Jumat, 27 April 2012
passive voice
1.I cook the corn : the corn is cooked by me
2.You read the story : the story is read by you
3.we open the door : the door is opened by us
4.they eat the noodle : the noodle is eaten by them
Jumat, 20 April 2012
Relative pronoun "WHO"
1. the farmer who plants corn is my family
2. the chef who cooks rice is my friend
3. the singer who sings Dangdut song is my classmate
4. the student who studies English is my sister
5. the seller who sells book is my neighbor
6. the tailor who sews clothes is my nephew
7. the teacher who teaches student is my uncle
8. the police who catches wati is my boy friend
2. the chef who cooks rice is my friend
3. the singer who sings Dangdut song is my classmate
4. the student who studies English is my sister
5. the seller who sells book is my neighbor
6. the tailor who sews clothes is my nephew
7. the teacher who teaches student is my uncle
8. the police who catches wati is my boy friend
Sabtu, 07 April 2012
adverb of frequency in Simple Present
1. I always love you
2. Angel usually sings pop song
3. I often miss you
4. You sometimes read a story
5. Wati seldom studies English
6. Mery never watches television
7. Elma ever writes English
Jumat, 06 April 2012
Adverb of time in simple present tense
1. I love you every time
2. Angel sings pop song every day
3. I miss you every week
4. You read a story every month
5. Wati studies English every year
6. Mery watches television every Sunday
7. Elma writes English every Monday
2. Angel sings pop song every day
3. I miss you every week
4. You read a story every month
5. Wati studies English every year
6. Mery watches television every Sunday
7. Elma writes English every Monday
Sabtu, 03 Maret 2012
English Sing a Song
- If you're happy and you know and you really want to show
- If you're happy and you know it
- If you're happy and you know it clap your hand 2X
- clap your hand
Kamis, 01 Maret 2012
Lagu Wajib TEC
kursusbahasainggrishandal.blogspot.com
One and one two
Two and two three
Three and three let's follow me
Study English with TEC
Makes me happy and clever
English listening
English speaking
English reading and writing
English grammar, game, and singing 
All of them, there are in TEC
What are you doing 
What are you doing 
Now I am studying English
Study English with TEC 
We must practice everyday
Where are you now
Where are you now
Now I am in TEC
Study English with TEC
We are all bright because TEC 
Selasa, 28 Februari 2012
Ticka
The Story of Prophet Muhammad (pbuh)
Ibn Kathir
| Muhammad   (pbuh) was born in Mecca (Makkah), Arabia, on Monday, 12 Rabi 'Al-Early (2 August AD 570).   His mother, Aminah, was the daughter of Wahb Ibn Abdu Manaf of the Zahra   family. His father, 'Abdullah, was the son of Abdul Muttalib. His genealogy   has been traced to the noble house of Ishmael, the son of Prophet Abraham in   about the Fortieth descend. Muhammad's father Died before his birth.  Before   he was six years old his mother Died, and the doubly orphaned Muhammad was   put under the charge of his grandfather Abdul Muttalib WHO took the most   tender care of him. But the old chief Died two years afterwards. On his   deathbed he confided to his son Abu Talib the charge of the little orphan.  When   Muhammad was twelve years old, he accompanied his uncle Abu Talib on a   journey to Syria Mercantile, and They proceeded as far as Busra. The journey   lasted for some months. It was at Busra That the Christian monk Bahira met   Muhammad. He is related to have said to Abu Talib: 'Return with this boy and   guard him against the hatred of the Jews, for a great career awaits your   Nephew. "  After   this journey, the youth of Muhammad seems a to have been passed uneventfully,   but all authorities agree in ascribing to him Such correctness of manners and   purity of Morals as were rare Among the people of Mecca. The fair character and the honorable   mention bearing of the unobtrusive youth won the approbation of the citizens   of Mecca, and   by common consent he received the title of "Al Ameen," The   Faithful.  In his   early years, Muhammad was not free from the cares of life. He had to watch   the flocks of his uncle, who, like the rest of the Bani Hashim, had lost the   Greater part of his wealth.  From   Youth to Manhood he led an almost solitary life. The lawlessness Rife Among   the Meccans, the sudden outbursts of causeless and bloody quarrels Among the   tribes frequenting the Fair of Okadh (The Arabian Olympia), and the   immorality and skepticism of the Quraish, naturally Caused feelings of pity and   sorrow in the heart of the sensitive youth. Such scenes of social misery and   religious degradation were characteristic of a depraved age.  When   Muhammad was twenty five years old, he traveled once more to Syria as a   factor of a noble and rich Quraishi widow named Khadijah; and, having proved   Himself faithful in the commercial interests of that lady, he was soon   rewarded with her hand in marriage . This marriage proved fortunate and   singularly happy. Khadijah was much the senior of her husband, but in spite   of the disparity of age Between them, the most tender devotion on both sides   existed. This marriage gave him the loving heart of a woman WHO was ever   ready to console him in his despair and to keep alive within him the feeble,   flickering flame of hope when no man believed in him and the world Appeared   in his gloomy eyes.  