The
Prophet had kept his mission concealed for three years after he received
the first revelations. The Muslim brotherhood had functioned as a secret
society. Ibn Ishãq gives a list of persons who had joined.1
“The advantage of the darkness for the first few years was great. The darkness
saved it from being crushed at the outset. Ridicule and contempt could
be more easily endured when some hundred persons were involved, than if
the Prophet had been compelled to endure them by himself. It saved him,
too, from the character of the eccentric sage (such as Waraqa and others
had borne), investing him from his first public appearance
with that of the leader of a party; it gave the Prophet time to secure
over a reasonable number of people that influence which he could exercise
to a reasonable degree.”2
People in Mecca
had, however, sensed that something was afoot. From the first, Muslims
had been directed by Allãh to offer prayers in congregation. They
could not do it inside the city so long as they were an underground organisation.
“When the apostle’s companions prayed,” reports Ibn Ishãq, “they
went to the glens so that people could not see them praying, and while
Sa‘d b. Abû Waqqãs was with a number of the prophet’s companions
in one of the glens of Mecca, a band of polytheists came upon them while
they were praying and rudely interrupted them. They
blamed them for what they were doing until they came to blows, and it was
on that occasion that Sa‘d smote a polytheist with the jawbone of a camel
and wounded him. That was the first blood to be shed in Islam.”3
No reprisals from the pagan side are reported.
Some more incidents
of a similar king happened and the offenders went unpunished. The pagans
were not organised in an ideologically oriented group, secret or open,
to be able to meet the challenge promptly and effectively. As it happens
in every pluralistic society faced with an aggressive and determined minority,
the Meccan majority showed only surprise and pain at what was happening.
This state of helplessness displayed by the majority helped the Muslims
to acquire contempt for it; some faint-hearted pagans chose to go over
fast to what looked like the winning side. So the secret society felt sufficiently
self-confident to come out in the open. “People began to accept Islam,
both men and women, in large numbers until the fame of it spread throughout
Mecca, and it began to be talked about. Then God commanded His apostle
to declare the truth of what he had received and make known His commandments
to men and call them to Him. Three years elapsed
from the time the apostle concealed his state until God commanded him to
publish his religion, according to information which has reached me. Then
God said, ‘Proclaim what you have been ordered and turn aside from the
polytheists.”’4
The “religion”
proclaimed was very simple-the end of the world is near at hand; on the
Last Day the dead will be raised and judged; those who had believed in
Allãh as the only god and in Muhammad as the last Prophet will enter
paradise for an everlasting life of the rarest pleasures; those who ascribed
partners to Allãh or denied Muhammad’s prophethood or did both will
be thrown into blazing hell-fire and subjected to ever more terrible torments
without end or relief. It was made quite clear at the very outset that
belief in Allãh as the only God was not enough; it had to he accompanied
by the belief that Muhammad was the only mediator through whom Allãh’s
mercy could be sought or obtained.
There were, of
course, some novel ways of worshipping Allãh and leading a pious
life. What startled the Meccans, however, was the polemics which accompanied
the publicity of Islam. “To avow Islam meant to renounce publicly the national
worship, to ridicule, and if possible to break down idols, and unabashedly
to use the new salutation and to celebrate the new-fangled rites. For it
must be remembered that Islam was in its nature polemical. Its Allah was
not satisfied with worship, unless similar honour was paid to no other
name; and his worship also was intolerant of idols, and of all rites not
instituted by himself… Mohammed and Abu Bakr were planning an attack on
the national religion, that cult which every Meccan proudly remembered
had within their memory been defended by a miracle from the Abyssinian
invaders and in their myths had often thus triumphed before. The gods they
worshipped were, Mohammed and Abu Bakr asserted,
no gods. For their worship these innovators would substitute that of the
Jews whose power in South Arabia had recently been overthrown, and of the
Christians with whose defeat the national spirit of Arabia had just awakened.”5
The pagan response
was slow in crystallizing. The first thing which the pagans did was to
lead several delegations to Abû Tãlib, Muhammad’s uncle and
guardian. They told him that his nephew had “cursed our gods, insulted
our religion, mocked our way of life and accused our forefathers of error”,
and requested him to restrain the revolutionary. Abû
Tãlib was conciliatory and tried to persuade Muhammad to go slow.
“Do not put on me a burden greater than I can bear”, he said to his nephew.
But the Prophet “continued on his way, publishing God’s religion and calling
men therein.”6 His uncle
was in no position to stop him. “Perhaps Abu Talib and his numerous
family could not afford to abandon their wealthy relative; and, indeed,
had Mohammed not had some power over his uncle, it is unlikely that the
latter would have submitted to the inconvenience which his nephew’s mission
brought on him.”7
Meanwhile, Islam
was having an impact on Meccan society which was even more painful for
a people wedded to the solidarity of family and clan. Every family from
which a member or members had converted to the new creed was under severe
strain. Sons were not only becoming rude to their parents but also pouring
contempt on the elders’ way of life and worship. Brothers were becoming
estranged. Marriages in which one of the partners
had converted, were breaking up fast. As al-Walîd b. al-Mughîra,
a man of standing in Mecca, observed, Muhammad looked like “a sorcerer
who has brought a message by which he separates a man from his father,
or from his brother, or from his wife, or from his family.”8
“The view prevalent
at Meccah concerning Mohammad appears to have been that he was mad-under
the influence of a Jinn, one of the beings who were supposed to speak through
poets and sorcerers. That this charge stung Mohammed
to the quick may be inferred from the virulence with which he rejects it,
and the invective with which he attacks the ‘bastard’ who had uttered it.
