RISALAT
WHO IS
MUHAMMAD?
Khurram Murad
Source: www.al-islamforall.org
Foreword
Khurram Murad has been a source of guidance and inspiration to thousands of people the world over. His death in December 1996 has deprived the Ummah of one of its great sons – thinkers, a prolific writer, a teacher, a guide and a leader of the Islamic movement. During the last months of his life he planned to write a trio on the Qur’an and the life and message of Prophet Muhammad sallallaho ‘alaihi wassallam, particularly directed towards the Muslim youth in the English-speaking world. These small tracts were meant to reach the hearts and souls of our youth, yearning for guidance, seeking ideals to live by.
The Quranic Treasures and Gifts from Muhammad was proof-read by him on his death bed. Who is Muhammad was still in the form of a first draft when he breathed his last. Now we are able to present this last work of Brother Khurram. We are grateful to Br. Abdur Rashid Siddiqui who has worked meticulously to edit and prepare this tract for publication. I have gone through the manuscript and made minor editorial modifications, keeping in view the purpose and style of Br. Khurram. I hope this small booklet will be of immense assistance, to all those who want to understand Muhammad, sallallaho ‘alaihi wassallam, the man and his mission.
Prof. Kurshid Ahmad
11th April 1998
One in every five persons on this earth firmly believes that the Prophet Muhammad is the last Messenger of God. He was a Muslim and there are more than 1.3 billion such Muslims today. Not only individual but entire countries take pride in declaring their allegiance to him. There are 54 such Muslim states today, ranging from those as large as Indonesia and Bangladesh, with populations of 200 and 125 million respectively, to those as tiny as the Maldives or Brunei with populations of 230,000 and 260,000. Even in non-Muslim countries, large Muslim populations constitute significant minorities; as much as 120 million in
As now so always, down the centuries, across the planet, from end to end, billions and billions of men and women have lived all their lives, loving the Prophet an trying to follow in his footsteps, as no one else has been so loved and followed. They have lived and died, believed and acted, married and raised families, worshipped and ruled, made was and peace, even eaten and dressed, walked and slept, just as he did or taught them to do. Indeed, never in history has a man influenced mankind, even beyond his death, so deeply and so pervasively as he has. He brings light and peace to countless hearts and lives. They love him more dearly than their own selves. In him they find their greatest source of inspiration and guidance. He is the ultimate norm
and the perfect example for them. Faith in him is their mainstay, and he is their chief source of support and comfort in all personal vicissitudes and tribulations. To him they also look to lead them through social and political turmoil. He has always inspired them to greater and greater heights of spiritual and moral upliftment and civilization achievements. And still does.
In short, they believe that through him, a human like themselves, God has spoken to hem, and guided him to live amongst them, setting a example and a model for all times to come. Even today he motivates and induces whole populations to yearn and strive to shape their private lives, politics and policies according to his teachings.
Who, then, is this man Muhammad?
It was in the year 570, after Jesus that Muhammad was born in Makkah, in what is now
However, Makkah was, and remains, important for an altogether different reason. For here lies the Ka’bah, the ‘first House’ ever set up for mankind to worship their only God. More than 1,000 years before the Prophet Solomon built the temple in
Makkah never had, nor does it have now, any worldly inducement to offer for settlement. It is a barren, desolate place, where even grass does not grow! There were springs and wells of abundant water nearby in Taif, and a short distance away in Madinah. But it was the first House of God, architecturally an unremarkable cube, but spiritually and civilizationally the most remarkable foundation and spring of life – which made it supremely important, a place of attraction for people from all over the world. Forever, therefore, Makkah has been a great center of pilgrimage.
