The Battle of Uhud
Ghazwat-us-Sawiq was only a prelude to the big
battle that was to follow. The chagrin and fury of the Quraish at their defeat
at Badr knew no bounds. Their whole energy was aroused and they commenced
preparations for another attack on the Muslims. The tribes of Tihamah and
Kinanah joined them. Their united forces numbered three thousand well equipped
soldiers under the command of Abu Sufyan. This army marched towards Medina and
occupied a vantage position near the hills of Uhud, a short distance of three
miles from Medina. Muhammad (s.a.w.) marched out with only a thousand men. On
the way, 'Abdullah ibn Ubay with three hundred of his followers, the munafiqun, deserted the believers, and
the Prophet was left with only seven hundred men. Only a hundred of them had
coats of mail, and between them they had only two horses. Their zeal was,
however, so great that when some boys, who were considered too young to
participate in the battle, were asked to go back, they departed very
reluctantly and two of them, Raft' ibn Khadij and Samrah, managed to remain
with the army anyway.
The Prophet took up his position below the hill. The army
was arrayed in fighting formations and fifty archers were posted, under the
command of 'Abdullah ibn Jubayr, at a pass between the hills to guard the army
from any attack from the rear. They had strict orders not to leave their post,
whatever the outcome of the battle might be. The standard was in the hands of
Mus'ab ibn'Umayr. Zubayr was in command of the mailed section and Hamza in
command of the rest. On the side of the Meccans, Talhah held the standard and
the various regiments were under the charge of Khalid ibn al-Walid,
'Ikrimah ibn Abu jahl, Safwan ibn Umayyah and 'Abdullah ibn Umayyah. Talhah
challenged the Muslims to individual combat. The challenge was accepted by 'Ali
ibn Abi Talib and very soon Talhah's dead body lay on the ground. The standard
was taken by his brother 'Uthman who was slashed by Hamza. A general engagement
then started. 'Ali, Hamza and Abu Dajjanah gave heroic accounts of their valor.
An Abyssinian slave, Wahshi, had been commissioned by Hind,
wife of Abu Sufyan, to kill either Muhammad (s.a.w.), 'Ali, or Hamza (in order
to avenge the death of her father 'Utbah ibn Rabi'ah, her brother al-Walid
as well as that of Hanzalah son of Abu Sufyan at Badr at their hands). He
singled Hamza out and threw a spear at him, which pierced his abdomen and
killed him.
On the Meccan side, one standard-bearer after another
met his end at the hands of 'Ali. The Meccans were losing heart till one of
their women, 'Umrah daughter of 'Alqamah, took up the standard. The Meccans
again rallied behind her but the Muslims crushed them. The Meccans, having paid
a heavy toll, fell back in disarray and the Muslims started gathering the
booty. Thinking that the battle battle was over, most of the archers who were
guarding the passage in the hill left their posts lured by the spoils even
against the orders of their leader'Abdullah ibn Jubayr. Khalid ibn al-Walid
was fleeing when he saw such an opportunity and, gathering a group and killing
the few remaining defenders of the pass, launched a furious attack from the
rear. The Muslims were taken so much by surprise that they did not know what to
do. In the general melee their ranks became disorganized. The retreating Meccan
forces rallied again and launched a fresh onslaught from the front. The Muslim
standard-bearer, Mu'sab ibn 'Umayr, who bore a great facial resemblance
to the Prophet, was killed. Up went the cry that the Prophet had been killed.
This threw the Muslims into further confusion and utter dismay. Even many of
their famous personalities lost heart. 'Umar threw away his sword saying there
was no use fighting since the Prophet was no more. He fled towards the mountain
and, in his own words, he was jumping from one boulder to another like mountain
goats. Abu Bala and 'Uthman also fled, the latter returning to Medina after
three days.
On the other hand, many valiant soldiers, renouncing all
discretion, entered the thick of the Meccan ranks determined to fight to the
end. This went on till Ka'ab ibn Malik saw the Prophet and shouted at the top
of his voice that the Prophet was still alive. The spirit of the Muslims
revived, but the Prophet now became the chief target of the Meccan forces.