Until he   reached thirty years of age, Muhammad was almost a stranger to the outside   world. Since the death of his grandfather, authority in Mecca   was Divided Among the ten senators WHO constituted the governing body of the Arabian Commonwealth. There was no such accord   Among them as to Ensure the safety of individual rights and property. Though   family relations afforded some degree of protection to citizens, yet   Strangers were frequently exposed to persecution and Oppression. In many   cases They were robbed, not only of Their goods, but even of Their wives and   daughters. At the instigation of the faithful Muhammad, an old league called   the Federation of Fudul, ie, favors was revived with the object of repressing   lawlessness and defending every weak individual - whether Meccan or stranger,   free or slave - against any wrong or Oppression to the which Might he be the   victim within the territories of Mecca.  When   Muhammad reached thirty-five years, he settled by his judgment a grave   dispute, the which Threatened to plunge the whole of Arabia   into a fresh series of her oft-recurring wars. In rebuilding the Sacred House   of the Ka'ba in AD 605, the question arose as to WHO should have the honor of   raising the black stone, the most holy relics of that House, into its proper   place. That honor each tribe claimed. The senior citizen advised the   disputants to accept for Their arbitrator the first man to enter from a   Certain gate. The proposal was Agreed upon, and the first man WHO Entered the   gate was Muhammad "Al-Ameen." His advice satisfied all the   contending parties. He ordered the stone to be placed on a piece of cloth and   each tribe to share the honor of lifting it up by taking hold of a part of   the cloth. Thus Spake The stone was Deposited in its place, and the   rebuilding of the House was completed without further interruption.  It is   related that, about this time, a Certain Usman, Ibn Huwairith, supported by   Byzantine gold, made an attempt to convert the territory of Hijaz   into a Roman dependency, but the attempt failed, chiefly through the   instrumentality of Muhammad.  These   are nearly all the public acts related by Historians in the which Muhammad   took part in the first fifteen years of his marriage to Khadijah. As for his   private life he is described to have been ever helpful to the needy and the   helpless. His uncle Abu Talib had fallen into distress through his endeavors   to maintain the old position of his family. Muhammad, being rather rich at this   time by his alliance with Khadijah, tried to discharge part of the debt of   Gratitude and obligation the which he owed to his uncle by undertaking the   Bringing Up and education of his son 'Ali. A year later he adopted 'Akil,   another of his uncle's sons.  Khadijah   bore Muhammad three sons and four daughters. All the males Died in childhood,   but in loving 'Ali he found much Consolation.  About   this time, Muhammad set a good example of kindness, the which created a   salutary effect upon his people. His wife Khadijah had made him a present of   young slave named Zaid Ibn Haritha, WHO had been Brought as a captive to Mecca and sold to   Khadijah. When Haritha heard That Possessed Muhammad Zaid, he Came to Mecca and Offered a   large sum for his Ransom. Whereupon Mohammad said: "Let Zaid come here,   and if he Chooses to go with you, take him without Ransom; but if it be his   choice to stay with me, why should I not keep him? ' Zaid, being Brought into   Muhammad's presence, declared That he would stay with his master, WHO treated   him as if he was his only son. Muhammad no Sooner heard this than he took   Zaid by the hand and led him to the black stone of Ka ' ba, where he publicly   adopted him as his son, to the which the father acquiesced and returned home   well satisfied. Henceforward Zaid was called the son of Muhammad.  Mohammad   was now approaching his Fortieth year, and his mind was ever-engaged in   profound contemplation and reflection. Before him lay his country, bleeding   and torn by fratricidal wars and Intolerable dissension's; his people, sunk   in barbarism, addicted to the observation of rites and superstitions, were,   with all Their desert virtues, lawless and Cruel. His two visits to Syria had opened to him a scene of unutterable   moral and social Desolation, rival Creeds and sects tearing each other to   pieces, carrying Their hatred to the valleys and deserts of Hijaz, and   rending the townships of Arabia with Their   quarrels and bitterness .  For   years after his marriage, Muhammad had been accustomed to secluding Himself   in a cave in Mount Hira, a few miles from Mecca. To this cave he used to go for   prayer and meditation, Sometimes alone and sometime with his family. There,   he spent Often the whole nights in deep thought and profound communion with   the Unseen yet All-Knowing God of the Universe. It was during one of Those   retirements and in the still hours of the night, when no human Sympathy was   near, that an Angel Came to him to tell him That he was the Messenger of   Allah sent to reclaim a fallen people to the knowledge and service of Their   Lord.  Renowned   compilers of authentic traditions of Islam agree on the Following account of   the first revelations received by the Prophet.  