| With respect to the lineage of Prophet
Muhammad (PBUH), there are three versions: The first was authenticated by biographers and
genealogists and states that Muhammads genealogy has been traced to Adnan. The
second is subject to controversies and doubt, and traces his lineage beyond Adnan
back to Abraham. The third version, with some parts definitely incorrect, traces his
lineage beyond Abraham back to Adam - Peace be upon him -. After this rapid review, now sample details are believed to
be necessary.
The first part: Muhammad bin
Abdullah bin Abdul-Muttalib (who was called Shaiba) bin Hashim, (named
Amr) bin Abd Munaf (called Al-Mugheera) bin Qusai (also called Zaid) bin Kilab
bin Murra bin Kab bin Loi bin Ghalib bin Fahr (who was called Quraish and
whose tribe was called after him) bin Malik bin An-Nadr (so called Qais) bin Kinana bin
Khuzaiman bin Mudrikah (who was called Amir) bin Elias bin Mudar bin Nizar bin
Maad bin Adnan.
The second part: Adnan bin Add bin
Humaisi bin Salaman bin Aws bin Buz bin Qamwal bin Obai bin Awwam bin Nashid
bin Haza bin Bildas bin Yadlaf bin Tabikh bin Jahim bin Nahish bin Makhi bin Aid bin
Abqar bin Ubaid bin Ad-Daa bin Hamdan bin Sanbir bin Yathrabi bin Yahzin
bin Yalhan bin Arawi bin Aid bin Deshan bin Aisar bin Afnad bin Aiham bin Muksar bin
Nahith bin Zarih bin Sami bin Mazzi bin Awda bin Aram bin Qaidar bin Ishmael son of
Abraham - Peace be upon him -.
The third part: beyond Abraham - Peace be
upon him - , Ibn Tarih (Azar) bin Nahur bin Saru bin Rau bin Falikh bin Abir
bin Shalikh bin Arfakhshad bin Sam bin Noah - Peace be upon him - , bin Lamik bin
Mutwashlack bin Akhnukh [who was said to be Prophet Idris (Enoch) - Peace be upon him -]
bin Yarid bin Mahlail bin Qainan bin Anusha bin Shith bin Adam - Peace be upon him
-.
The Prophetic Family:
The family of Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) is
called the Hashimite family after his grandfather Hashim bin Abd Munaf. Let us now
speak a little about Hashim and his descendants:
1. Hashim: As we have previously
mentioned, he was the one responsible for giving food and water to the pilgrims. This had
been his charge when the sons of Abd Munaf and those of Abd Ad-Dar compromised
on dividing the charges between them. Hashim was wealthy and honest. He was the first to
offer the pilgrims sopped bread in broth. His first name was Amr but he was called
Hashim because he had been in the practice of crumbling bread (for the pilgrims). He was
also the first man who started Quraishs two journeys of summer and winter. It was
reported that he went to Syria as a merchant. In Madinah, he married Salma the
daughter of Amr from Bani Adi bin An-Najjar. He spent some time with her in
Madinah then he left for Syria again while she was pregnant. He died in Ghazza in
Palestine in 497 A.D. Later, his wife gave birth to Abdul-Muttalib and named him
Shaiba for the white hair in his head[], and brought him up in her fathers house in
Madinah. None of his family in Makkah learned of his birth. Hashim had four sons; Asad,
Abu Saifi, Nadla and Abdul-Muttalib, and five daughters Ash-Shifa, Khalida,
Daifa, Ruqyah and Jannah.
2. Abdul-Muttalib: We have
already known that after the death of Hashim, the charge of pilgrims food and water
went to his brother Al-Muttalib bin Abd Munaf (who was honest, generous and
trustworthy). When Abdul-Muttalib reached the age of boyhood, his uncle Al-Muttalib
heard of him and went to Madinah to fetch him. When he saw him, tears filled his eyes and
rolled down his cheeks, he embraced him and took him on his camel. The boy, however
abstained from going with him to Makkah until he took his mothers consent.
Al-Muttalib asked her to send the boy with him to Makkah, but she refused. He managed to
convince her saying: "Your son is going to Makkah to restore his fathers
authority, and to live in the vicinity of the Sacred House." There in Makkah, people
wondered at seeing Abdul-Muttalib, and they considered him the slave of Muttalib.