'Abdullah ibn Qama'a advanced towards the Prophet and struck a sword on his
head with such force that two links of his helmet penetrated the Prophet's
face. Utbah ibn Abi Waqqas threw a stone at the Prophet, further injuring his
face and dislodging his two upper teeth. The Prophet now had fallen in a pit
where 'Ali ibn Abi Talib found him and protected him against the continuous
furious onslaughts of the Meccans. When the Prophet saw this sacrificing spirit
of 'Ali, he asked him as to why did he too not flee like the others. 'Ali
replied: "Should I become kafir after having accepted Islam?"
When 'Ali's sword broke down, the Holy Prophet gave him his
own sword Dhul-Fiqar. It was then that a voice was heard from above
saying, "There is no sword except Dhul-Fiqar. There is no hero
except Ali."
At the same time, Jibril told the Holy Prophet that it was
the height of loyalty and bravery which 'Ali was demonstrating towards the Holy
Prophet. The Holy Prophet said: "Why not? 'Ali is from me and I am from
'Ali." Jibril said: "And I am from you both."
Later, some Muslims, like Sad, Zubayr, Talhah, Abu Dajjanah
and Ziyad, gathered round the Holy Prophet.
Faithful companions, including the brave lady Ummu 'Ammarah,
prevented others from getting too close to the Prophet. With their bodies did
they shield him against the rain of arrows. Standing in such a great peril, the
Prophet cried to God: "O God! Forgive my people, for they know not!"
There was no rancor, no bitterness, and no ill-will in his heart against
his mortal enemies even in such a precarious situation. An overwhelming
compassion for the people and a burning desire to lead them to the right path
actuated all his deeds and sayings. Then some other Muslims arrived where the
Prophet was being defended at fearful odds by the small band of his companions.
After some furious fighting, they managed to take the Prophet to the security
of a cave in the heights of Uhud.
Meanwhile, the word had reached Medina that the Prophet was
killed. The Prophet's daughter, Fatimah al-Zahra, surrounded by a group
of Muslim women, hurried to Uhud. To her great relief, Fatimah found her father
alive but his forehead and face were covered with his own blood. 'Ali brought
water in his shield and Fatimah cleansed and dressed the wounds.
The Meccan forces had turned the tables but they were too
exhausted to drive their advantage home either by attacking Medina or by
driving the Muslims from the heights of the hill. They satiated their desire
for vengeance by committing ghastly brutalities upon the slain and the injured,
cutting off their ears and noses and mutilating their bodies. The brave Hamza
was amongst the slain. Hind cut off his ears and nose and took out his heart
and liver. She tried to chew the liver but Allah made it so hard that she could
not do so... She had to throw it out. The horrible scene was so revolting that
the Prophet forbade forever the practice of mutilation.
In this battle, seventy Muslims were martyred and an equal
number of them were wounded. 'Ali received sixteen serious sword wounds. The
Meccans lost 30 (or 22) warriors twelve of whom at the hands of 'Ali.
With victory almost within their grasp, the Muslims had
suffered a heavy blow. They were shaken in body and in spirit. But the Prophet
preached to them fortitude and endurance. For those who laid their lives in the
way of Allah, the following glad tiding had been revealed:
And reckon not those
who are killed in Allah's way as dead; nay, they are alive (and) are sustained
by their Lord. (Qur'an, 3:169)
While retreating to Mecca, Abu Sufyan had bribed a traveler
going towards Medina to inform the Holy Prophet that the Meccans were again
assembling a great force to attack Medina. Hearing the news, 'Ali said:
"Allah is sufficient for us and most excellent Protector is He."
The Holy Prophet went out at once, taking with him only
those seventy warriors who were wounded in Uhud, to pursue the Meccan forces.