Muhammad   would seclude Himself in the cave    of Mount Hira and   worship three days and nights. He would, he Wished Whenever, return to his   family at Mecca   and then go back again, taking wihim the necessities of life. Thus Spake he   continued to return to Khadijah from time to time until one day the   revelation CAME down to him and the Angel Gabriel (Jibreel) Appeared to him   and said: "Read!" But as Muhammad was illiterate, having never   received any instruction in reading or writing, he said to the angel: "I   am not a reader." The angel took a hold of him and squeezed him as much   as he Could bear, and then said again: "Read!" Then Prophet said:   "I am not a reader." The Angel again seized the Prophet and   squeezed him and said: "Read! In the Name of Your Lord, Who has   created (all that exists), has created a man from a clot (a piece of thick   coagulated blood). Read! And your Lord is the Most Generous, Who has taught   (the writing) by the pen, taught man That has the which he Knew not. "   (Ch 96:1-4 Quran).  Then the   Prophet repeated the words with a heart Trembling. He returned to Khadijah   from Mount Hira and said: "Wrap me up! Wrap   me up!" She wrapped him in a garment until his fear was dispelled. He of   toll Khadijah what had Occurred and that 'he was either a soothsayer or   Becoming one with madness Smitten. She replied: "Allah forbid! He will   surely not let Happen Such a thing, for you speak the truth, you are faithful   in trust, you bear the afflictions of the people, you spend in good works   what you gain in trade, you are hospitable and you assist your fellow men.   Have you seen anything terrible? " Muhammad replied: "Yes,"   and told her what he had seen. Whereupon, Khadijah said: "Rejoice, O   dear husband and be cheerful. He is Whose hands stands Khadijah's life bears   witness to the truth of this fact, that you will be the prophet to this   people." Then she arose and went to her cousin Waraqa Ibn Nawfal, WHO   was old and blind and Who Knew the Scriptures of the Jews and Christians, and   is Stated to have translated them into Arabic. When she of toll him of what   she had heard, he cried out: "Holy! Holy! Verily, this is the Namus (The   Holy Spirit) WHO CAME to Moses. He will be the prophet of his people. Tell   him this and bid him to be brave at heart. " When the two men met   subsequently in the street, the blind old student of the Jewish and Christian   Scriptures spoke of his faith and trust: "I Swear by Him in Who hand   Waraqa's life is, Allah has chosen you to be the prophet of this people .   They will call you a liar, They Will persecute you, They Will Banish you, and   They Will fight against you. Oh, that I Could live to Those days. I would   fight for these. " And he Kissed him on the forehead.  The   first vision was Followed by a considerable period, during the which Muhammad   suffered much mental depression. The angel spoke to the grieved heart of hope   and trust and of the bright future when he would see the people of the earth   crowding into the one true faith. His destiny was unfolded to him, when,   wrapped in profound meditation, Melancholy and sad, he felt Himself called by   a voice from heaven to Arise and Preach. O you (Muhammad) enveloped (in   garments)! Arise and warn! And your Lord (Allah) magnify! (Ch   74:1-3 Quran) He arose and engaged Himself in the work to the which he   was called. Khadijah was the first to accept his mission. She was to believe   in the revelations, to abandon the idolatry of her people and to join him in   purity of heart and in offering up prayers to Allah the Almighty.  At the   beginning of his mission, Muhammad - hereinafter called the Prophet - opened   his soul only to Those WHO were attached to him and tried to free them from   the gross practices of Their forefathers. After Khadijah, his cousin 'Ali was   the next companion. The Prophet used to go into Often the desert around Mecca with his wife and   young cousin That They Might together offer Their heart felt thanks to the   Lord of all nations for His manifold blessings. Once They were surprised by   Abu Talib, the father of 'Ali. He said to the Prophet: "O son of my   brother, what is this religion are you Following?" "It is the   religion of Allah of His Angels, His Messengers and of our ancestor of   Abraham," answered the Prophet. "God has sent me to His Servants,   to direct them towards the truth, and you, O my uncle, are the most worthy of   all. It is not meet That I should call upon you and Thus Spake it is meet   That you should accept the truth and help in spreading it. "  Abu   Talib replied: "Son of my brother, I can not abjure the religion of my   fathers: but by the Supreme Lord, while I am alive, none shall dare to injure   you." Then turning towards' Ali, the Venerable chief asked what religion   was his. Ali answered: "O father, I believe in Allah and His Prophet and   go with him." Abu Talib replied: "Well my son, he will not call you   to anything except what is good, therefore you are free to go with him."    After   'Ali, Muhammad's adopted son Zaid Became a convert to the new faith. He was   Followed by Abu Bakr, a leading member of the Quraish tribe and an honest,   Wealthy merchants enjoyed great consideration WHO Among his compatriots. He   was but two years younger than the Prophet. His adoption of the new faith was   of great moral effect. Soon after, five notables Themselves Presented before   the Prophet and accepted Islam. Several converts also CAME from the lower   classes of the Arabs to the aim of adopting the new religion.  For   three long weary years, the Prophet labored very Quietly to deliver his   people from the worship of idols. Polytheism was Deeply rooted Among the   people. It Offered Attractions, the which the new faith in its purity did not   possess. The Quraish had personal material interests in the old worship, and   Their prestige was dependent upon its maintenance. The Prophet had to contend   with the idolatrous worship of its followers and to oppose the ruling   oligarchy, governed the which its Destinies.  