He charges the author of the outrage with being unable to write and with
being over head and ears in debt and threatens to brand him on his ‘proboscis.’”9
Allãh thundered on his prophet’s behalf: “You are not a mad man… And
you will see and they will see, which of you is the demented. Therefore
obey not you the rejecters, who would have you compromise, that they may
compromise: Neither obey you each feeble oath-monger, detractor, spreader
abroad of slanders, hinderer, of the good, an aggressor, malefactor, greedy
therewithal, intrusive. We shall brand him on the nose.”10
This loss of temper
on Allãh’s part, however, served only to confirm the Meccans in
their suspicion. Another incident gave strength
to it. One day some Meccans were assembled in the precincts of the Ka‘ba
when Muhammad also happened to come by. The Meccans made some remarks within
his hearing. Muhammad hit back, “By him who holds my life in His hand,
I bring you slaughter.”11 The Meccans were
stunned. They concluded that something had happened to Muhammad who had
been known earlier as a man of even temper. Muhammad had claimed that an
angel came to him often with Allãh’s revelations. The Meccans became
sure that he was being visited by some malevolent Spirit.
The
Meccans sent ‘Utba b. Rabî‘a, one of their chiefs, to Muhammad. Among
other offers made by ‘Utba to Muhammad, one was that of providing medical
relief. ‘Utba said, “If this ghost which comes to you, which you see, is
such that you cannot get rid of him, we will find a physician for you,
and exhaust our means in getting you cured, for often a spirit gets possession
of a man until he can be cured of it.”12 The
Prophet remained calm, explained his mission to ‘Utba, and recited some
Qur’ãn. ‘Utba came back convinced that Muhammad was quite sane and
advised the Meccans to leave him alone. “If (other) Arabs kill him, others
will have rid you of him,” he said.13 The
Meccans, however, did not agree with him. They decided to launch an offensive
against the Prophet. Their patience had come to an end.
The questions
which the Meccans posed and the observations they made are scattered over
many chapters of Qur’ãn. We have collected and sorted them out with
reference to subject and logical sequence. “The
objections recorded and ostensibly answered in the Koran appear to have
been directed against every part and feature of the new system; against
Mohammed personally, against his notion of prophecy, against his style,
his statements, his doctrines. It is impossible to suggest any chronological
scheme for them.”14
The manner in
which the debate is recorded in the Qur’ãn is somewhat strange.
The Meccans must have said what they said, to Muhammad and his Muslims
directly, or among themselves. But the answers come invariably from Allãh
in the form of revelations. It appears as if Allãh thought it hazardous
to depend upon the credibility or the capacity of his prophet to meet the
challenge. “The debate with which the earlier years were filled was conducted
in a variety of ways. Occasionally the Prophet himself condescended to
enter the arena, and confront his antagonists: he was indeed a powerful
preacher and ‘when he talked of the Day of Judgment his cheeks blazed,
and his voice rose, and his manner was fiery’; apparently, however, he
was not a ready debater, and was worsted when he tried the plan. Moreover,
his temper in debate was not easily controlled, and he was apt to give
violent and insulting answers to questioners. He therefore received
divine instruction not to take part in open debate, to evade the question
and if questioned by the unbelievers, retire.”15
Cynics may say
that the Prophet was using Allãh as an alibi. Whatever be the truth,
Allãh’s intervention helped in preserving some very significant
pagan statements, as we shall see. The biographers of the Prophet do indicate
that a debate took place during his mission at Mecca. But their reports
on the subject are one-sided, apart from being sketchy.
The style in which
the pagan questions are posed and Allãh’s answers stated in the
Qur’ãn is stereotyped. The points the Meccans made are preceded
by the phrase, “They say”, and Allãh’s rejoinders by the phrase,
“Say”. Allãh looks like a prompter guiding from the wings an actor
on the stage. Quite often, the debate is reported as having taken place
between some earlier prophet and his people. It
is obvious, however, that the participants meant are Muhammad and his pagan
contemporaries, “More often then the controversy was conducted as it is…
in election times, when different speakers address different meetings.