Al-Muttalib said: "He is my nephew, the son of my brother Hashim." The boy was
brought up in Al-Muttalibs house, but later on Al-Muttalib died in Bardman in Yemen
so Abdul-Muttalib took over and managed to maintain his peoples prestige and
outdo his grandfathers in his honourable behaviour which gained him Makkahs deep
love and high esteem.
When Al-Muttalib died, Nawfal usurped
Abdul-Muttalib of his charges, so the latter asked for help from Quraish but they
abstained from extending any sort of support to either of them. Consequently, he wrote to
his uncles of Bani An-Najjar (his mothers brothers) to come to his aid. His uncle,
Abu Sad bin Adi (his mothers brother) marched to Makkah at the head of
eighty horsemen and camped in Abtah in Makkah. Abdul-Muttalib received the men and
invited them to go to his house but Abu Sad said: "Not before I meet
Nawfal." He found Nawfal sitting with some old men of Quraish in the shade of
Al-Kabah. Abu Sad drew his sword and said: "I swear by Allâh that if you
dont restore to my nephew what you have taken, I will kill you with this
sword." Nawfal was thus forced to give up what he had usurped, and the notables of
Quraish were made to witness to his words. Abu Sad then went to
Abdul-Muttalibs house where he stayed for three nights, made Umra
and left back for Madinah. Later on, Nawfal entered into alliance with Bani Abd
Shams bin Abd Munaf against Bani Hashim. When Khuzaa, a tribe, saw Bani
An-Najjars support to Abdul-Muttalib they said: "He is our son as he is
yours. We have more reasons to support him than you." Abd Munafs mother
was one of them. They went into An-Nadwa House and entered into alliance with Bani Hashim
against Bani Abd Shams and Nawfal. It was an alliance that was later to constitute
the main reason for the conquest of Makkah. Abdul-Muttalib witnessed two important
events in his lifetime, namely digging Zamzam well and the Elephant raid.
In brief, Abdul-Muttalib received
an order in his dream to dig Zamzam well in a particular place. He did that and found the
things that Jurhum men had buried therein when they were forced to evacuate Makkah. He
found the swords, armours and the two deer of gold. The gate of Al-Kabah was stamped
from the gold swords and the two deer and then the tradition of providing Zamzam water to
pilgrims was established.
When the well of Zamzam gushed water
forth, Quraish made a claim to partnership in the enterprise, but Abdul-Muttalib
refused their demands on grounds that Allâh had singled only him out for this honourable
job. To settle the dispute, they agreed to consult Bani Sads diviner. On their
way, Allâh showed them His Signs that confirmed Abdul-Muttalibs prerogative
as regards the sacred spring. Only then did Abdul-Muttalib make a solemn vow to
sacrifice one of his adult children to Al-Kabah if he had ten.
The second event was that of Abraha
As-Sabah Al-Habashi, the Abyssinian (Ethiopian) viceroy in Yemen. He had seen that the
Arabs made their pilgrimage to Al-Kabah so he built a large church in Sana in
order to attract the Arab pilgrims to it to the exclusion of Makkah. A man from Kinana
tribe understood this move, therefore he entered the church stealthily at night and
besmeared its front wall with excrement. When Abraha knew of that, he got very angry and
led a great army of sixty thousand warriors to demolish Al-Kabah. He
chose the biggest elephant for himself. His army included nine or thirteen elephants. He
continued marching until he reached a place called Al-Magmas. There, he mobilized his
army, prepared his elephants and got ready to enter Makkah. When he reached Muhassar
Valley, between Muzdalifah and Mina, the elephant knelt down and refused to go forward.
Whenever they directed it northwards, southwards or eastwards, the elephant moved quickly
but when directed westwards towards Al-Kabah, it knelt down. Meanwhile, Allâh
loosed upon them birds in flights, hurling against them stones of baked clay and made them
like green blades devoured. These birds were very much like swallows and sparrows, each
carrying three stones; one in its peak and two in its claws. The stones hit Abrahas
men and cut their limbs and killed them. A large number of Abrahas soldiers were
killed in this way and the others fled at random and died everywhere. Abraha himself had
an infection that had his fingertips amputated. When he reached Sana he was in a
miserable state and died soon after.
The Quraishites on their part had fled
for their lives to the hillocks and mountain tops. When the enemy had been thus routed,
they returned home safely.
