| Emigration to Madinah could never be
attributable to attempts to escape from jeers and oppression only, but it also constituted
a sort of cooperation with the aim of erecting the pillars of a new society in a secure
place. Hence it was incumbent upon every capable Muslim to contribute to building this new
homeland, immunizing it and holding up its prop. As a leader and spiritual guide, there
was no doubt the Noble Messenger (PBUH), in whose hands exclusively all affairs would be
resolved. In Madinah, the Prophet
(PBUH) had to deal with three distinctively different categories of people with different
respective problems:
- His Companions, the noble and Allâh
fearing elite - may Allah be pleased with them all -
- Polytheists still detached from the Islam
and were purely Madinese tribes.
- The Jews.
1. As for his Companions, the conditions
of life in Madinah were totally different from those they experienced in Makkah. There, in
Makkah, they used to strive for one corporate target, but physically, they were scattered,
overpowered and forsaken. They were helpless in terms of pursuing their new course of
orientation. Their means, socially and materially, fell short of establishing a new Muslim
community. In parallel lines, the Makkan Chapters of the Noble Qurân were confined
to delineating the Islamic precepts, enacting legislations pertaining to the believers
individually and enjoining good and piety and forbidding evils and vices.In Madinah , things were otherwise; here all the
affairs of their life rested in their hands. Now, they were at ease and could quite
confidently handle the challenges of civilization, construction, means of living,
economics, politics, government administration, war and peace, codification of the
questions of the allowed and prohibited, worship, ethics and all the relevant issues. In a
nutshell, they were in Madinah at full liberty to erect the pillars of a new Muslim
community not only utterly different from that pre-Islamic code of life, but also
distinctive in its features in the world at large. It was a society that could stand for
the Islamic Call for whose sake the Muslims had been put to unspeakable tortures for 10
years. No doubt, the construction of a society that runs in line with this type of ethics
cannot be accomplished overnight, within a month or a year. It requires a long time to
build during which legislation and legalization will run gradually in a complementary
process with mind cultivation, training and education. Allâh, the All-Knowing, of course
undertook legislation and His Prophet Muhammad (PBUH), implementation and orientation:
"He it is Who sent among the
unlettered ones a Messenger (Muhammad (PBUH) ) from among themselves, reciting to them His
Verses, purifying them (from the filth of disbelief and polytheism), and teaching them the
Book (this Qurân, Islamic laws and Islamic Jurisprudence) and Al-Hikmah (As-Sunna:
legal ways, orders, acts of worship, etc. of the Prophet Muhammad (PBUH))." [62:2]
The Prophets Companions - may Allah
be pleased with them all - , rushed enthusiastically to assimilate these Qurânic
rules and fill their hearts joyfully with them:
"And when His Verses (this
Qurân) are recited unto them, they (i.e. the Verses) increase their Faith."
[8:2]
With respect to the Muslims, this task
constituted the greatest challenge for the Messenger of Allâh (PBUH). In fact, this very
purpose lay at the heart of the Islamic Call and the Muhammadan mission; it was never an
incidental issue though there were the matters that required urgent addressing.
The Muslims in Madinah consisted
virtually of two parties: The first one already settled down in their abode, land and
wealth, fully at ease, but seeds of discord amongst them were deeply seated and chronic
enmity continually evoked; they were Al-Ansar (the Helpers). The second party were Al-Muhajirun
(the Emigrants), homeless, jobless and penniless. Their number was not small, on the
contrary, it was increasing day by day after the Prophet (PBUH) had given them the green
light to leave for Madinah whose economic structure, originally not that prosperous one,
began to show signs of imbalance aggravated by the economic boycott that the anti-Islamic
groups imposed and consequently imports diminished and living conditions worsened.
- The purely Madinese polytheists
constituted the second sector with whom the Prophet (PBUH)had to deal. Those people had no
control at all over the Muslim. Some of them nursed no grudge against the Muslims, but
were rather skeptical of their ancestors religious practices, and developed
tentative inclination towards Islam and before long they embraced the new faith and were
truly devoted to Allâh. However, some others harboured evil intentions against the
Prophet (PBUH) and his followers but were too cowardly to resist them publicly, they were
rather, under those Islamically favourable conditions, obliged to fake amicability and
friendliness. Abdullah bin Ubai, who had almost been given presidency over
Al-Khazraj and Al-Aws tribes in the wake of Buath War between the two tribes, came
at the head of that group of hypocrites. The Prophets advent and the vigorous rise
of the new spirit of Islam foiled that orientation and the idea soon went into oblivion.
He, seeing another one, Muhammad (PBUH), coming to deprive him and his agents of the
prospective temporal privileges, could not be pleased, and for overriding reasons he
showed pretension to Islam but with horrible disbelief deeply-rooted in his heart. He also
used to exploit some events and weak-hearted new converts in scheming malevolently against
the true believers.
- The Jews (the Hebrews), who had migrated
to Al-Hijaz from Syria following the Byzantine and Assyrian persecution campaigns, were
the third category existent on the demographic scene in Madinah. In their new abode they
assumed the Arabian stamp in dress, language and manner of life and there were instances
of intermarriage with the local Arabs, however they retained their ethnic particularism
and detached themselves from amalgamation with the immediate environment. They even used
to pride in their Jewish-Israeli origin, and spurn the Arabs around designating them as
illiterate meaning brutal, naïve and backward. They desired the wealth of their
neighbours to be made lawful to them and they could thus appropriate it the way they
liked.
"
because they say: "There
is no blame on us to betray and take the properties of the illiterates (Arabs)"
[3:75]
Religiously, they showed no zeal; their
most obvious religious commodity was fortunetelling, witchcraft and the secret arts
(blowing on knots), for which they used to attach to themselves advantages of science and
spiritual precedence.