The points are recorded and reported by members of the audience to the
antagonists; who then proceed if they deem it worth while, in some manner
to reply.”16
To start with,
the Meccans felt amused that a man like Muhammad, who was distinguished
neither by birth nor breeding, should strut around proclaiming himself
a prophet. Muhammad’s followers also came from classes and occupations
which were not very respectable according to Meccan standards. Allãh
reports: “When they see you (O Muhammad) they treat you as a jest saying:
Is he (the man) whom Allãh has sent as a messenger? He would
have led us far away from our gods if we had not been staunch to them…
Has he invented a lie concerning Allãh or is there some madness
in him? …Shall we forsake our gods for a mad poet? …Or one of the gods
has possessed you in an evil way… Shall we put faith in you when the lowest
(people) follow you? …We see you but mortal (man) like us, and we see not
that any save the most abject among us follow you, without reflection.
We behold in you no merit above us-nay, we deem you liars… We are surely
better than this fellow who can hardly make (his meaning) clear… We
do not understand much of what you say, and we see you weak among us… We
are more (than you) in wealth, and in children… Why are not angels sent
down unto us, and why do we not see our Lord? …If you cease not, you will
soon be the outcast.”17
Allãh keeps
mum about his Prophet’s birth and breeding. About the Prophet’s followers
he says that their past is not relevant after they have come to the true
faith. He assures the Meccans that Muhammad is neither mad, nor a poet,
nor possessed. He laments that the Meccans think too highly of themselves
and are proud and scornful. He assures Muhammad that the time is fast approaching
when it will be found out who is really mad, and that the disbelievers
shall stand humbled.
Muhammad’s and
his followers’ low birth and lack of breeding may sound a merit in our
own times when an inverted snobbery, which prizes them above everything
else, has been made fashionable by Marxism and allied ideologies; one has
to hide one’s high birth and breeding these days in order to pass muster.
To the Meccans of the seventh century as to their contemporary societies,
however, Muhammad’s bio-data disqualified him, at least as a messenger
from Allãh. Biographers of the prophet would not have taken the
pains they took, and invented fables in order to invest Muhammad with a
distinguished pedigree, had not his background been seen by them as a distinct
disadvantage to his claims and career. Margoliouth has cited several early
Muslim sources to conclude that Muhammad’s grandfather, ‘Abd
al-MuTTalib, was a manumitted slave who made his living by means which
were not considered honourable in Mecca at that time, namely, lending money
and providing water and food to the pilgrims for a consideration.18
In any case, there is no escape from the evidence provided by the Qur’ãn
that Muhammad himself felt deeply hurt by the jibes hurled at him by the
Meccans and sought consolation from Allãh. It appears that he himself
shared the standards or prejudices of his age.
Another point
which provided amusement to the Meccans was the Prophet’s incapacity to
perform miracles. He had himself invited the trouble by producing revelations
in which the preceding prophets, particularly Moses and Jesus, had exhibited
supernatural powers. Allãh reports: “They say: This is only a mortal
like you who would make himself superior to you… He is only a man in whom
there is a madness. So watch him for a while… This is only a mortal like
you who eats whereof you eat, and drinks of what you drink… If you were
to obey a mortal like yourselves, you surely will be losers… What ails
the messenger of Allãh that he eats and walks in the markets? …You
are but mortals like us who would fain turn us away from what our fathers
used to worship… shall mere mortals guide us? …You are but a mortal man
like us. RaHmãn has naught revealed to you but a lie… Is this other
than a mortal man? Will you then succumb to magic when you see it? …So
bring some token if you are of the truthful… If only some portent were
sent down upon him from his Lord … If only he would bring us a miracle
from the Lord… Why are no portents sent down upon him? …Why then have armlets
of gold not been set upon him, or angles sent along with him? …We shall
not put faith in you till you cause a spring to gush forth from the earth
for us, or you have a garden of date-palms and grapes and cause rivers
to gush forth therein abundantly, or you cause the heavens to fall peacemeal
as you have pretended, or bring Allãh and the angels as warrant, or
you have a house of gold, or you ascend into heaven, and even then we will
put no faith in your ascension till you bring down a book that we can read…
Or why is not treasure thrown down unto him or why has he not a paradise
from whence to eat? …You are following but a man bewitched…”19
Allãh assures
the Meccans: “Your comrade errs not, nor is deceived… Surely he beheld
him (the angel) on the horizon. Nor is he avid of the unseen…” He commands
the Prophet: “Say: You are a warner only… Say: I am naught save a mortal
messenger… Portents are with Allãh and I am a warner only… Allãh
is able to send down a portent. But most of them known not…” He reminds
Muhammed that the Meccans are not likely to believe even if a miracle is
shown to them. “The hour drew nigh and the moon was rent in twain. And
if they behold a portent, they turn away and say: Prolonged illusion.”20
According to some commentators on the Qur’ãn, this revelation refers
to an actual miracle performed by the Prophet. One night the moon had split
into two and Mount Hara was seen standing between the two parts. But the
Meccans dismissed it as an illusion. Other commentators, however, say that
this refers to a future event when the Last Day will be near at hand.
The Meccan stood
firm by their gods; their faith in the gods was not at all shaken by Muhammad’s
attacks. Allãh reports: “When it was said unto them, There is no
God save Allãh, they were scornful, and said: Shall we forsake our
gods for a mad poet?… And they marvel that a warner from among themselves
has come. They say: This is a wizard, a charlatan. Makes he the gods
One God? This is an astounding thing… The chiefs among them go about exhorting:
Go and be staunch by your gods. This is a thing designed (against) you.