He stayed for three days at a place called Hamra'ul-Asad but did not find
any trace of the Meccans, so he returned. The Qur'an mentions this episode in
the following ayat:
Those who responded to the call of Allah and the Messenger even after
the wound had afflicted them, those among them who do good and guard
(themselves against evil) shall have a great reward. Those to whom the people
said: Surely men have gathered against you; therefore, fear them, but this only
increased their faith, and they said: Allah is sufficient for us and most
excellent Protector is He. So they returned with favor from Allah and (His)
grace; no evil touched them, and they followed the pleasure of Allah, and Allah is the Lord of mighty
grace. (Qur'an, 3:172-174)
The defeat at Uhud did, indeed, create serious difficulties
for the Muslims. It emboldened the nomadic tribes on the one hand to make
forays upon Medina and, on the other hand, encouraged the Jews of Medina to
foment further trouble. Yet it was not disastrous for the Muslims. While a
defeat at Badr, when the Muslims were yet a handful would have wiped them out
and spelt the death knell of the Prophetic mission, a defeat here and there
after Islam had gained strength only put the Muslims in the testing crucible so
that they might emerge more determined and cured of any complacency and vanity
to which they might have otherwise fallen prey.
The Meccans were determined to annihilate the Muslims. This
objective they could not achieve. Their infantry had suffered such losses that
they could not even drive home the advantage they gained in the last stages of
the battle. They had thought they were the masters of all western Arabia, but
they could do nothing more than hold their own against the Muslims. It is not
surprising, therefore, that they marched back to Mecca frustrated and
discouraged.
The Meccans realized that on their own they could not crush
the Islamic movement. They ,now started instigating other tribes to make common
causewith them. Most of the tribes were already inimical to Islam. They practiced
idolatry while Islam forbade it and enjoined worship of one God. Raiding and
plundering were the general means of their livelihood while Islam dictated an
orderly society, forbidding oppression, exploitation, and foul play. It
enjoined its followers to seek honest means of livelihood. The influence of the
Quraish extended far and wide and all the tribes came into contact with them at
the time of the annual pilgrimage. The Jews were also constantly instigating
the tribes against the Muslims. The victory of the Muslims over the Quraish at
Badr had overawed nomadic tribes but their defeat at Uhud emboldened them to
show their hands and a number of skirmishes followed.
Sariyah Abu Salamah
The first of these forays was Sariyah Abu Salamah. Talhah
and Khalid instigated their tribe, Banu Asad, to attack Medina on the first of
Muharram of 4 A.H. The Prophet dispatched a force of one hundred and fifty men
to intercept them. The invaders dispersed on seeing this force and there was no
engagement.
Sariyah Ibn Anis
In the same month (4 A.H.), Sufyan ibn Khalid of the Banu
Lahyan prepared to attack Medina. The Prophet sent 'Abdullah ibn Anis with a
force to meet him. 'Abdullah was killed. Hostile critics say that the Prophet
got the chiefs of some tribes killed to overawe them. They quote Arab
historians like al-Waqidi, Ibn Hisham and Ibn al-Athir in
recounting the names of the persons killed, but they very conveniently omit the
details and circumstances given by the same authorities regarding the raids
they were committing or the preparations they were making to assault Medina.
The Prophet could not ignore the danger that surrounded the Muslims; he would
not allow them to be exterminated.
Treachery at Bir Ma'unah
The tribes were not only repeatedly raiding Medina but also
employing treacherous methods to deplete the Muslim's ranks and resources. In
Safar of 4 A.H., Abu Bara' of Banu Kalb approached the Prophet to lend the
services of his companions to preach to his tribe and to instruct them in the
way of Islam. Seventy pious disciples were sent with him but, with the
exception of one person, namely Abr ibn Umayyah, the entire party was put to
death when it reached Bi'r Ma'unah.
The Foul play at Raji
Likewise, the tribes of Adh'al and Quarah sent a deputation
to the Prophet to inform him that they had accepted Islam and needed some
instructors. He sent ten disciples with them. On reaching Raji', the envoys
instigated Banu Lahyan to kill seven of the disciples and to capture the rest.
The captives were sold at Mecca and those who purchased them put them to death.
One of the captives was Zaid. A crowd, including Abu Sufyan, assembled to see
him being slaughtered. Abu Sufyan inquired of him if he would not have
considered himself lucky had Muhammad been there to be slaughtered in his
place. The devoted attachment of Zaid to the Prophet can be gauged from the
reply he gave. He said: "By God, I do not value my life even this much
that in its place a thorn may pierce the sole of the Prophet's foot." He
was thereupon slashed to death.