By the time Muhammad was born, the Ka’bah’s latest guardians, the tribe of Quraysh, had more than 300 idols installed in and around the Ka’bah to be worshipped as lords, gods and intercessors besides the One God. Muhammad was a direct descendent of the Prophet Abraham through the Prophet Ishmael. He belonged to the financially poor but politically strong and noble clan of Banu Hashim from the tribe of Quraysh. As guardians of the Ka’bah, the House of God and the center of pilgrimage for all
Muhammad was born an orphan. His father, Abdullah, died before he was born. His mother, Aminah, too, passed away when he was only six years old. Doubly an orphan, his grandfather, Abdal-Muttalib, took him into his care. Only two years later, however, the orphaned boy was bereaved of his grandfather as well, leaving him in the care of his uncle, Abu Talib.
After his birth, the infant child was sent to the desert to be suckled and weaned and to spend part of his childhood among one of the Bedouin tribes, Bani Sa’d ibn Bakr, who live in the southeast of Makkah. This was the usual custom of all the great families in Makkah.
As Muhammad grew up, to earn his livelihood he pastured sheep, and goats, as have done most Prophets. His uncle and guardian, Abu Talib, also took him along with him on his travels with the trade caravans to greater
At the age of 25, Muhammad married a lady named Khadijah. A widow, Khadijah was 15 years older than Muhammad. She was a rich merchant of Makkah, and Muhammad had managed some of her trade affairs. It was she who proposed marriage. Khadijah remained Muhammad’s wife and his closest friend and companion all her life till her life till her death 25 years later. She bore him six children, of whom four daughters survived. Until he was 40, Muhammed led a very uneventful life, showing so signs of the Prophet in the making that he was suddenly to be. What set him apart from his compatriots was his absolute truthfulness, trustworthiness and integrity, his sense of justice and compassion for the poor, oppressed and downtrodden, as well as his total refusal to worship any idol or do anything immoral. He was popularly acclaimed for these qualities. Al-Amin, the Trustworthy, the Honest, al-Sadiq, the Truthful, were the titles on everybody’s lips for Muhammad, which itself means the Praised One.
At a very young age, Muhammad enthusiastically joined a pact of chivalry for the establishment of justice and the protection of the weak and the oppressed made by certain chiefs of the Quraysh. He took part in the Oath when they all vowed that henceforth they would stand together as one man on the side of the oppressed against the oppressor until justice was done, whether the oppressed were a man of the Quraysh or one who had come from abroad.
In later years, at Madinah, Muhammad used to say: ‘I was present in the house of Abd Allah Ibn Jud’an at so excellent a pact that I would not exchange my part in it for a herd of red camels, and if now, in Islam, I were summoned to a similar pact, I would gladly respond.’ A testimony to Muhammad’s character was given by his wife Khadijah as she comforted him at the time when the first Revelation came to him. He said later: ‘I fear for my life.’ She replied: ‘By no means! I swear by God that God will never lose you. You join ties of relationship, you speak the truth, you bear people’s burdens, you earn for the poor, you entertain guests, and you help against the vicissitudes, which affect people’s rights.
Muhammad’s wisdom was also acknowledged by all. Once, while repairing the Ka’bah, various clans of the Quraysh disputed violently as to who should have the honor of placing the Black Stone in its place. As they were about to unsheathe their swords and go to war, they made the Prophet their arbitrator and he brought them peace. He placed the Black Stone on his cloak and asked all the clan chiefs to hold its edges and raise it, and then he placed the Black Stone in its appointed spot with his own hands. Muhammed was not only a wise, just, compassionate, honored and respected man, but also a profoundly contemplative and spiritual person. As he approached the age of 40, increasingly he came to spend more and more of his time in retreat, in contemplation, worship, prayer, in the Cave of Hira in Jabal at-Nur, sometimes for several days at a time.
It was here that one night before dawn, in the last part of the month of Ramadan, the holy month of fasting for Muslims, the Angel Gabriel appeared before him in the form of a man, and said to him: ‘Read’, and the Prophet said: ‘I am not a reader.’ Thereupon, as he himself told it, ‘the Angel Jibrail overwhelmed me in his embrace until I reached the limit of any endurance. Then he returned me and said: ‘Read.’ Again I said: ‘I am not a reader.’ Thrice the same thing happened. The third time, after releasing me from his embrace, the Angel finally said: Read in the name of your Lord Who has created. He has created man from a clot of blood. Read, and your Lord is the Most Bountiful: He who has taught by the pen, taught man what he knew not. (al-Alaq 96: 1-5)
He recited thee words after the Angel. And, then, the Angel said to him:
‘you are the Messenger of God.’