After   three years of constant but quiet struggle, only thirty followers were   secured. An Important change now Occurred in the relations of the Prophet   with the citizens of Mecca.   His compatriots had Begun to doubt his sanity, thinking him crazy or   Possessed by an evil spirit. Hitherto he preached Quietly and unobtrusively.   He now Decided to appeal publicly to the Meccans, requesting them to abandon   Their idolatry. For this he arranged a gathering on a neighboring hill and   there spoke to them of Their Folly in the sight of God in worshipping pieces   of stone the which They called Their gods. He invited them to abandon Their   old impious worship and the aim of adopting the faith of love, truth and   purity. He warned them of the fate That had overtaken past races WHO had not heeded   the Preaching of former Prophets. But the gathering Departed without   listening to the warning given them by the Prophet.  Thus   Spake Having failed to induce his fellow citizens to listen to him, he turned   his attention to the Strangers arriving in the city on commerce or   Pilgrimage. But the Quraish made attempts to frustrate his Efforts. They   hastened to meet the Strangers Themselves first on different routes, to warn   them against holding any communication with the Prophet, whom They   represented as a dangerous magician. When the pilgrims or traders returned to   Their homes, They Carried with them the news of the advent of the bold   preacher was inviting the WHO Arabs loudly - at the risk of his own life - to   abandon the worship of idols Their dear.  Now the   Prophet and his followers Became subject to some persecution and indignity.   The hostile Quraish prevented the Prophet from offering his prayers at the   Sacred House of the Ka'ba; They pursued him Wherever he went; They covered   him and his Disciples with dirt and filth when engaged in their Devotions;   They Scattered Thorns in the places the which he frequented for devotion and   meditation. Amidst all these trials the Prophet did not WAVER. He was full of   confidence in his mission, even when on Several Occasions he was put in   imminent danger of losing his life.  At this   time Hamza, the youngest son of Abdul Muttalib, adopted Islam. Hamza was a   man of distinguished Bravery, an Intrepid warrior, generous and true, Whose   Heroism earned for him the title of the "Lion of God." He Became a   devoted adherent of Islam and everlost his life in the cause.  The   Prophet continued Preaching to the Arabs in a most gentle and reasonable   manner. He called thepeople, so accustomed to iniquity and wrong doings, to   abandon Their abominations. In burning words the which excited the hearts of   his hearers, he warned them of the punishment inflicted upon the which God   had the ancient tribes of 'Ad and Thamud WHO had obstinately disobeyed the   Teachings of God's messengers to them. He adjured them by the wonderful   sights of nature, by the noon day brightness, by the night when it spreads   its veil, by the day when it Appears in glory to listen to his warning before   a similar destruction befell them. He spoke to them of the Day of Reckoning,   when Their deeds in this world will be weighed before the Eternal Judge, when   the children had been Buried Alive WHO will be asked for what crime They were   put to death.  Almighty   Allah said: Nay, They wonder That there has come to them a Warner (Muhammad)   from Among Themselves. So the disbeliveers say: "This is a   strange thing! When we are dead and have Become dust (shall we be   resurrected)? That is a far return." We know that the which the   earth takes of them (Their dead bodies), and with Us is a Book preserved (ie,   the Book of Decrees).  Nay,   but, They have denied the truth (this Qur'an) when it has come to them, so   They are in a confused state (can not differentiate Between right and wrong).   They have not looked at the heaven above them, how We have made it and   adorned it, and there are no rifts in it? And the earth! We have spread it   out, and set thereon mountains standing firm, and have produced therein every   kind of lovely growth (plants).  An   insight and a reminder for every slave turning to Allah (ie, the one WHO   Believes in Allah and performs deeds of His obedience, and always begs His   pardon). And We send down blessed water (rain) from the sky, then we Produce   therewith gardens and grain (every kind of harvests are reaped That). And   tall date palms, with ranged clusters; a provision for (Allah's) Slaves. And   We give life therewith to a dead land. Thus Spake will be the resurrection   (of the dead). Denied before them (ie these Pagans of Makka WHO denied you, O   Muhammad) the people of Noah, and the dwellers of Rass, and the Thamud, and   'Ad, and Pharaoh, and the brethren of Lot, and the dwellers of the Wood , and   the people of Tubba, everyone of them denied Their Messengers, so My Threat   took effect. "(Ch 50: 2-14 Quran)  Almighty   Allah also declared: All praises and thanks be to Allah Who Alone created   the heavens and the earth, and originated the darkness and the light, Those   yet disbelieve hold others as WHO equal with Their Lord. He it is Who   has created you from clay, and then has decreed a Stated Term (for you to   die). And there is with Him another determined term (for you to be   resurrected), yet you doubt (in the Resurrection).  