The Attitude of the Jews
For a long time, the Jews were masters of Medina. The tribes
of Aws and money lending at exorbitant rates of interest was Khazraj (the
Ansar) had settled there later. Gradually, these tribes gathered strength and
equaled the Jews in power and prestige. The internecine war of the Bu'ath,
however, weakened them, and the Jews again assumed ascendancy. The Jews were a
prosperous people and one of their main occupations. With the deterioration in
the economic situation of the tribes of Aws and Khazraj, many of them became
heavily in debt to the Jews. The position of authority and eminence, which
their material superiority and strength gave to the Jews, received a big
setback when Islam started spreading in Medina. They therefore, viewed the
expansion of Islam with great disfavor and apprehension. Expediency had
actuated them into entering into a pact with the Muslims, but soon they began
plotting against Islam. They would distort the words and verses of the Qur'an
and mock and jeer at the Muslims. Nevertheless, the Prophet was bidden to bear
it patiently:
.... And you shall certainly hear from those who have been given the
Book before you and from those who are polytheists much annoying talk, and if
you are patient and guard (yourself against evil), surely this is one of the
matters of great resolve. (Qur'an,
3:186)
The Prophet tried his best to maintain friendly ties with
the Jews. The Qur'an stressed the fundamental unity between the two religions
and asked the Jews to come to terms with the Muslims:
Say: O people of the
Book! Come to a word common between us and you: That we shall not worship any
but Allah and (that) we shall associate nothing with Him, and (that) some of us
shall not take others for lords besides Allah, but if they turn back, then say:
Bear witness that we are Muslims. (Qur'an,
3:64)
Neither kindness nor fair dealing on the part of the Prophet
could, however, conciliate the Jews. They tried to revive the rift between the
tribes of Aws and Khazraj. Some Jews would accept Islam one day and renounce it
the next in order to show that there was nothing (important) in Islam.
And a party of the
people of the Book say: Profess faith in that which has been revealed to those
who believe in the first part of the day and disbelieve therein at the end of
it, perhaps they will go back on their religion. (Qur'an, 3:72)
They conspired with the munafiqun and sent emissaries to the enemies of Islam. Apprehension and envy at the growing power of the Muslims following their victory at Badr rankled in their hearts, and they redoubled their efforts to exterminate the new religion. The Quraish were further instigating them to do so, sending a threatening epistle to them:
"You possess arms and fortresses. You should fight our
enemy (Muhammad); otherwise, we will attack you and nothing will prevent us
from grabbing the arms of your women."
Ka'ab ibn Ashraf, a Jewish chieftain of Banu Nadhir, was a
poet of considerable fame. Like so many others, he was bitterly hostile to
Islam. With his fiery poems, he began to incite the people to rise up against
the Muslims. After the battle of Badr, he composed a number of eulogies
mourning the Meccan chiefs slain in the battle. He used to recite them at every
gathering. He contacted Abu Sufyan with a view to making a combined effort to
wipe out the Muslims. He openly recited a number of poems derogatory to the
Prophet. As poetry had a high place in the life of the Arabs and could deepen
influence and sway feelings, Ka'ab ibn Ashraf had become not only a nuisance
but a serious menace. We have it on the authority of al-Ya'qubi and Hafiz
Ibn Hajar that Ka'ab plotted to kill the Prophet. When the Prophet knew this
plot, he consulted his companions and it was decided that Ka'ab should be
silenced forever. Muhammad ibn Maslamah undertook to carry out the job and, on
getting an opportunity, he sent Ka'ab ibn Ashraf to hell.
The Banu Qinaqa', the most powerful Jewish tribe, were the
first to resile from the alliance with the Muslims. Says Ibn Sa'd, "The Jews
attempted sedition during the battle of Badr and were envious of the Muslims,
retracting from their pact with them."
As mentioned earlier, an incident in 2 A.H. led to a flare-up.