The Event of the Elephant took place in
the month of Al-Muharram, fifty or fifty five days before the birth of Prophet Muhammad
(PBUH) which corresponded to late February or early March 571 A.D. It was a gift from
Allâh to His Prophet and his family. It could actually be regarded as a Divine auspicious
precursor of the light to come and accompany the advent of the Prophet and his family. By
contrast, Jerusalem had suffered under the yoke of the atrocities of Allâhs
enemies. Here we can recall Bukhtanassar in B.C. 587 and the Romans in 70 A.D.
Al-Kabah, by Divine Grace, never came under the hold of the Christians the
Muslims of that time although Makkah was populated by polytheists.
News of the Elephant Event reached the
most distant corners of the then civilized world. Abyssinia (Ethiopia) maintained strong
ties with the Romans, while the Persians on the other hand, were on the vigil with respect
to any strategic changes that were looming on the socio-political horizon, and soon came
to occupy Yemen. Incidentally, the Roman and Persian Empires stood for the powerful
civilized world at that time. The Elephant Raid Event riveted the worlds attention
to the sacredness of Allâhs House, and showed that this House had been chosen by
Allâh for its holiness. It followed then if any of its people claimed Prophethood, it
would be congruous with the outcome of the Elephant Event, and would provide a justifiable
explanation for the ulterior Divine Wisdom that lay behind backing polytheists against
Christians in a manner that transcended the cause-and-effect formula.
Abdul-Muttalib had ten sons,
Al-Harith, Az-Zubair, Abu Talib, Abdullah, Hamzah, Abu Lahab, Ghidaq, Maqwam, Safar
and Al-Abbas. He also had six daughters, who were Umm Al-Hakim the only white
one, Barrah, Atikah, Safiya, Arwa and Omaima.
3. Abdullah: The father of
Prophet Muhammad (PBUH). His mother was Fatimah, daughter of Amr bin
Aidh bin Imran bin Makhzum bin Yaqdha bin Murra. Abdullah was the
smartest of Abdul-Muttalibs sons, the chastest and the most loved. He was also
the son whom the divination arrows pointed at to be slaughtered as a sacrifice to
Al-Kabah. When Abdul-Muttalib had ten sons and they reached maturity, he
divulged to them his secret vow in which they silently and obediently acquiesced. Their
names were written on divination arrows and given to the guardian of their most beloved
goddess, Hubal. The arrows were shuffled and drawn. An arrow showed that it was
Abdullah to be sacrificed. Abdul-Muttalib then took the boy to Al-Kabah
with a razor to slaughter the boy. Quraish, his uncles from Makhzum tribe and his brother
Abu Talib, however, tried to dissuade him from consummating his purpose. He then sought
their advice as regards his vow. They suggested that he summon a she-diviner to judge
whereabout. She ordered that the divination arrows should be drawn with respect to
Abdullah as well as ten camels. She added that drawing the lots should be repeated
with ten more camels every time the arrow showed Abdullah. The operation was thus
repeated until the number of the camels amounted to one hundred. At this point the arrow
showed the camels, consequently they were all slaughtered (to the satisfaction of Hubal)
instead of his son. The slaughtered camels were left for anyone to eat from, human or
animal.
This incident produced a change in the
amount of blood-money usually accepted in Arabia. It had been ten camels, but after this
event it was increased to a hundred. Islam, later on, approved of this. Another thing
closely relevant to the above issue goes to the effect that the Prophet (PBUH)once said:
"I am the offspring of the
slaughtered two," meaning Ishmael and Abdullah.
Abdul-Muttalib chose Amina,
daughter of Wahab bin Abd Munaf bin Zahra bin Kilab, as a wife for his son,
Abdullah. She thus, in the light of this ancestral lineage, stood eminent in respect
of nobility of position and descent. Her father was the chief of Bani Zahra to whom great
honour was attributed. They were married in Makkah, and soon after Abdullah was sent
by his father to buy dates in Madinah where he died. In another version, Abdullah
went to Syria on a trade journey and died in Madinah on his way back. He was buried in the
house of An-Nabigha Al-Judi. He was twenty-five years old when he died. Most
historians state that his death was two months before the birth of Muhammad (PBUH). Some
others said that his death was two months after the Prophets birth. When Amina was
informed of her husbands death, she celebrated his memory in a most heart-touching
elegy.
Abdullah left very little wealth
five camels, a small number of goats, a she-servant, called Barakah Umm Aiman
who would later serve as the Prophets nursemaid. |