And He   is Allah (to be Worshipped Alone) in the heavens and on the earth, He knows   what you conceal and what you reveal, and He knows what you earn (good or   bad). And never an dad (sign) comes to them from the verse (proofs,   Evidences, lessons, signs, revelations, etc.) Of Their Lord, but that They   have been turning away from it.  Indeed,   They rejected the truth (The Qur'an and Muhammad) when it Came to them, but   there will come to them the news of that (The Torment) the which They used to   mock at. They have not seen how many a generation before them We have   destroyed whom We had established on the earth Such as We have not established   you? And We poured out on them rain from the sky in Abundance, and made the   rivers flow under them. Yet We destroyed them for Their Sins, and created   after them other generations. "(Ch 6:1-6 Quran)  As the   number of Believers Increased and the cause of the Prophet was strengthened   by the conversions of many powerful citizens, the Prophet's Preaching alarmed   the Quraish. Their power and prestige were at stake. They were the Custodians   of the idols, the which the Prophet had Threatened to destroy; They were the   Ministers of the worship, the which he denounced; in fact Wholly Their   existence and living depended upon the maintenance of the old institutions.   The Prophet taught That in the sight of his Lord all human were equal, the   only distinction Recognized Among them being the weight of Their Piety.  Allah   the Exalted said: O mankind! We have created you from a male and a   female, and made you into nations and tribes, that   you may know one another. Verily, the most honorable mention of you in the Sight of   Allah is that? Believer WHO has At Taqwa (one of the Muttaqun, Pious and   righteous persons WHO fear Allah much, abstain from all Kinds of Sins and   evil deeds the which He has forbidden), and love Allah much (perform all   Kinds of good deeds the which He has ordained. Verily, God is All-Knowing,   All-Aware. "(Ch 49:13 Quran).  The   Quraish would have none of this leveling of distinctions, as it reflected   upon Their long Inherited privileges. Accordingly, They organized a system of   persecution in order to suppressed the movement before it Became firmly   established. They Decided That each family should take upon Itself the task   of stamping out the new faith on the spot. Each household tortured its own   members or adherents or Slaves were WHO Themselves Supposed to have connected   with the new religion. With the exception of the Prophet, WHO was protected   by Abu Talib and his kinsmen, and Abu Bakr, and a few others were either   distinguished by WHO Their rank or Possessed some influence Among the   Quraish, all other converts were subjected to different Sorts of torture .   Some of them were thrown into prison, starved, and then flogged. The hill of   Ramada and the place called Bata Thus Spake Became Cruel scenes of torture.  One day   the Quraish tried to induce the Prophet to discontinue his Teachings of the   new religion, the which had sown Discord Among Their people. 'Utba Ibn   Rabi'a, was Delegated to see the Prophet and speak to him. 'Utba said:   "O son of my brother, you are distinguished by your qualities; yet you   have sown Discord Among our people and cast dissension in our families; you   denounced our gods and goddesses and you charge our Ancestors with impiety.   Now we are come to make a proposition to you, and I ask you to think well   before you reject it. " "I am listening to you, O father of   Walid," said the Prophet. "O son of my brother, if by this affair   you intend to acquire Riches, honors, and dignity, we are willing to collect   for you a fortune larger than is Possessed by any one of us: we shall make   you our chief and will do nothing without you. If you desire dominion, we   shall make you our king; and if the demon possesses the which you can not be   subdued, we will bring you doctors and give them until Riches They cure you.   " When 'Utba had finished his discourse, the Prophet said: "Now   listen to me, O father of Walid." "I listen." He replied. The   Prophet, recited to him the first thirteen verses of Surah Fussilat, the   which maybe interpreted as follows: In the Name of Allah The Most   Beneficent, The Most Merciful.  Ha Mim   (These letters are one of the miracles of the Quran, and none but Allah Alone   knows Their meanings). A revelation from Allah the Most Beneficent, the Most   Merciful. A Book whereof the Verses are explained in detail; - a Quran in   Arabic for people WHO know. Giving glad Tidings (of Paradise to the one WHO   Believes in the Oneness of Allah Islamic Monotheism) and Fears Allah much   (abstains from all Kinds of Sins and evil deeds) and loves Allah much   (performing all Kinds of good deeds the which He has ordained ), and warning   (of punishment in the Hellfire to be the one WHO disbelieves in the Oneness   of Allah), but most of them turn away, so They listen not.  And They   say: "Our hearts are under coverings (screened) from That to the which   you invite us, and in our ears is deafness, and Between us and you is a   screen, so work you (on your way); verily we are working (on our way).  