Overawed by the unique experience or the Divine and overwhelmed by the huge burden of truth and message, he came out of the cave, his body trembling and his heart quaking. The Prophet returned home. ‘Cover me! Cover me!’, he said to his wife Khadijah. She quickly covered him with a cloth. Wrapped in the cloth, he told her what had happened in the
The event in Hira, as narrated by Muhammad, was the supreme and most crucial event of his life. All that happened later has been happening over the centuries, and all the positions that he enjoys in the eyes of his followers, or his detractors, hinges on the veracity, truthfulness, authenticity and nature of this event in Hira. Yet the only thing to support his claim in this respect was and remains his own word. Was he truly a Messenger of God? Was what he saw real and true? Or, was it an hallucination? Was he a man possesses? Did he just compose in word as poets do, the ideas he found in his heart? These questions are raised today, as they were raised by his compatriots then. Of these his wife of 15 years was to be year was to be the first judge.
She knew him too well to doubt even for a moment that he could say anything but the. She also knew his character .so, she believed in him without a moment’s hesitation. As with his wife Khadijah, so his closest friend Abu Bakr, his adopted son Zyad, his cousin Ali who lived with him, in short all who knew the Prophet most intimately, believed in his truthfulness most spontaneously. Khadijah took the Prophet to her cousin Waraqah, who had converted to Cristianity, and acquired great learning in Christian Scriptures.
Both the Jews and Christians have been expecting the coming of the last Prophet as foretold in their scriptures. Had not Moses, just before he died, been told: ‘I will raise up for them a Prophet like you from among their brethren; and I will put my worked in his mouth’ (Deuteronomy 18:18)? Who could be the brethren of the sons of
Waraqah therefore has no doubts that the last that the last Prophet had come; so he, too, believed in him. But most of the people of Makkah who had acclaimed him the Trustworthy (Al-Amin) and the Truthful (Al-Sadiq) could not bring themselves to believe in him. Nor could the Jews and Christians who had for so long been living in expectation of his arrival. Not that they doubted his truthfulness or integrity. But they were not prepared to turn their whole established way of life upside down by submitting to his simple but radical message: When I recite the Qur’an, I find the following clear instructions: God is He who has created you, and the heavens and the earth, He is your only Lord and Master, surrender your beings and your lives totally to Him alone and worship and serve no one but Him. Let God be the only God. The words I speak, He places in my mouth, I speak on His an authority. Obey me and forsake all false claimants to human obedience. Every thing in the heavens and on earth belongs to God; no man has a right to be master of another man, to spread oppression and corruption on earth. An eternal life beyond awaits you; where you will meet God face to face, and your life will be judge; for that you must prepare.
This simple message shook the very foundation of the Makkan society as well as the seventh-century world. That world, as today, lives under the yoke of many false gods: kings and emperor’s priests and monks, feudal lords and rich businessmen, soothsayers and spell-binders who claimed to know what others knew not – all lorded over man. Not only that: man-made
gods of their own desires, their tribal loyalties, their ancestors, and the powers of nature, like the nations, cultures, science and technology today all lorded over man.
The Prophet’s message challenged them all, exposed them all, threaten4ed
them all. His immediate opponents in Makkah could do no better than brand
him unconvincingly as a liar, a poet, a soothsayer, a man possessed. But
how could he who was illiterate, he who had never composed a single verse,
he who had shown no inclination to lead men, suddenly, have words flowing
from his lips, so full of wisdom and light, morally so uplifting, specifically so
enlivening, so beautiful and powerful, that they began to change the hearts
and minds and lives of the hearers? His detractors and opponents had no
answer. When challenged to produce anything even remotely similar to the
words Muhammad claimed he was receiving from god, they could not match
God’s words.