We have not heard this earlier in our religion. This is naught but an invention.
Has a Reminder been revealed unto him alone among us?… Why not Allãh
speak to us, or some sign come to us?… Had Allãh willed we would
not have ascribed (unto him) partners, neither our forefathers… Had
Allãh willed we would not have worshipped aught beside Him, we and
our forefathers, nor forbidden aught commanded from Him… We worship them
only that they may bring us near unto Allãh… He has invented a lie
about Allãh…”21
Some of their
observations were addressed to Muhammad, though reported by Allãh:
“Enough for us is that wherein we found our forefathers. Have you come
to us that we serve Allãh alone and foresake what our fathers worshipped?
Do you ask us not to worship what our forefathers worshipped? We are in
grave doubt concerning that to which you call us… Does your way of prayer
command you that we should forsake that which our forefathers worshipped
?… We found our forefathers following a religion,
and we are guided by their footprints. In what you bring we are disbelievers…
O Wizard! Entreat your Lord by the pact he has made with you, so that we
may walk aright…”22
The Meccans were
in no mood to accept the name which Muhammad wanted to foist on Allãh:
“When they see you, they but choose you out of mockery: Is this (the man)
who makes mockery of our gods? And they would deny all mention of
the RaHmãn… And when they are asked to adore RaHmãn, they
say: What is RaHmãn? Are we to adore whatever you bid us?
And it increases aversion in them… And when the
son of Mary is quoted as an example, behold! the folk laugh out, and say:
Are our gods better, or is he?… They call our revelations false with strong
denial… And when the Qur’ãn is recited unto them, they do not prostrate
themselves.”23
But, as Muhammad
persisted in reviling their gods, the Meccans decided to hit back. They
met him and said: “Muhammad, you will either stop cursing our gods, or
we will curse your Allãh.” They had understood finally that the
Allãh whose will Muhammad was revealing was not the Allãh
they worshipped. Allãh of the Qur’ãn felt concerned at this
new turn and revealed, “Had Allãh willed, they would not have been
idolatrous. We have not set you as a keeper over
them, nor are you responsible for them. Revile not
those unto whom they pray beside Allah lest they wrongfully revile Allah
through ignorance.”24 Ibn Ishãq observes:
“I have been told that the apostle refrained from cursing their gods, and
began to call them to Allãh.”25
The Meccans, however,
were not at all impressed by the revelations produced by the Prophet; they
did not accept his claim that he received them from some higher source.
They thought that he was inventing them himself. Allãh reports:
“They say: This is naught else than the speech of a mortal man… This is
naught else than an invented lie… Nay, say they,
(these are but) muddled dreams, he has but invented it; nay, he is but
a poet… And when our revelations are recited unto them, they say: We have
heard. If we wish we can speak the like of this. This is naught but fables
of the men of old…”26
Muhammad
threw a challenge to the Meccans. Allãh prompted him: “Say: Then
bring a sûrah like unto it, and call (for help) all you can besides
Allãh if you are truthful.”27 The
challenge was accepted by al-NaDr b. Hãrith, a Meccan chief, who
said: “I can tell a better story than he… In what respect is Muhammad a
better story-teller?”28 He
told several stories in verses which were like verses of the Qur’ãn.
Muhammad felt outraged and never forgave al-NaDr. “The effect of the criticism
must have been very damaging; for when the Prophet at the battle of Badr
got the man into his power, he executed him at once while he allowed the
others to be ransomed.”29 Ibn
Ishãq confirms that when the apostle was at al-Safrã’ on
his way back from Badr. “al-NaDr was killed by ‘Alî…”30 But
while the Prophet was still in Mecca, Allãh thought it wise to pacify
the pagans. He revealed: “It is not a poet’s speech… nor diviner’s speech.
