| Three Years of Secret
Call: It is well-known
that Makkah was the centre for the Arabs, and housed the custodians of Al-Kabah.
Protection and guardianship of the idols and stone graven images that received veneration
on the part of all the Arabs lay in the hands of the Makkans. Hence the difficulty of
hitting the target of reform and rectitude in a place considered the den of idolatry.
Working in such an atmosphere no doubt requires unshakable will and determination, that is
why the call unto Islam assumed a clandestine form so that the Makkans should not be
enraged by the unexpected surprise.
The Early Converts:
The Prophet (PBUH) naturally initiated his
sacred mission right from home and then moved to the people closely associated with him.
He called unto Islam whomsoever he thought would attest the truth which had come from his
Lord. In fact, a host of people who nursed not the least seed of doubt as regards the
Prophet (PBUH), immediately responded and quite readily embraced the true faith. They are
known in the Islamic literature as the early converts.
Khadijah, the Prophets spouse, the
mother of believers, was the first to enter the fold of Islam followed by his freed slave
Zaid bin Harithah, his cousin, Ali bin Abi Talib, who had been living with him since
his early childhood, and next came his intimate friend Abu Bakr As-Siddiq (Abu Bakr the
truth verifier). All of those professed Islam on the very first day of the call. Abu Bakr,
and from the first day he embraced Islam, proved to be an energetic and most zealous
activist. He was wealthy, obliging, mild and upright. People used to frequent his house
and draw nigh to him for his knowledge, amity, pleasant company and business. He invited
whomever he had confidence in to Islam and through his personal efforts a good number of
people converted to Islam, such as Uthman bin Affan Al-Umawi, Az-Zubair bin
Awwam Al-Asadi, Abdur Rahman bin Awf, Sad bin Abi Waqqas, Az-Zuhri
and Talhah bin Ubaidullah At-Tamimy. Those eight men constituted the forerunners and
more specifically the vanguard of the new faith in Arabia. Among the early Muslim were
Bilal bin Rabah (the Abyssinian), Abu Ubaidah bin Al-Jarrah from Bani Harith bin
Fahr (the most trustworthy of the Muslim Nation), Abu Salamah bin Abd Al-Asad,
Al-Arqam bin Abi Al-Arqam from the tribe of Makhzum, Uthman bin Mazoun and his
two brothers Qudama and Abdullah, Ubaidah bin Al-Harith bin Al-Muttalib bin
Abd Munaf, Said bin Zaid Al-Adawi and his wife Fatimah - daughter of
Al-Khattab (the sister of Umar bin Al-Khattab), Khabbab bin Al-Aratt,
Abdullāh bin Masud Al-Hadhali and many others. These were the Muslim
predecessors. They belonged to various septs of Quraish. Ibn Hisham, a biographer, counted
them to be more than forty.
Ibn Ishaq said: "Then people entered
the fold of Islam in hosts, men or women and the new faith could no longer be kept
secret."
The Prophet (PBUH) used to meet and teach,
the new converts, the religion in privacy because the call to Islam was still running on
an individual and secret basis. Revelation accelerated and continued after the first
verses of "O you wrapped in garments." The verses and pieces of Sūrah
(chapters) revealed at this time were short ones with wonderful strong pauses and quite
fascinating rhythms in full harmony with that delicate whispering setting. The central
topic running through them focused on sanctifying the soul, and deterring the Muslims from
falling prey to the deceptive glamour of life. The early verses used as well to give a
highly accurate account of the Hell and the Garden (Paradise), leading the believers down
a new course diametrically opposed to the ill practices rampant amongst their compatriots.
As-Salāt (the Prayer):
Muqatil bin Sulaiman said: "Salāt
(prayer) was established as an obligatory ritual at an early stage of the Islamic Call, a
two rak ah (unit of prayer) Salāt in the morning and the same in the
evening;
"And glorify the praises of your Lord
in the Ashi (i.e. the time period after the mid-noon till sunset) and in the Ibkar
(i.e. the time period from early morning or sunrise till before mid-noon)." [40:55]
Ibn Hijr said: "Definitely the Prophet
(PBUH) used to pray before The Night Journey but it still remains a matter of
controversy whether or not the prayer was established as an obligatory ritual before
imposing the rules of the usual five prayers a day. It is related that obligatory prayer
was established twice a day, in the morning before sunrise and after sunset. It is
reported through a chain of narrators that when the Prophet (PBUH) received the first
Revelation, Gabriel - the angel, proceeded and taught him how to observe Wudu
(ablution). When the Prophet (PBUH) had finished, he took a handful of water and sprinkled
it on his loins.
Ibn Hisham reported that when it was time
for prayers, the Messenger of Allāh (PBUH) and his Companions went into a mountain valley
to pray secretly. Abu Talib once saw the Messenger of Allāh (PBUH) and Ali praying, he
asked them what they were up to. When he got to know that it was obligatory prayer, he
told them to stay constant in their practice.
The Quraishites learn about the Call:
This stage of the Call, even though
conducted in a clandestine manner and on an individual basis, its news leaked out and
assumed a public interest all over Makkah. In the beginning, the Makkan leaders did not
care much about Muhammad (PBUH) and took no heed of his teachings. At first, they thought
that Muhammad (PBUH) was merely a religious philosophist like Omaiyah bin Abi As-Salt,
Quss bin Saidah, Amr bin Nufail and their ilk who used to philosophize on
godship and religious obligations. But this attitude of indifference soon changed into
real apprehension. The polytheists of Quraish began to watch Muhammads movements
closely and anxiously for fear of spreading his Call and producing a change in the
prevalent mentality.
For three underground years of activism, a
group of believers emerged stamped by a spirit of fraternity and cooperation with one
definite objective in their mind: propagating and deeply establishing the call unto Islam.
For full three years Muhammad (PBUH) had been content to teach within a rather narrow
circle. The time had, however, come to preach the faith of the Lord openly. The angel
Gabriel had brought him down a further Revelation of Allāhs Will to confront his
people, invalidate their falsehood and crush down their idolatrous practices. |