He
went out of the cave on to the hillside and heard the same awe-inspiring voice say: “O Muhammad!
Thou art Allah’s messenger, and I am Jibril (Gabriel).” Then he raised his eyes and saw the
angel, in the likeness of a man, standing in the sky above the horizon. And again the dreadful voice
said: “O Muhammad! Thou art Allah’s messenger, and I am Jibril (Gabriel).” Muhammad (peace and
blessings be upon him) stood quite still, turning away his face from the brightness of the vision,
but wherever he turned his face, there stood the angel confronting him. He remained thus a long
while till at length the angel vanished, when he returned in great distress of mind to his wife
Khadijah. She did her best to reassure him, saying that his conduct had been such that Allah would
not let a harmful spirit come to him and that it was her hope that he was to become the Prophet of
his people. On their return to Makkah she took him to her cousin Waraqa ibn Nawfal, a very old man,
“who knew the Scriptures of the Jews and Christians,” who declared his belief that the heavenly
messenger who came to Moses of old had come to Muhammad, and that he was chosen as the Prophet of
his people.
|
Muhammad
eventually accepted the tremendous task imposed on him, becoming filled with enthusiasm of obedience
|
His
Distress
To understand the reason of the Prophet’s diffidence and his extreme distress of mind after the
vision of Hira’, it must be remembered that the Hunafa, of whom he had been one, sought true
religion in the natural world and regarded with distrust the intercourse with spirits of which men
“avid of the Unseen” sorcerers and soothsayers and even poets, boasted in those days. Moreover,
he was a man of humble and devout intelligence, a lover of quiet and solitude and the very thought
of being chosen out of all mankind to face mankind, alone, with such a message, appalled him at the
first.
Recognition
of the Divine nature of the call he had received involved a change in his whole mental outlook
sufficiently disturbing to a sensitive and honest mind, and also the forsaking of his quiet, honored
way of life. The early biographers tell how his wife Khadijah “tested the spirit” which came to
him and proved it to be good, and how, with the continuance of the revelations and the conviction
that they brought, he at length accepted the tremendous task imposed on him, becoming filled with
enthusiasm of obedience which justifies his proudest title of “the Slave of Allah.”
First
Converts
For
the first three years, or rather less, of his mission, the Prophet preached to his family and his
intimate friends, while the people of Makkah as a whole regarded him as one who had become a little
mad. The first of all his converts was his wife Khadijah, the second his first cousin Ali, whom he
had adopted, the third his servant Zayd, a former slave. His old friend Abu Bakr also was among
those early converts.
Beginning
of Persecution
At
the end of the third year the Prophet received the command to “arise and warn,” whereupon he
began to preach in public, pointing out the wretched folly of idolatry in face of the tremendous
laws of day and night, of life and death, of growth and decay, which manifest the power of Allah and
attest His sovereignty. It was then, when he began to speak against their gods, that Quraysh became
actively hostile, persecuting his poorer disciples, mocking and insulting him. The one consideration
which prevented them from killing him was fear of the blood-vengeance of the clan to which his
family belonged. Strong in his inspiration, the Prophet went on warning, pleading, threatening,
while Quraysh did all they could to ridicule his teaching, and deject his followers.
The
Flight to
Abyssinia
|

|
|
A
16th century map of
Abyssinia
– modern day
Ethiopia
|
The
converts of the first four years were mostly humble folk unable to defend themselves against
oppression. So cruel was the persecution they endured that the Prophet advised all who could
possibly contrive to do so to immigrate to a Christian country,
Abyssinia
. And still in spite of persecution and emigration the little company of Muslims grew in number.
Quraysh were seriously alarmed. The idol worship at the Ka`bah, the holy place to which all
Arabia
made pilgrimage, ranked for them, as guardians of the Ka`bah, as first among their vested
interests. At the season of the pilgrimage they posted men on all the roads to warn the tribes
against the “madman” who was preaching in their midst. They tried to bring the Prophet to a
compromise offering to accept his religion if he would so modify it as to make room for their gods
as intercessors with Allah, offering to make him their king if he would give up attacking idolatry;
and, when their efforts at negotiation failed, they went to his uncle Abu Talib offering to give him
the best of their young men in place of Muhammad, to give him all that he desired, if only he would
let them kill Muhammad and have done with him. Abu Talib refused.
Conversion
of Omar
The
exasperation of the idolaters was increased by the conversion of Omar, one of their stalwarts. They
grew more and more embittered, till things came to such a pass that they decided to ostracize the
Prophet’s whole clan, idolaters who protected him as well as Muslims who believed in him. Their
chief men caused a document to be drawn up to the effect that none of them or those belonging to
them would hold any intercourse with that clan or sell to them or buy from them. This they all
signed, and it was deposited in the Ka`bah. Then for three years, the Prophet was shut up with all
his kinsfolk in their stronghold which was situated in one of the gorges which run down to Makkah.