And if he had invented false sayings, we assuredly had taken him by the
right hand, and severed his life-artery, and not one of you could have
held us off from him.”31
The more knowledgeable
among the Meccans suspected that Muhammad was only repeating what he had
learnt from the People of the Book, Jews and Christians. Allãh reports:
“They say: And we know well that only a man teaches him… This
is naught but a lie that he has invented and other folk have helped him
so that they produced a slander and a lie… Fables of men of old which he
has written down so that they are dictated to him morn and evening… One
taught (by others), a mad man…”32
There were several
stories current in Mecca regarding the particular person or persons who
coached Muhammad in biblical lore which, they said, was all that came out
in the Qur’ãn. “One account says it was Jabar, a Greek servant to
Amer Ebn al Hadrami, who could read and write well; another, that they
were Jabar and Yesar, two slaves who followed the trade of sword cutlers
at Mecca, and used to read the pentateuch and gospel and had often Mohammed
as their auditor, when he passed that way. Another
tells us it was Aîsh, or Yãsîh, a domestic of al Haweiteb
Ebn Abd al ‘Uzzã, who was a man of some learning, and had embraced
Mohammedanism. Another supposes it was Kais, a Christian, whose house Muhammad
frequented; another, that it was Addãs, a servant of Otba Ebn Rabia…”33
Having seen the
People of the Book from close quarters, the Meccans found it difficult
to believe that divine knowledge had been sent to the Jews and the Christians
long ago, and that they themselves were deprived of it till the advent
of Muhammad. Allãh proceeds: “They say: The Scripture was revealed
only to two sets of people before us, and we in sooth were not aware of
what they read… If the Scripture had been revealed
unto us, we surely would have been better guided than are they… Two magics
which support each other… In both we are disbelievers… If it had been any
good they would not have been before us in attaining it… This is an ancient
lie.”34
It
had also been noticed that Muhammad produced revelations according to his
convenience in the debate. Allãh complained: “And when we put a
revelation in place of (another), they say: You are but inventing… Why
is not the Qur’ãn revealed unto him all at one.”35
Allãh had himself revealed that the Qur’ãn was being read
out from a “well guarded tablet” preserved in the highest heaven. Why was
it then being doled out in bits and pieces? The Meccans suspected that
the Prophet was inventing verses as occasion demanded.
The incident which
confirmed their suspicion was that of the so-called Satanic Verses. Tabarî
has recorded: “When the apostle saw that his people turned their backs
on him and he was pained by their estrangement from what he brought them
from God he longed that there should come to him from God a message that
would reconcile his people to him… Then God sent down, ‘Have ye thought
of Al-Lãt and al-‘Uzzã and Manãt the third, the other,
these are the exalted Gharãnîq whose intercession is approved.’”
The Meccans felt happy and thought that the strife was over, now that Muhammad
had endorsed their Goddesses. But Muhammad had to
face his own followers who felt betrayed. The verses were withdrawn soon
after and replaced by another revelation. “So God annulled what Satan had
suggested and God established His verses.”36
So the Meccans
turned down the Qur’ãn totally and finally. Allãh reports:
“Their chieftains said: We surely see you in foolishness and we deem you
of the liars… It is all one to us whether you preach or are not of those
who preach… Our hearts are protected from that unto
which you (Muhammad) call us, and in our ears there is deafness, and between
us and you there is a veil… They say (to their people): Heed not this Qur’ãn,
and drown the hearing of it.”37
Having reaffirmed
their Gods and rejected Muhammad’s prophethood as well as revelations,
the Meccans made fun of the Last Day (Yaumu’l Ãkhir) which
is described by Allah variously as Day of Resurrection (Yaumu’l Qiyamah), Day
of Separation (Yaumu’l FaSl), Day of Reckoning (Yaumu’l Hisãb),
Day of Awakening (Yaumu’l Ba’l), Day of Judgment (Yaumu’l Dîn),
Day of Encompassing (Yaumu’l MuHit) or simply as The Hour (As-Sa’ah).38 “For
Muhammad, a revivalist preacher seeking to strike terror in his hearers,
the doctrines of resurrection and of the judgment were of the first importance,
and the Qur’ãn, in consequence, is full of references to them.”39
on this day, the dead are to be raised, judged, and sent to eternal heaven
if they were believers, and to an eternal hell if they were unbelievers. The
pagan Arabs, on the other hand, believed in survival of the human personality
after death. In the absence of positive evidence it is difficult to give
details of their doctrine. But if we go by what the Sabaeans believed,
they stood for transmigration of souls.40 So
“the notion of the reconstruction of the decayed body seemed to them in
the highest degree absurd, and Mohammed’s promise of heavenly spouses occasioned
mirth.”41
Allãh reports:
“They say: Shall we show you a man who will tell you (that) when you have
become dispersed in death, with the most complete dispersal, still even
then, you will be created anew. Has he invented a lie concerning Allãh
or is there in him a madness?… This is a strange thing: When we are dead
and have become dust like our forefathers, shall we verily be brought back?
We were promised this forsooth, we and our forefathers. This is naught
but fables of the men of old. Bring back our fathers if you speak the truth…
When we are lost in the earth, how can we then be recreated?… Shall we
really be restored to our first state: Even after we are crumbled bones?
Then that will be a vain proceeding… There is naught
but our life of this world; we die and we live, and naught destroys us
save Time… We deem it but a conjecture, and are by no means convinced…
And they swear by Allãh their most binding oaths (that) Allãh
will not raise him who dies…”42
Allãh’s
rejoinder is also recorded in the Qur’ãn: “We know what the earth
takes, and with us is a recording Book… Thinks man we shall not assemble
his bones. We are able to restore his very finger… Surely it will need
but one Shout, and they will be awakened… Those
of old and those of later times, will all be brought together to the tryst
of an appointed day. Then you the deniers, you will eat of a tree called
Zaqqum, and will fill your bellies therewith and thereon you will drink
of boiling water, drinking as the camel drinks. This will be their welcome
on the Day of Judgment…”43
The Meccans, however,
were not cowed down by these threats. They challenged Muhammad to hurry
up and bring down the doom upon them. Allãh reports: “They say:
You have disputed with us and multiplied disputation with us. Now bring
down upon us that wherewith you threaten us, if you are truthful… O
Allãh! if this be indeed the truth from you, rain down stones on
us or bring us some painful doom… Our Lord! Hasten us for our fate before
the Day of Reckoning… They ask you of the Hour: When will it come to port?…
When will the promise be fulfilled, if you are truthful? When is the Day
of Judgment?… They say: The hour will never come to us…”44
The Meccans threw this challenge again and again if the Qur’ãn is
to be believed.