A veiled Muslim lady had gone to the shop of a Jew. She was pestered and her
clothes thrown up. A Muslim standing nearby was unable to tolerate this
indecent behavior, so he killed the Jew. The Jews, thereupon, killed the
Muslim. The Prophet remonstrated with them but they defiantly replied that they
were not (as weak as) Quraish (who were defeated in Badr) and would show him
what battle was. Within the security of their fortress, they started making
preparations for war. The Muslims besieged the fortress for fifteen days and
the Jews had to sue for peace, promising that they would accept the Prophet's
decision. The Prophet banished them, allowing them to take all their movable
possessions to Syria. Some European critics see only the immediate cause, that
is, the indecent behavior with the Muslim lady and, ascribing it to boyish
prank, they try to minimize it. In their view, therefore, the punishment was
too harsh, but they fail to take notice of the constant efforts of the Jews to
undermine the Islamic movement. It was not one incident but a series of events
that had brought on the final clash.
Expulsion of the Bann
Nadhir (Rabi 1, 4 A.H.)
The banishment of the Banu Qinaqa' enraged its sister tribe,
the Banu Nadhir. Encouraged by the Meccans and by 'Abdullah ibn Ubay, they
plotted to kill the Prophet. Once the Holy Prophet, together with some
companions, were there to seek their help in arranging the payment of blood-money
of two persons from the tribe of 'Amir. The Jews asked the Holy Prophet to come
inside their fortress, but the Holy Prophet did not like the idea. Instead, he sat
outside the wall of the fortress. They sent one man to climb the wall from
inside the fortress and to kill the Holy Prophet by throwing a big boulder on
his head.
The Holy Prophet, through divine revelation, came to know of
this treacherous scheme in nick of time and immediately left the place.
Then he sent Banu Nadhir an ultimatum with Muhammad ibn
Maslamah that, since they had broken their treaty, they should leave Medina in
ten days. They wanted to migrate when 'Abdullah ibn Ubay encouraged them not to
leave Medina, promising them help with 2000 warriors. The Jews then refused to
leave Medina. The following ayats refer to this promise of help:
Have you not seen those who have become hypocrites? They say to those
of their brethren who disbelieve from among the people of the
Book: If you are driven forth, we shall certainly go forth with you,
and we will never obey anyone concerning you, and if you are fought, we will certainly help you, and Allah bears witness
that they are most surely liars. Certainly, if these are driven forth, they
will not go forth with them, and if they
are fought, they will not help them, and even if they help there, they will certainly turn (their) backs, then they
shall not be helped. (Qur'an, 59:
11-12)
Their fortress was besieged, and 'Abdullah ibn Ubay did
nothing to help them. After 15 days, they agreed to leave Medina. They were
allowed to take away-`all their movables, which they could take except
weapons of war.
They did not like the idea of leaving their houses to be occupied
by the Muslims, so they demolished them. The Qur'an refers to the various
aspects of this expulsion in Sura 59. For example, their migration and the
destructing of their houses at their own hands is referred to in this ayat:
He it is who caused those who disbelieved from among the people of the
Book to go forth from their homes at the first banishment, you did not
think that they would go forth, while they were certain that their
fortresses would defend them against Allah, but Allah came to them from
where they did not expect and cast terror into their hearts: they demolished their houses
with their own hands and the hands of the believers; therefore, take a lesson,
O you who have eyes! (Qur'an,
59:2)
They passed through Medina's market singing and beating
drums to show that they were not disheartened by that banishment and that they
would soon avenge this defeat. Some of them went to Syria while others settled
with the Jews of Khaybar.
Since there was no war, according to the command of Allah (see
Sura 59, verses 6 to 10), all the wealth left by them became the personal
property of the Holy Prophet who, having consulted with the Ansar, distributed
all movable property to poor Muhajirun and three poor companions from the
Ansar: Sahl ibn Hanif, Abu Dajjanah and Zaid. He gave the immovable property to
'All ibn Abi Talib (a.s.) who made it waqf
(endowment) for the descendants of Fatimah (s.a.).
The 59th Chapter of the Qur'an (The Banishment) describes
various aspects of Banu Nadhir' s expulsion.
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