First privately, then publicity, the Prophet continued to proclaim his
Message, He himself had an intense, living relationship with God, totally
committed to the Message and mission entrusted to him. Slowly and
gradually, people came forward and embraced Islam. They came from all
walks of life- chiefs and slaves, businessmen and artisans men and women –
most of them young.
Some simply heard the Qur’an, and that was enough to transform them.
Some saw the Prophet, and were immediately captivated b y the light of
mercy, generosity and humanity that was visible in his manners and morals,
in his words and works, and in his face too.
So also the opposition continued to harden and sharpen. It grew furious and
ferocious. Those who joined the Prophet as also the Prophet himself were
tortured in innumerable to ways: they were mocked, abused, beaten,
flogged, imprisoned, and boycotted. Some were subjected to much more
inhuman tortures: made to lie on burning coal fires until the melting body
fat extinguished them gave it up in the face of such trials and tribulation.
However, as the persecution became unbearable, the Prophet said to them:
‘If you go to
no one suffers wrong. ‘About 80 of his followers, therefore, forsook their
homes and immigrated to
protection despite the pleadings and machinations of the emissaries sent by
the Quraysh chiefs. This was the first emigration of Islam.
All the while, the Prophet and his Companions continued to nourish their
souls and intellects and strengthen their character and resolve for the great
task that lay ahead. They met regularly, especially at a house near the
Ka’bah called Dar al-Arqam, to read and study the Qur’an to worship and
pray, and to forge the ties of brotherhood.
Ten years passed, but the people of Makkah would not give their allegiance
to the Prophet’s Message nor showed any signs of mitigating their
persecution. At the same time, the Prophet lost his closest Companions and
his wife Khadijah, as also his uncle Abu Talib, his chief protector in the
tribal world of Makkah.
The Prophet now decided to carry his Message to be people of the nearby
town of
and ridiculed him and rejected his Message. They also stirred up their slaves
and the street urchins to insult him, mock him, and throw stones at him.
Thus, he was stoned until he bled and was driven out of Taif. And yet when
his Companion, Zyad, requested him to curse the people of Taif, and when
God placed at his command the Angel of Mountains to crush the valley of
Taif if he so wished, he only prayed for their being guided. Such was the
mercy and compassion of the one who is the mercy for all the worlds’.
The Taif episode was the hardest moment in the Prophet’s life. It signaled
the advent of a new era for him, when his mission was to find a secure
base, and was to ascend higher and higher in the coming days until the end
of time.
To mark that, one night the Prophet was awakened and taken, in the
company of the angel Gabriel, first to
met by all the Prophets, Who gathered together behind him as he prayed on
the rock in the center of the site of the
of the Rock stands today. From the rock, led by the Arcangel, he ascended
through the seven heavens and beyond. Thus he saw whatever Gods made
him see, the heavenly worlds Which no human eye can see, the heavenly
worlds which no human eye can see, and which were the focus of his
Message and mission.
During this journey, the five daily prayers were ordained for his people.
Furthermore, it was then that the Prophet was given the charter for the
new society and state soon to be born, which, too, was prophesied and
which is described in Surah al-Isra (Chapter 17) of the Qur’an.
The Message that Makkah and Taif rejected, found responsive hearts in
Yathrib, a small oasis about 400 kilometers to the north of Makkah. Now
known a Madinatun Nabi, the city of the Prophet, or Madinah Munawwarah,
the radiant city, it was destined to be the center of the Divine light that
was to spread to all parts of the world for all times to come.
In quick succession, the Prophet suffered the terrible loss of Khadijah, his
intimate and beloved companion of 25 years, and of Abu Talib, his guardian
and protector against the bloodthirsty Makkan foes, and encountered the
worst ever rejection, humiliation and persecution at nearby Taif. As the
Prophet reached the lowest point in his vocation, God brought him comfort
and solace. On the one hand, 65spiritually, He took him during the Night of
the Ascension to the highest of highs, realities and divinities, face to face
with the Unseen. And on the other, materially, he opened the hearts of the
people of Yathrib to the Message and mission of Muhammad.