They excelled at the arts of earning
money and trading. They in fact monopolized trading in cereals, dates, wine, clothes,
export and import. For the services they offered to the Arabs, the latter paid heavily.
Usury was a common practice amongst them, lending the Arab notables great sums to be
squandered on mercenary poets, and in vanity avenues, and in return seizing their fertile
land given as surety.
They were very good at corrupting and
scheming. They used to sow seeds of discord between adjacent tribes and entice each one to
hatch plots against the other with the natural corollary of continual exhaustive bloody
fighting. Whenever they felt that fire of hatred was about to subside, they would nourish
it with new means of perpetuity so that they could always have the upper hand, and at the
same time gain heavy interest rates on loans spent on inter-tribal warfare.
Three famous tribes of Jews constituted
the demographic presence in Yathrib (now Madinah): Banu Qainuqua, allies of
Al-Khazraj tribe, Banu An-Nadir and Banu Quraizah who allied Al-Aws and inhabited the
suburbs of Madinah.
Naturally they held the new changes with
abhorrence and were terribly hateful to them, simply because the Messenger of Allâh was
of a different race, and this point was in itself too repugnant for them to reconcile
with. Second, Islam came to bring about a spirit of rapport, to terminate the state of
enmity and hatred, and to establish a social regime based on denunciation of the
prohibited and promotion of the allowed. Adherence to these canons of life implied paving
the way for an Arab unity that could work to the prejudice of the Jews and their interests
at both the social and economic levels; the Arab tribes would then try to restore their
wealth and land misappropriated by the Jews through usurious practices.
The Jews of course deeply considered all
these things ever since they had known that the Islamic Call would try to settle in
Yathrib, and it was no surprise to discover that they harboured the most enmity and hatred
to Islam and the Messenger (PBUH) even though they did not have the courage to uncover
their feelings in the beginning.
The following incident could attest
clearly to that abominable antipathy that the Jews harboured towards the new political and
religious changes that came to stamp the life of Madinah. Ibn Ishaq, on the authority of
the Mother of believers Safiyah - may Allah be pleased with her - narrated: Safiyah,
daughter of Huyayi bin Akhtab said: I was the closest child to my father and my uncle Abi
Yasirs heart. Whenever they saw me with a child of theirs, they should pamper me so
tenderly to the exclusion of anyone else. However, with the advent of the Messenger of
Allâh (PBUH)and setting in Quba with Bani Amr bin Awf, my father,
Huyayi bin Akhtab and my uncle Abu Yasir bin Akhtab went to see him and did not return
until sunset when they came back walking lazily and fully dejected. I, as usually, hurried
to meet them smiling, but they would not turn to me for the grief that caught them. I
heard my uncle Abu Yasir say to Ubai and Huyayi: "Is it really he (i.e. Muhammad
(PBUH) )?" The former said: "It is he, I swear by Allâh!" "Did you
really recognize him?" they asked. He answered: "Yes, and my heart is burning
with enmity towards him"
An interesting story that took place on
the first day, the Prophet (PBUH) stepped in Madinah, could be quoted to illustrate the
mental disturbance and deep anxiety that beset the Jews. Abdullah bin Salam, the
most learned rabbi among the Jews came to see the Prophet (PBUH) when he arrived, and
asked him certain questions to ascertain his real Prophethood. No sooner did he hear the
Prophets answers than he embraced Islam, but added that if his people knew of his
Islamization they would advance false arguments against me. The Prophet (PBUH) sent for
some Jews and asked them about Abdullah bin Salam, they testified to his scholarly
aptitude and virtuous standing. Here it was divulged to them that he had embraced Islam
and on the spot, they imparted categorically opposite testimonies and described him as the
most evil of all evils. In another narration Abdullah bin Salam said, "O Jews!
Be Allâh fearing. By Allâh, the only One, you know that he is the Messenger of Allâh
sent to people with the Truth." They replied, "You are lying." ... That was
the Prophets first experience with the Jews.
That was the demo-political picture
within Madinah. Five hundred kilometres away in Makkah, there still lay another source of
detrimental threat, the archenemy of Islam, Quraish. For ten years, while at the mercy of
Quraish, the Muslims were subjected to all sorts of terrorism, boycott, harassment and
starvation coupled by a large scale painstaking psychological war and aggressive organized
propaganda. When they had emigrated to Madinah, their land, wealth and property were
seized, wives detained and the socially humble in rank brutally tortured. Quraish also
schemed and made attempts on the life of the first figure of the Call, Muhammad (PBUH) .
Due to their acknowledged temporal leadership and religious supremacy among the pagan
Arabs, given the custodianship of the Sacred Sanctuary, the Quraishites spared no effort
in enticing the Arabians against Madinah and boycotting the Madinese socially and
economically. To quote Muhammad Al-Ghazali: "A state of war virtually existed between
the Makkan tyrants and the Muslims in their abode. It is foolish to blame the Muslims for
the horrible consequences that were bound to ensue in the light of that long-standing
feud."
The Muslims in Madinah were completely
eligible then to confiscate the wealth of those tyrants, mete out for them exemplary
punishment and bring twofold retaliation on them in order to deter them from committing
any folly against the Muslims and their sanctities.
That was a resume of the major problems
that the Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) had to face, and the complicated issues he was supposed
to resolve.
In full acknowledgment, we could safely
say that he quite honestly shouldered the responsibilities of Messengership, and cleverly
discharged the liabilities of both temporal and religious leadership in Madinah. He
accorded to everyone his due portion whether of mercy or punishment, with the former
usually seasoning the latter in the overall process of establishing Islam on firm grounds
among its faithful adherents. |