Say (O   Muhammad): "I am only a human being like you. It is inspired in me that   your Ilah (God) is One Ilah (God - Allah), therefore take the Straight Path   to Him (with true Faith - Islamic Monotheism ) and obedience to Him, and seek   Forgiveness of Him. And woe to Al-Mushrikeen; (polytheists, Pagans,   idolaters, and disbeliveers in the Oneness of Allah, etc, Those WHO worship   others along with or set up rivals or partners to Allah etc.) Those WHO give   not the Zakat and disbeliveers They are in the Hereafter. Truly, Those who   believe (in the Oneness of Allah and in His Messenger Muhammad - Islamic   Monotheism) and do righteous good deeds for them will be an endless reward   That will never stop (Paradise).  Say (O   Muhammad): "Do you verily disbelieve in Him Who created the earth in two   Days and you set up rivals (in worship) with Him? That is the Lord of the   Alamin (mankind, jinn and all that exists).  He   placed therein (the earth) firm mountains from above it, and He blessed it,   and therein its sustenance Measured (for its dwellers) in four Days equal   (all these four days were equal in the length of time), for all Those WHO ask   (about its creation). He then Istawa (rose over) towards the heaven when it   was smoke, and said to it and to the earth: "Come both of you willingly   or unwillingly." They both said: "We come, willingly." Then He   completed and finished from Their creation as seven heavens in two days and   he made in each heaven with lamps (stars) to be an adornment as well as to   guard (from the devils by using them as missiles against the devils). Such is   the Decree of Him the All Mighty, the All Knower.  But if   They turn away, then say (O Muhammad): "I have warned you of a Sa'iqa (a   destruction awful cry, Torment, hit, a thunder bolt) like the Sa'iqa the   which overtook 'Ad and Thamud (people ). " (Ch 41:1-13 Quran).  When the   Prophet had finished his recitation, he said to 'Utba: "This is my reply   to your proposition; now take what course you find best."  Persecution   by the Quraish grew fiercer every day and the sufferings of the Prophet's   Disciples Became unbearable. He had heard of the righteousness, tolerance,   and hospitality of the neighboring Christian king of Abyssinia.   He recommended WHO Such of his Companions were without protection to seek   refuge in the kingdom of that Pious king, Al Najashi (Negus). Some fifteen of   the adherents of Islam promptly Unprotected Themselves availed of the advice   and sailed to Abyssinia. Here they met with   a very kind reception from the Negus. This is called the first hijra   (migration) in the history of Islam and Occurred in the fifth year of the   Prophet Muhammad's mission, AD 615. These emigrants were soon Followed by   many of Their fellow sufferers, until the number reached eighty-three men and   eighteen women.  The   hostile Quraish, furious at the escape of Their Victims, sent deputes to the   king of Abyssinia to request him to deliver up the Refugees, that They Might   Be put to death for adjuring Embracing Their old religion and a new one. The   king summoned the poor fugitives and inquired of them what was the religion,   the which They had adopted in preference to Their old faith. Ja'far, son of   Abu Talib and brother of 'Ali, ACTED as Spokesman for the exiles. He's Thus   spoke: "O king, we were plunged in the depth of ignorance and barbarism,   we adored idols, we lived in unchastity, and we ate dead bodies, and we spoke   abomination, we disregarded every feeling of humanity and sense of duty   towards our neighbors, and we Knew no law but that of the strong, when God   raised Among Us a man, of Whose birth, truthfulness, honesty, and purity we   were aware. He called us to profess the Unity of God and taught us to   associate nothing with Him; he forbade us the worship of idols and enjoined   us to speak the truth, to be faithful to our trusts, to be merciful, and to   regard the rights of neighbors; he forbade us to speak evil of the worship of   God and not to return to the worship of idols of woos and stone and to   abstain from evil, to offer prayers, to give alms, to Observe the fast. We   have believed in him, we have accepted his Teachings and his injunctions to   worship Allah alone and to associate nothing with Him. Hence our people have   persecuted us, Trying to Make us forego the worship of Allah and return to   the worship of idols of wood and stone and other abominations. They have   tortured us and injured us until, finding no safety Among them, we have come   to your kingdom trusting you will give us protection against Their   persecution. "  After   hearing the above speech, the hospitable king ordered the deputies to return   to Their people in safety and not to interfere with Their fugitives. Thus   Spake the emigrants passed the period of exile in peace and comfort.  While   the followers of the Prophet sought safety in foreign lands against the   persecution of Their people, he continued his warnings to the Quraish more   strenuously than ever. Again They Came to him with offers of Riches and   honor, the which he firmly and utterly Refused. But They mocked at him and   urged him for miracles to PROVE his mission. He used to answer: "Allah   has not sent me to work wonders; He has sent me to Preach to you."  Thus   Spake disclaiming all power of wonder working, the Prophet ever rested the   truth of his divine mission upon his wise Teachings. He addressed Himself to   the inner consciousness of man, to his common sense and to his own better judgment.   