Soon after Muhammad’s return from Taif and the Night Journey, at the time
of the pilgrimage, six men from Yathrib embraced Islam. They delivered the
message of Islam to as many as they could, and at the time of the next
pilgrimage in the year 621 CE, 12 persons came. They pledge themselves to
the Prophet that they would make no god beside God, which they would
neither steal nor commit fornication, or slay their infants, nor utter
slanders, nor disobey him in that, which is right. The Prophet said: “If you
fulfill this pledge, then paradise is yours. “ This time the Prophet sent
Mus’ab ibn ‘Umayr with them to teach them the Qur’an and Islam and to
spread the Message of Islam.
More and more people over the course of a year-tribal leaders, men and
women- in Yathrib became Muslims. A the time of the next pilgrimage, they
decided to send a delegation to the Prophet, make a pledge to him, and
invite him and all Muslims in Makkah to Yathrib as a sanctuary and as a base
for spreading the Divine Message of Islam.
In all 73 men and two women came. They met the Prophet at ‘Aqabah. They
pledge to protect the Prophet as they would protect their own women and
children, and to fight against all men, red and black, even if their nobles
were killed and they suffered the loss of all their possessions. When asked
what would be theirs if they fulfilled their pledge, the Prophet said:
‘
society, stage and civilization were set.
The road was now open for the persecuted and tortured followers of the
Prophet to come to the House of Islam that was to be Madinah. He
therefore, instructed them to emigrate, and gradually most of them found
their way to Yathrib.
Their Makkan foes could not bear to see the Muslims living in peace. They
knew the power of the Prophet’s Message, they knew the strength of those
dedicated believers who cared nothing for the age – old Arab customs and
ties of kinship, and who if they had to would fight for their faith. The
Makkans sensed the danger that the Muslims presence in Madinah posed for
their northern trade caravan routes. They saw no other way to stop al this
but to k ill the Prophet.
Hence they hatched a conspiracy: one strong and well-connected young man
was to be nominated by each clam, and all of them were to pounce upon
and kilo the Prophet one morning as he came out of his house, so that his
blood would be on all the clan’s hands. Thus, the Prophet‘s clan would have
to accept blood money in place of revenge.
Informed of the plot by the Angel Gabriel, and instructed to leave Makkah
for Madinah, the Prophet went to Abu Bakr’s house to finalize the travel
arrangements. Abu Bakr was overjoyed at having been chosen for the honor
and blessing of being the Prophet’s Companion on this blessed and
momentous, sacred and epoch-making journey. He offered his she-camel to
the Prophet, but the Prophet insisted on paying its price.
On the fateful night, as darkness fell, the youths selected by the Quraysh
leaders to kill the Prophet surrounded his house. They decided to pounce on
him when he came out of his house for the dawn Prayers.
Meanwhile, the Prophet handed over all the money left by the Makkans with
him for safe keeping to Ali. Ali offered to lie in the Prophet’s bed. The
Prophet slipped out of his house, threw a little dust in their direction, and
walked past his enemies, whose eyes were still on the house.
He met Abu Bakr at his house, and they both traveled to a nearby cave, the
Jabal Thur. When the Quraysh realized that the Prophet had evaded them,
they were furious. They looked for him everywhere and on all roads; they
also offered a reward of 100 she-camels for anybody who would bring them
the Prophet, dead or alive.
A tribal chief, Suraqa, sighted the Prophet and followed him, to earn the
reward. The Prophet, with bloodthirsty foes in pursuit and an uncertain
further ahead of him in Madinah, told Suraqa: “A day will soon come when
Kisra’s golden hand bracelet will be in Suraqa’s hands.” Thereafter, Suraqa
retreated, and the Prophet proceeded towards Madinah.
This was Hijrah, the emigration – a small distance in space, a mighty leap in
history, an event that was to become a threshold in the shaping of the
Islamic Ummah. This is why the Muslims date their calendar from Hijrah,
and not from the birth of the Prophet.