Only at the time of pilgrimage could he go out and preach, or did any of his kinsfolk dare to go
into the city.
Destruction
of the Document
At
length some kinder hearts among Quraysh grew weary of the boycott of old friends and neighbors. They
managed to have the document which had been placed in the Ka`bah brought out for reconsideration;
when it was found that all the writing had been destroyed by white ants, except the words Bismik
Allahumma (“In thy name, O Allah”). When the elders saw that marvel the ban was removed, and the
Prophet was again free to go about the city. But meanwhile the opposition to his preaching had grown
rigid. He had little success among the Makkans, and an attempt which he made to preach in the city
of
Ta’if
was a failure. His mission was a failure, judged by worldly standards, when, at the season of the
yearly pilgrimage he came upon a little group of men who heard him gladly.
The
Men from Yathrib
They
came from Yathrib, a city more than two hundred miles away, which has since become world-famous as
al-Madinah, “the City” par excellence. At Yathrib there were Jewish tribes with learned rabbis,
who had often spoken to the pagans of a Prophet soon to come among the Arabs, with whom, when he
came, the Jews would destroy the pagans as the tribes of ‘Aad and Thamud had been destroyed of old
for their idolatry. When the men from Yathrib saw Muhammad they recognized him as the Prophet whom
the Jewish rabbis had described to them. On their return to Yathrib they told what they had seen and
heard, with the result that the next season of pilgrimage a deputation came from Yathrib purposely
to meet the Prophet.
|
Quraysh
dreaded what the Prophet might become if he escaped from them and so plotted to kill him
|
First
Pact of al-‘Aqabah
These
swore allegiance to him in the first pact of al-‘Aqabah. They then returned to Yathrib with a
Muslim teacher in their, company and soon “there was not a house in Yathrib wherein there was not
mention of the messenger of Allah.”
Second
pact of al-‘Aqabah
In
the following year, at the time of pilgrimage, seventy-three Muslims from Yathrib came to Makkah to
vow allegiance to the Prophet and invite him to their city. At al-‘Aqabah, by night, they swore to
defend him as they would defend their own wives and children. It was then that the Hijrah, the
flight to Yathrib, was decided.
Plot
to Murder the Prophet
Soon
the Muslims who were in a position to do so, began to sell their property and to leave Makkah
unobtrusively. Quraysh had wind of what was going on. They hated Muhammad in their midst, but
dreaded what he might become if he escaped from them. It would be better, they considered, to
destroy him now. The death of Abu Talib had removed his chief protector; but still they had to
reckon with the vengeance of his clan upon the clan of the murderer. They cast lot and chose a
slayer out of every clan. All these were to attack the Prophet simultaneously and strike together,
as one man. Thus his murder would be blamed on all Quraysh. It was at this time (Ibn Khaldun
asserts, and it is the only satisfactory explanation of what happened afterwards) that the Prophet
received the first revelation ordering him to make war upon his persecutors “until persecution is
no more and religion is for Allah only.”
The
Hijrah (
June 20th, 622
C.E.)
The last of the able Muslims to remain in Makkah were Abu Bakr, Ali and the Prophet himself. Abu
Bakr, a man of wealth, had bought two riding camels and retained a guide in readiness for the
flight. The Prophet only waited for God’s command. It came at last. It was the night appointed for
his murder. The slayers were before his house. He gave his cloak to Ali, bidding him lie down on the
bed so that anyone looking in might think Muhammad lay there. The slayers were to strike him as he
came out of the house, whether in the night or early morning. He knew they would not injure Ali.
Then he left the house and, it is said, blindness fell upon the would-be murderers so that he put
dust on their heads as he passed by-without their knowing it.
|
The
Hijrah counts as the beginning of the Muslim era
|
He
went to Abu Bakr’s house and called to him, and they two went together to a cavern in the desert
hill and hid there till the hue and cry was past, Abu Bakr’s son and daughter and his herdsman
bringing them food and tidings after nightfall. Once a search party came quite near them in their
hiding-place, and Abu Bakr was afraid; but the Prophet said: “Fear not! Allah is with us.” Then,
when the coast was clear, Abu Bakr had the riding-camels and the guide brought to the cave one
night, and they set out on the long ride to Yathrib.
After
traveling for many days of unfrequented paths, the fugitives reached a suburb of Yathrib, whither,
for weeks past, the people of the city had been going every morning, watching for the Prophet till
the heat drove them to shelter. The travelers arrived in the heat of the day, after the watchers had
retired. It was a Jew who called out to the Muslims in derisive tones that he whom they expected had
at last arrived.
Such
was the Hijrah, the Flight from Makkah to Yathrib, which counts as the beginning of the Muslim era.
The thirteen years of humiliation, of persecution, of seeming failure, of prophecy still
unfulfilled, were over.
*Taken,
with some editorial changes, from Pickthall’s introduction to his translation of the Qur’an.