Muhammad had to
wriggle out of the situation. Allãh reports: “Say: Knowledge thereof
is with my Lord. He alone will manifest it at the proper time… It comes
not to you save unawares… But Allãh will not punish them while you
(Muhammad) are with them… For every nation there
is an appointed time… It is (only) then when it has befallen that you will
believe… And it is in the Scriptures of the men of old. Is it not a portent
for them that the doctors of the Children of Israel know it? …You are but
a warner sent unto them… So withdraw from them and await (the event)…”45
“Thus then the
years of the debate rolled on; in which parties increased in vehemence
and antagonism, and in which the successful polemics of the Meccans
on the new religion were met by ridicule and refutation of the religious
notions current among the pagans. As has been said, the Meccan side is
known only from the statements of the adversary, whose acquaintance with
the Meccan religion may not have been very deep…”46
The poet Abû
Qays b. al-Aslat whose pseudonym was Sayfî summed up the pagan position
as follows:
Lord of mankind, serious things have happened.
The difficult and the simple are involved.
Lord of mankind, if we have erred
Guide us to the good path.
Were it not for our Lord we should be Jews
And the religion of Jews is not convenient.
Were it not for our Lord we should be, Christians
Along with the monks on Mount Jalîl.
But when we were created we were created
Hanîfs; our religion is from all generations.47
It may be noted that
the Lord of the pagans is the Lord of mankind, and not the Lord of Muslims
alone.
Muhammad’s mission
at Mecca had failed. Commenting on the last phase of the Meccan Sûras,
F. Buhl says: “It is the weakest part of the Qur’ãn, in which Muhammad’s
imagination became exhausted, and he was content with tiresome repetitions
of his earlier ideas and especially with the tales of the prophets. The
form becomes discursive, and more prosaic… The passages belonging to it
show clearly that Muhammad would have become intellectually bankrupt if
the migration to Medina had not aroused him to a new effort…”48
This is not the
place to go into what the Prophet did after migration to Medina; the story
has been documented in detail by the biographers of the Prophet-surprise
raids on trade caravans and tribal settlements; the use of plunder thus
obtained for recruiting an ever-growing army of desperados; assassinations
of opponents ordered, and blessed when successful; expropriation, expulsion
and massacre of Jews who had lived for long in Medina; attack on and enslavement
of Jews settled in Khybar; sale of women and children, captured in raids,
for buying horses and arms; conquest of Mecca and the rest of Arabia by
show as well as use of overwhelming force; and winning over to his fold,
by means of bribes, the tricksters and the treacherous in every Arab tribe.
He organised no less than eighty-six expeditions, twenty-six of which he
led himself. He was getting ready to invade neighbouring lands when he
died all of a sudden. What interests us in the present context are the
revelations he produced vis-a-vis those who worship Gods other than his
Allãh.
Believers
were prohibited from contracting marriage relations with the idolaters;49
they were forbidden to pray for the idolaters, even if the latter were
their parents or kinsmen of the first degree.50
Immediately after the conquest of Mecca, the Ka‘ba which had been a pagan
temple for ages past was placed out of bounds for the pagans; it was converted
into a place of Muslim worship as we shall see. Allãh revised the
history of Arabia in order to justify the usurpation. He revealed, “Say:
Allãh speaks truth… The first sanctuary appointed for mankind was
that at Becca… And (remember) when we prepared for Abraham the place of
the (holy) House saying, Ascribe you nothing as partners unto Me, and purify
my house for those who make the round (thereof) and those who stand and
those who bow and make prostrations… It is not for
the idolaters to tend Allãh’s sanctuaries, bearing witness against
themselves of disbelief… The idolaters only are unclean. So let them not
near the Place of Inviolable worship after this year…”51
A permanent jihãd
(holy war) was pronounced on the idolaters: “Those
who believe do battle for the cause of Allãh; and those who disbelieve
do battle for the cause of idols. So fight the minions of the devil… Slay
the idolaters wherever you find them, and take them (captive) and besiege
them, and prepare for them each ambush…”52
Going back to
the debate at Mecca, it is obvious that in those days Allãh was
keeping a diary of all that happened in the pagan metropolis between the
Muslims on the one hand and the pagans on the other. It is difficult to
believe that he recorded only that which the pagans said and ignored altogether
that which they did to the Muslims. If this inference is correct, certain
conclusions follow.
