct of their old and new
rulers. Under the old regime, they could not have imagined in their wildest
dreams the governors and other dignitaries of state living and moving about like
ordinary mortals, always accessible even to the humblest of men, ever ready to
hear the grievances of those in distress. When under the Islamic regime they saw
such rulers, all, except those blinded by rank prejudice, were compelled to
recognize the moral superiority of the new rulers and of their religion.
Like the governors and other administrators,
the conquering armies of Islam showed exemplary behavior. As they would pass
through a conquered city, thousands of women, attractively made up, would line
up on the balconies to see
the soldiers' march past; and not one of them
would raise his eyes to catch a glimpse of beauty on exhibition. Indeed, a whole
army would sometimes march through a city with-
out becoming aware of the inviting presence of
pretty women on the balconies. This was something that the peoples of these
lands had never seen or heard : what they had seen and heard was that no woman's
honor was safe at the hands of a conquering army. In the circumstances, it was
but natural that the battalions of the new conquerors should win the hearts of
the vanquished peoples.
Scrupulous regard for the honor of women was
but one of the many unique features of the character and conduct of the new
conquerors; strict honesty in financial and other dealings with the conquered
was another. For instance, whenever, a Muslim army was forced by enemy pressure
to withdraw from any part of a conquered territory, it would refund all the
taxes collected from the people to meet the cost of administration, because it
was no longer in a position to discharge the responsibilities of administration
and of protecting their lives and properties. This was again a complete
departure from the precedent set by the earlier conquerors and rulers, who, far
from refunding collected levies, would rob and plunder as much as they could
before evacuating an occupied territory. The peoples of those lands could not
have expected any conqueror to be honest in political dealings or administrative
matters; what they actually experienced now was saintly character and exemplary
conduct in every aspect of life. It was virtue incarnate, and they couldn't but
be overwhelmed by it.
This, then was the real power and strength
which enabled the earlier Muslims to conquer a large part of the world. There is
no doubt that they achieved much more through their excellent character and
exemplary conduct than they did by the force of arms. Each one of them had
embraced and adopted Islam on the basis of a full understanding and appreciation
of the creed, and had molded his character and personality in harmony with the
spirit of the Faith. Therefore, in all aspects of their lives and in all spheres
of their conduct, they acted faithfully in accordance with the tenets and
injunctions of Islam; no temptation could make them flinch or swerve from their
path, no oppression could force them to budge an inch from their stand, nor
could any power, however great and terror-striking, stand in their way. The
people whom they conquered and ruled were not their political slaves but their
admirers and their followers. They embraced the conquerors' religion, accepted
their culture and even adopted their language. And down to the present day these
conquered peoples regard their Muslim conquerors as their heroes and exemplars;
on the other hand they are not willing to identify themselves with their
non-Muslim fellow countrymen or ancestors. Could such a radical and total change
in the lives and thoughts of men have possibly been brought about by the force
of arms?
That was the first phase of the history of
Islam. .This is sot the occasion to discuss the details of that stage of our
history.* What needs to be emphasized in the context of the present discussion
is the fact that Islam achieved such spectacular success in the first phase of
its history because its votaries had consciously and earnestly accepted its
principles and doctrines, which were fully reflected in the life and character
of individuals and the conduct of the community and because a State determined
to stake its all on establishing the rule of God on earth had come into being.
These were the causes that gave Islam in the very first phase 01` its history a
momentum that have survived for nearly fourteen hundred years and promises to
last for ever. Even today, when the Muslims are in a state of cultural
degeneration almost all over the world, they 'bear the imprint of the glorious
fast stage of their history. However corrupt or degenerate a Muslim may be
today, he still cherishes, in his heart of hearts, the ideal of Islamic society
that was established by the Prophet and maintained and consolidated by the
right-guided Caliphs. He can never completely forget that ideal - which
continues to illumine the world. Every Muslim is still fascinated by that ideal
and desires to see it realized once again. During the many long centuries since
the end of the early Caliphate, Islam has been constantly spreading, and there
is no part of the world where the light of the Faith has not reached. All this
expansion and progress has been in spite of the .fact that there has been no
dearth amongst the Muslims of tyrannical rulers, dissolute nobles or immoral
commoners. We have long since ceased. to be an ideal nation that could serve as
a source of inspiration to the rest of mankind. If Islam has been spreading in
the world in spite of the sorry state of the Muslims, it is because they are
still enamored of Islam in its pristine purity, as it was preached and practiced
by the Prophet, his first four Caliphs and his Companions. It is that Islam
which people still regard as the tree Faith and which they desire to follow.
Moreover, the little virtue that one still finds in the character and conduct of
Muslims is a faint reflection of the great qualities that their ancestors had
developed during the earlier decades of Islam. The imprint of glorious the
beginning of Islam upon the life of the community has no doubt faded a great
deal with the passage of time, but it has not vanished, and its influence
abides. Whatever dynamism, we find today in Islam is entirely due to the great
movement that Islam generated during the initial years of its historic career.
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