In Qubah, 10 kilometers outside Madinah, the Prophet made his first
sojourn. Here he built the first mosque. Here he also made his first public
address: “Spread peace among yourselves, give away food to the needy,
pray while people sleep – and your enter
Three days later, the Prophet entered Madinah. Men, women, children, the
entire populace came out on the streets and jubilantly welcomed him.
Never was there a day of greater rejoicing and happiness. “Come is the
Prophet! Come is the Prophet!” sang the little children.
The first thing the Prophet did after arriving in Madinah was to weld the
Emigrants (called Muhajirs) and the hosts, called the Helpers (or Ansar) into
on brotherhood. Still today this brotherhood remains the hallmark of the
Muslims. One person from the Emigrants was made the brother of one from
amongst the Helpers. The Helpers offered to share equally all that they
possessed with the Emigrants.
So the Muslims were forged into close-knit community of faith and
brotherhood and the structure of their society and polity was being built.
The first structure was also raised. This was the Mosque, or Masjid, the
building consecrated to the worship of One God – called Masjid-al-Nabawi,
the Prophet’s Mosque. Since then the Masjid has also remained the hallmark
of the Muslims’ collective and social life, the convenient space for the
integration of the religious and political dimensions of Islam, a source of
identification, a witness to Muslim existence.
At the same time, steps were taken and the required institutions built to
integrate the entire social life around the center and pivot of the worship of
One God. For this purpose, five daily Prayers in congregation were
established.
Ramadan, fasting every day from dawn to sunset for an entire month was
also prescribed. Similarly, to establish ‘giving’ as the way of life, Zakat, a
percentage of one’s wealth to be given in the way of God was made
obligatory.
As long as there was no different instruction from God, the Muslims
followed the practice observed by the Jews and Christians. Hence, they
used to pray with their faces turned towards
direction to which the Muslims faced in prayer was changed from
to Makkah. This historic episode signaled the formation of the new Muslim
community, charged with Divine trust and the mission of God’s guidance,
replacing the earlier Jews and Christians, and following the most ancient
message of Abraham turning towards the most ancient House of God, built
by him.
The Prophet, after arriving in Madinah, first formed an alliance with the Jews.
Next, he approached all the nearby tribes and tried to persuade them to make
an alliance or at least enter into a no-war pact. Many did. Thus the small group
evicted from Makkah assumed strategic importance.
The Makkans who had earlier planned to kill the Prophet, were now determined
to annihilate this nascent community of Islam. Having failed in all other ways
they decided on a military solution.
A heavily armed Makkah force-marched towards Madinah in the second year
after Hijrah, on the pretext of protecting their trade caravan. The Prophet,
despite his community’s small number and lack of arms, decide to face their
threat boldly. On the 17th of Ramadan, at Badr, the two forces met and fought
a battle in which 313 Muslims defeated the 1,000 strong Makkan army.
Seventy of the Makkan chiefs who had been most active and vehement in
persecuting the Muslims were killed; many others were taken prisoner, later to
be released for ransom. For the first time, prisoners of war were treated
humanely and kindly; they were fed and housed in the same way as their
captors ate and lived.
In the third year of Hijrah, a 3,000 strong Makkan force again marched on
Madinah, both to an avenge the defeat at Badr and to make another attempt to
defeat the Muslims; 700 of them were mailed and 200 mounted. The Muslims
numbered only 700. The two sides met just outside Madinah near the Uhud
Mountain. The initial Muslim victory was, however, reversed; the Muslim
contingent posted to protect the rear, violated the Prophet’s instructions and
abandoned its position. The Quraysh attacked from behind, and victory was
turned into defeat, resulting in the deaths of about 65 Muslims. The Makkans,
however, failed to pursue their advantage and clinch victory.
The Makkans now planned to make a final assault on Madinah to settle the
matter once and for all. All Bedouin tribes, Jews and hypocrites within Madinah
joined forces with them. In the fifth year after Hijrah, 24,000 of them
advanced on Madinah. It was impossible to fight them on the open battlefield,
or defend Madinah, which was without walls. The Muslims therefore defended
themselves by digging ditches all round Madinah for 25 days, due to inner
dissension, lack of supplied, cold weather and high winds, the Makkan army
was forced to withdraw. This was the turning point in the history of
confrontation with the Makkans. Madinah was never to be attacked again.