Say (O Muhammad): "I am only a human being like you. It is inspired   in me that your Ilah (God) is One Ilah (God-Allah), therefore take the   Straight Path to Him (with true Faith - Islamic Monotheism ) and obedience to   Him and seek Forgiveness of Him. And woe to Al Mushrikeen; (polytheists,   Pagans, idolaters, and disbeliveers in the Oneness of Allah etc., WHO Those   worship others along with Allah or set up rivals or partners to Allah etc .   (Ch 41:6 Quran)  Despite   all the exhortation of the Prophet, the Quraish persisted in asking him for a   sign. They insisted That unless some sign be sent down to him from his Lord,   They would not believe. The disbeliveers used to ask: "Why has Muhammad   not been sent with miracles like previous Prophets?" T he Prophet   replied: "Because miracles had proved inadequate to convince. Noah was   sent with signs, and with what effect? Where was the lost tribe of   Thamud? They had Refused to receive the Preaching of the Prophet Salih,   unless he showed them a sign and Caused the rock to bring forth a living   camel. He did What They asked. In scorn They cut the camel's feet and then   online the prophet to fulfill his threats of judgment, were found dead in   their beds the next morning, stricken by the angel of the Lord. "  There   are some seventeen places in the Quran, in which the Prophet Muhammad is   challenged to work a sign, and he answered them all to the same or similar   effect: Allah has the power of working miracles, and has not been believed;   there were greater miracles in nature than any which could be wrought outside   of it; and the Quran itself was a great, everlasting miracle. The Quran, the   Prophet used to assert to the disbeliveers, is a book of blessings which is a   warning for the whole world; it is a complete guidance and explains   everything necessary; it is a reminder of what is imprinted on human nature   and is free from every discrepancy and from error and falsehood. It is a book   of true guidance and a light to all.  As to   the sacred idols, so much honored and esteemed by the pagan Arabs, the   Prophet openly recited: They are but names which you have named - you and   your fathers - for which Allah has sent down no authority. (CH 53:23 Quran)    When the   Prophet thus spoke reproachfully of the sacred gods of the Quraish, the   latter redoubled their persecution. But the Prophet, nevertheless, continued   his preaching undaunted but the hostility of his enemies or by their bitter   persecution of him. And despite all opposition and increased persecution, the   new faith gained ground. The national fair at Okadh near Mecca attracted many desert Bedouins and   trading citizen of distant towns. These listened to the teachings of the   Prophet, to his admonitions, and to his denunciations of their sacred idols   and of their superstitions. They carried back all that they had heard to   their distant homes, and thus the advent of the Prophet was made know to almost   all parts of the peninsula.  The   Meccans, however, were more than ever furious at the Prophet's increasing   preaching against their religion. They asked his uncle Abu Talib to stop him,   but he could not do anything. At , as the Prophet persisted in his ardent   denunciations against their ungodliness and impiety, they turned him out from   the Ka'ba where he used to sit and preach, and subsequently went in a body to   Abu Talib. They urged the venerable chief to prevent his nephew from abusing   their gods any longer or uttering any ill words against their ancestors. They   warned Abu Talib that if he would not do that, he would be excluded from the   communion of his people and driven to side with Muhammad; the matter would   then be settled by fight until one of the two parties were exterminated.  Abu   Talib neither wished to separate himself from his people, nor forsake his   nephew for the idolaters to revenge themselves upon. He spoke to the Prophet   very softly and begged him to abandon his affair. To this suggestion the   Prophet firmly replied: "O my uncle, if they placed the sun in my right   hand and the moon in my left hand to cause me to renounce my task, verily I   would not desist therefrom until Allah made manifest His cause or I perished   in the attempt." The Prophet, overcome by the thought that his uncle and   protector was willing to desert him, turned to depart. But Abu Talib called   him loudly to come back, and he came. "Say whatever you please; for by   the Lord I shall not desert you ever."  The   Quraish again attempted in vain to cause Abu Talib to abandon his nephew. The   venerable chief declared his intention to protect his nephew against any   menace or violence. He appealed to the sense of honor of the two families of   the Bani Hashim and the Bani Muttalib, both families being kinsmen of the   Prophet, to protect their member from falling a victim to the hatred of rival   parties. All the members of the two families nobly responded to the appeal of   Abu Talib except Abu Lahab, one of the Prophet's uncles, who took part with   the persecutors.  During   this period, 'Umar Al-Khattab adopted Islam. In him the new faith gained a   valuable adherent and an important factor in the future development and   propagation of Islam. Hitherto he had been a violent opposer of the Prophet   and a bitter enemy of Islam. His conversion is said to have been worked by   the miraculous effect on his mind of a Surah of the Quran which his sister   was reading in her house, where he had gone with the intention of killing her   for adopting Islam. Thus the party of the Prophet had been strengthened by   the conversation by his uncle Hamza, a man of great valor and merit; and of   Abu Bakr and 'Umar, both men of great energy and reputation. The Muslims now   ventured to perform their devotions in public.  