The bulk of the
Qur’ãn covers the Meccan period in the life of the Prophet. We do
not find in any of the chapters even the hint of any physical method used
by the Meccans towards Muhammad or his Muslims. The only violence we come
across is in the language of Allãh who frets and fumes and threatens
the Meccans with dire consequences, all too frequently and for no other
reason than that the Meccans refuse to accept what is written in the scriptures
of the Jews and the Christians, and stick to their own ancient religion.
What credence, then, can be placed in the stories, sold by the biographers
of Muhammad, that while the Prophet argued his case with patience and in
a reasoned manner, his opponents did not know how to meet the challenge
and resorted to physical methods? We find no evidence for these stories
in the only contemporary source available to us, namely, the Qur’ãn.
On the contrary,
the biographers provide several broad hints of violence threatened or committed
by the zealots of Islam in the streets of Mecca. For instance, when ‘Umar
became a Muslim, he went to the Ka‘ba and proclaimed to his fellow citizens, “There
is no god but Allah, and Muhammad is the apostle of Allah! Whoever
of you moves, I shall cut off his head with my bright scimitar, and shall
send him to the Mansion of destruction.”53
Margoliouth observes: “The persons whose accession
to Islam was most welcomed were men of physical strength, and much actual
fighting must have taken place at Meccah before the Flight; else the readiness
with which the Moslems after the Flight could produce from their number
tried champions would be inexplicable. A tried champion must have been
tried somewhere…”54 We do not expect Allãh
to find place for these Muslim doings in his diary. We also know his defence
for slurring over the misdeeds of his minions. It is the same as that of
every Marxist historian-Comrade! I am a partisan. I have no use for bloody
bourgois objectivity.” All that we are saying is that we cannot help suspecting
the stories which say that the Muslims were on the receiving end. They
look very much like the products of Islamic martyrology.
Martyrs have been
the stock-in-trade of prophetic creeds down the ages. Long before the prophet
of Islam was born, the annalists of Judaism and Christianity had perfected
the art of making the agressor look like the victim of aggression, and
vice versa. The Bible was the master-piece produced by this art. The biographers
of the Prophet had only to borrow the art and practise it in the new context.
The art continued to flourish in Christian and Muslim countries till the
eighteenth century when it was rejected in the modern West and a new discipline
of history-writing emerged. It was, however, revived in Soviet Russia under
Stalin and had a fresh lease of life. Now Russia has also rejected it with
repugnance. The only land in which it is being practised at present and
on some scale is India. The Stalinist historians who were placed in positions
of power in the regime of Jawaharlal Nehru and his Minister of “Education”,
Maulana Abul Kalam Azad, have been practising this art with considerable
self-confidence. They are of course nowhere near the masters of yester
years. It is seldom that apes acquire the looks of those they imitate.
But they do create confusion till they are identified and exposed.
Another conclusion
follows from Allãh’s silence over any mundane motives on the part
of the Meccans when they stand up for their Gods. Allãh accused
them of ignorance, obstinacy, temptations from Satan and the rest, but
never of greed for the rich revenues brought in by pilgrims to the Ka‘ba.
It needs an investigation as to when and by whom this base motive was attributed
to the Meccans for explaining their devotion to their religion. Allãh
for sure had no part in spreading the canard. Whatever its origin, this
much is certain that it must have acquired respectability with the spread
of Marxism. By now it has become the most fashionable way of explaining
the quarrel between Muhammad and his kinsmen. Marxists as well non-Marxists
mouth it with equal conviction. Nearer home, the same mind has spread a
similar canard about the Brahmins. We are told that the Brahmins proclaim
and practise their “puerile priestcraft” not because they believe in any
part of it but because it brings them mundane privileges and material profits.
Those who have studied the history of Brahmins and are familiar with the
depths of their spiritual traditions, and therefore dismiss the lies spread
about them by Christian missionaries and Marxist mullahs, can very well
judge the worth of the canard spread about the Meccans.
The motives of
the converts to Islam were, however, not in doubt from the very first.
“Of any moralising or demoralising effect which Mohammed’s teaching had
upon his followers, we cannot speak with precision. When he was at the
head of the robber community it is probable that the demoralising influence
began to be felt; it was then that men who had never broken an oath learnt
that they might evade their obligations, and that men to whom the blood
of their clansmen had been as their own began to shed it with impunity
in the cause of God; and that lying and treachery in the cause of Islam
received divine approval, hesitation to perjure oneself in that cause being
reprehended as a weakness. It was then, too, that Moslems became distinguished
by the obscenity of their language. It was then, too, that the coveting
of goods and wives (possessed by Unbelievers) was avowed without discouragement
from the Prophet… On the other hand, there is no
evidence that the Moslems were either in personal or altruistic morality
better than the pagans…”55
The war which
Allãh of the Qur’ãn had declared on pagan Gods was aimed
at ensuring a moral holiday for his followers. The ancient religion of
Arabia which centred round those Gods had established certain moral standards
and social conventions which kept the beast in man under restraint. The
destruction of temples where the Gods were worshipped gave a clear signal
that the beast had been unleashed.