Form the beginning, the Jews were given full rights of citizenship, yet they still
committed acts of treason and treachery. Some had to be expelled; some were
killed as a result of judgments given by an arbitrator appointed by them.
However, subsequent generations of Jews were never held responsible for the
misdeeds of the Jews of Madinah, as they were in Christendom for 2,000 years,
for the crucifixion of Jesus. Instead, the Muslims always treated them justly
and kindly.
The next year, the sixth after Hijrah, the Prophet and 1,400 Companions
journeyed to Makkah to perform umrah, the lesser Pilgrimage, in accordance
with several traditions of the time. They were unarmed. The Quraysh chiefs,
against all established and accepted traditions, refused them admission.
However, the Quraysh were now so low in morale and strength that they had to
sign a peace treaty with the Prophet, the Hudaybiyah Treaty.
Though the terms appeared highly unfavorable, even humiliating, for the
Muslims, they made tremendous gains by virtue of this Treaty. They, who were
driven out of Makkah and attacked thrice, were now recognized as an equal
force, to be treated respectfully, taken seriously. Peace provided an
opportunity for the wavering and the neutral, even the hostile, to witness Islam
at first hand, and many sensed the imminent victory of Islam. The result was
that many Makkans and Arab tribes either embraced Islam or made peace with
the Prophet.
As soon as the Hudaybiyah Treaty was signed, the Prophet sent letters to
various neighbouring Arab and non-Arab rulers, including Chosroes of Iran and
Heraclitus of the
them that he did not covet their kingdoms or riches. They could retain both,
but only if they surrendered themselves to serve and worship the One God.
The Quraysh, however, soon broke the Treaty of Hudaybiyah. It was, thus, time
to deal with their continuing hostility. The Prophet marched to Makkah, and
captured the town. The fall off Makkah witnessed unparalleled acts of mercy,
forgiveness and generosity. Not a single drop of blood was shed. Everybody who
remained indoors was granted security of life and property. The Prophet
forgave all who had been his bitterest foes all his life, who had persecuted him
and planned to kill him, who had driven him out of Makkah, and who had
marched thrice to Madinah to defeat the Muslims.
The neighbouring
Muslim community in Madinah. However, when the Prophet marched to Tabuk
on the northern border, his determination, courage and timely response made
the enemy lose heart and withdraw.
6.
Throughout those years, when the Prophet was surrounded by hostile forces
and ultimately triumphed over them, he continued to purify the souls and
uplift the morals of his followers and lay the foundations of a just and
compassionate family, society and state. His mission was now complete: he had
created a new man, and changed the lives of multitudes of men and women by
bringing them in total surrender to their Creator. He had created a new
society: one based on justice. In his own life example, and in the Qur’an,
mankind was given the light and way of a godly life.
It is remarkable that this entire epoch-making revolution which transformed
not only
birth of the most brilliant civilization in the world cost no more than 750 lives,
mostly opponents, in the various battles. Yet the Prophet is sometimes
maligned as a man of violence by those who have exterminated thousands of
people in pursuit of their civilizational ideals.
The Prophet performed his only Hajj in the tenth year after migration to
Madinah. In the Plain of Arafat, he gave a sermon of unsurpassable beauty and
lasting value: ‘No man has any right to lord over other man; all men are equal,
whatever their origin, color or nationality’.
A few months later, in the eleventh year after Hijrah, the Prophet Muhammad
died. He was buried in the house in which he had lived in Madinah.
The Prophet possessed a character of exquisite beauty and charm. He was
merciful, kind and compassionate. He loved children and taught kindness to
animals. He spoke softy, never abused anyone, and forgave even his worst
enemies. He lived a very simple life. He repaired his own shoes and clothes. He
lived frugally, sometimes for days no food was cooked in his household.
Such in Muhammad. According to every standard by which human greatness can
be measured he was matchless; no man was ever greater!
The Last Sermon Of Prophet Muhammad
This sermon was delivered on the Ninth day of Dhul-Hijjah, 10 A.H. ( 623AD) in the Uranah valley of
After praising and thanking Allah the Prophet (p.b.u.h.) began with the words:
"O People! Lend me an attentive ear, for I know not whether after this year I shall ever be amongst you again. Therefore, listen carefully to what I am saying and take these words to those who could not be present here today."
"O People! just as you regard this month, this day ,this city as sacred ,so regard the life and property of every Muslim a sacred trust. Return the goods entrusted to you to their rightful owners. Hurt no one so that no one may hurt you. Remember that you will indeed meet your Lord, and that he will indeed reckon your deeds."
"Allah has forbidden you to take usury, therefore all interest obligation shall henceforth be waived. Your capital is yours to keep .You will neither inflict nor suffer any inequality. Allah has judged that there shall be no interest and that all interest due to Abbas Ibn 'Aal-Muttalib be waived."
"Every right arising out of homicide in pre-Islamic days is henceforth waived and the first such right that I waive is that arising from the murder of Rabiah ibni al-Harithiah."
"O men! the unbelievers indulge in tampering with the calendar in order to make permissible that which Allah forbade, and to prohibit what Allah has made permissible. With Allah the months are twelve in number. Four of them are holy, there are sucessive and one occurs singly between the months of Jumada and Shaban."
"Beware of Satan, for the safety of your religion. He has lost all hope that he will be able to lead you astray in big things so beware of following him in small things."
"O People it is true that you have certain rights with regard to your women but they also have rights over you. Remember that you have taken them as your wives only under Allah's trust and with His permission. If they abide by your right then to them belongs the right to be fed and clothed in kindness. Do treat your women well and be kind to them for they are your partners and committed helpers. And it is your right that they do not make friends with any one of whom you do not approve, as well never to be unchaste."
"O People! listen to me in earnest, worship Allah, say your five daily prayers, fast during month of Ramadan, and give your wealth in Zakat .Perform Haj if you can afford it."
"All mankind is from Adam and Eve, an Arab has no superiority over a non-Arab nor a non-Arab has any superiority over an Arab; also a White has no superiority over a Black nor a Black has any superiority over a White except by piety and good action. Learn that every Muslim is a brother to every Muslim and that the Muslims constitute one brotherhood. Nothing shall be legitimate to a Muslim which belongs to a fellow Muslim unless it was given freely and willingly."
"Do not therefore do injustice to yourselves. Remember one day you will meet Allah and answer your deeds. So beware, do not astray from the path of righteousness after I am gone."
"O People! No Prophet or apostle will come after me and no new faith will be born. Reason well, therefore O People! and understand words that I convey to you. I leave behind me two things, the Quran and the Sunnah and if you follow these you will never go astray."
"All those who listen to me shall pass on my words to others and those to others again; and may the last ones understand my words better than those who listen to me directly."
"O Allah, be my witness, that I have conveyed your message to Your people."
As part of this sermon, the prophet recited to them a revelation from Allah, which he had just received, and which completed the Quran, for it was the last passage to be revealed:
This day the disbeliever's despair of prevailing against your religion, so fear them not, but fear Me (Allah)! This day have I perfected for you, your religion and fulfilled My favor unto you, and it hath been My good pleasure to choose Islam for you as your religion. (Surah 5, Ayah 3)
The sermon was repeated sentence by sentence by Safwan's brother Rabiah (RA), who had powerful voice, at the request of the Prophet and he faithfully, proclaimed to over ten thousand gathered on the occasion. Towards the end of his sermon, the Prophet asked "O people, have I faithfully delivered unto you my message?" A powerful murmur of assents "O Allah! yes!"arose from thousands of pilgrims and the vibrant words "Allahumma Na'm," rolled like thunder throughout the valley. The Prophet raised his forefinger and said: "O Allah bear witness that I have conveyed your message to your people."
No comments:
Post a Comment