Footnotes:
1 Ibn Ishãq, op. cit., pp. 116-17. 2 D.S. Margoliouth, op. cit., p. 112.
3 Ibn Ishãq, op. cit., p. 118.
4 Ibid., p. 117. Allãh’s command can be read in Qur’ãn, 15.8-9, 94.
5 D.S. Margoliouth, op. cit., p. 118-19.
6 Ibn Ishãq, op. cit, p. 119.
7 D.S. Margoliouth, op. cit., p. 123. It may be mentioned that Muhammad was married to a rich woman, Khadîjah, and controlled her considerable wealth which he used for supporting his uncle’s family as well as in the service of the mission to which his wife also subscribed.
8 Ibn Ishãq, op. cit, p. 121.
9 D.S. Margoliouth, p. cit., p. 121.
10 Qur’ãn, 68.2, 5-6, 8-13.
11 Ibn Ishãq, op. cit., p. 131.
12 Ibid., p. 132.
13 Ibid., p. 133.
14 D.S. Margoliouth, op., cit., p. 130.
15 Ibid., p. 127. Allãhs’ instruction to the Prophet can be read in Qur’ãn 6.67.
16 Ibid., pp. 127-28.
17 “Qur’ãn 25.41-42. 34.8; 37.36; 11.54; 26.111; 11.27; 43.52; 11.91; 34.35; 25.21; 26.167.
18 D. S. Margoliouth, op. cit., pp. 41-49.
19 Qur’ãn. 23.24,25,33,34; 2S.6; 14.10; 64.60; 36.15; 21.3; 26.154; 13.7; 20.133; 29.50-, 43.53; 17.90-93; 25.8. The Meccans (36.15) have a fling at RaHmãn, the name which the Prophet gave to Allãh quite frequently. They hated this name.
20 Ibid., 53.2; 81.23-24; 29.50; 13.7; 54.1-2.
21 Ibid., 37.35-36; 38.4-8; 2.183; 6.149; 39.3; 42.24.
22 Ibid., 5.104; 7.70; 11.62; 11.87; 43.22,24,49.
23 Ibid., 21.36; 25.60; 43.57-58; 78.28; 84.21.
24 Ibid., 6.108-109.
25 Ibn Ishãq, op, cit., p. 162.
26 Qur’ãn,74.25; 34.43 (also 11.13,35;32.3;34.43;46.8; 52.33); 21.5; 8.3l.,
27 Ibid., 10.38.
28 Ibn Ishãq, op. cit., p. 136. See also p. 163.
29 D.S. Margoliouth, op. cit., p. 135.
30 Ibn Ishãq, op. cit., p. 308.
31 Qur’ãn, 69, 41-42. 44-47.
32 Ibid., 16.103; 25.4-5; 44.14. The Meccan allegation goes to show that Muhammad was not an illiterate as is asserted even in the Qur’ãn (29.46,49).
33 George Sale, The Koran or Alcoran of Mohammed, London (n.d). p. 233, footnote 1.
34 Qur’ãn, 6.157-58; 28.48; 46.11.
35 Ibid., 16.101; 25.32;
36 Insert in Ibn Ishãq, op. cit., p. 165-66. Allah’s replacement of the “Satanic Verses” can be read in Qur’ãn. 53.19-17.
37 Qur’ãn, 7.66; 26.136; 41.5. 46.26.
38 Ibid., 2.79; 77.14; 40.28; 30.56; 1.3; 11.85.
39 First Encyclopaedia of Islam, op. cit., Vol. IV, p.1018.
40 Encyclopaedia Americana, New York, 19252, Vol. XXIV, p. 77.
41 D. S. Margoliouth, op, cit. p. 138.
42 Qur’ãn, 34.7-8; 50.2-3; 27.67-68; 44.36; 45.32; 32.10; 79.10-12, 45 24, 32; 16.38. The reference to the earlier promise points to the Jews who had been proclaiming for a long time that the forefathers of the Arabs will be raised again and judged.
43 Ibid., 50.4; 75.3-4; 79.13-14; 56.49-57.
44 Ibid., 11.22; 8.32; 48.16; 7.187; 10.48; 32.28; 51.13; 34.3.
45 Ibid., 7.187.8.33:10.49,51; 26.96-87; 79.45.
46 D. S. Margoliouth. op. cit., p. 141.
47 Ibn Ishãq, op. cit., p. 201.
48 First Encyclopaedia of Islam, op. cit., Volume IV, p. 1075.
49 Qur’ãn. 2.221.
50 Ibid., 9.113-14.
51 Ibid., 3.95-96; 22.26; 9.17,28. “Mecca” was also pronounced as “Becca” in olden times.
52 Ibid., 4.76, 9.5.
53 The Rauzat-us-Safa, or Garden of Purity by Muhammad bin Khavendshah bin Mahmud translated into English by E. Rehatsek, first published 1893, Delhi Reprint 1982, Vol. I, pt. II, p. 183.
54 D.S. Margoliouth, op. cit., p. 161.
55 D. S. Margoliouth, op. cit., p. 149.
No comments:
Post a Comment