Alarmed   at the bold part which the Prophet and his followers were not able to assume,   and roused by the return of the deputies from Abyssinia and the announcement   of their unsuccessful mission, the Quraish determined to check by a decisive   blow any further progress of Islam. Towards this end, in the seventh year of   the mission, they made a solemn covenant against the descendants of Hashim   and Muttalib, engaging themselves to contract no marriage with any of them   and to have no communication with them. Upon this, the Quraish became divided   into two factions, and the two families of Hashim and Muttalib all repaired   to Abu Talib as their chief. Abu Lahab, the Prophet's uncle, however, out of   his inveterate hatred of his nephew and his doctrine, went over to the   opposite party, whose chief was Abu Sufyan Ibn Harb, of the family of Umayya.   The persecuted party, Muslims as well as idolaters betook themselves to a   defile on the eastern skirts of Mecca.   They lived in this defensive position for three years. The provisions, which   they had carried with them, were soon exhausted. Probably they would have   entirely perished but for the sympathy and occasional help received from less   bigoted compatriots.  Towards   the beginning of the tenth year of the mission, reconciliation was concluded   between the Quraish and the two families of Hashim and Abdul Muttalib through   the intermediation of Hisham, Ibn Umar, and Zobeir, Ibn Abu Umayya. Thus, the   alliance against the two families was abolished, and they were able to return   to Mecca.  During   the period the Prophet and his kinspeople passed in their defensive position,   Islam made no progress outside; but in the sacred months, when violence was   considered sacrilege, the Prophet used to come out of his temporary prison to   preach Islam to the pilgrims. In the following year, both Abu Talib and   Khadijah died. Thus the Prophet lost in Abu Talib the kind guardian of his   youth who had hitherto protected him against his enemies, and in Khadijah his   most encouraging companion. She was ever his angel of hope and consolation.   The Prophet, weighed down by the loss of his amiable protector and his   beloved wife, without hope of turning the Quraish from idolatry, with a   saddened heart, yet full of trust, resolved to exercise his ministry in some   of her field. He chose Taif, a town about sixty miles east of Mecca, where he went   accompanied by a faithful servant Zaid. The tribe of Thakif, who were the   inhabitants of Taif, received Muhammad very coldly. However, he stayed there   for one month. Though the more considerate and better sort of men treated him   with a little respect, the slaves and common people refused to listen to his   teachings; they were outrageously indignant at his invitation to abandon the   gods they worshipped with such freedom of morals and lightness of heart. At   length they rose against him, and bringing him to the wall of the city,   obliged him to depart and return to Mecca.    The   repulse greatly discouraged his followers; however, the Prophet boldly   continued to preach to the public assemblies at the pilgrimage and gained   several new converts, among whom were six of the city of Yahtrib (later   called Medina), of the Jewish tribe of Khazraj. When these Yathribites   returned home, they spread the news among their people that a prophet had   arisen among the Arabs who was to call them to Allah and put an end to their   inquiries.  In the   twelfth year of his mission, the Prophet made his night journey from Mecca to Jerusalem,   and thence to heaven. His journey, known in history as Miraj (Ascension) was   a real bodily one and not only a vision. It was at this time that Allah   ordered the Muslims to pray the five daily prayers.  Almighty   Allah had said: Glorified (and Exalted) be He (Allah) (above all that evil   they associate with Him), Who took His slave Muhammad for a journey by night   from AL Masjid al Haram (at Makka) to the farthest mosque (in Jerusalem), the   neighborhood whereof We have blessed, order that We might show him (Muhammad)   of Our Ayat (proofs, evidences, lessons, signs, etc.). Verily, He is the All   Hearer, the All Seer." (Ch 17:1 Quran)  Abbas   Ibn Malik reported that Malik Ibn Sasaa said that Allah's Messenger described   to them his Night Journey saying: "While I was lying in Al-Hatim or   Al-Hijr, suddenly someone came to me and cut my body open from here to   here." I asked Al-Jarud, who was by my side, "What does he   mean?" He said: "It means from his throat to his public area,"   or said, "From the top of the chest." The Prophet further said,   "He then took out my heart. Then a gold tray of Belief was brought to me   and my heart was washed and was filled (with Belief) and then returned to its   original place. Then a white animal which was smaller than a mule and bigger   than a donkey was brought to me." (On this Al-Jarud asked: "Was it   in the Buraq, O Abu Hamza?" I (Anas) replied in the affirmative. The   Prophet said: "The animal's step (was so wide that it) reached the   farthest point within the reach of the animals' sight. I was carried on it,   and Gabriel set out with me till we reached the nearest heaven.  "When   he asked for the gate to be opened, it was asked, 'Who is it?' Gabriel   answered, 'Gabriel.' It was asked, 'Who is accompany you?' Gabriel replied,   'Muhammad.' It was asked, 'Has Muhammad been called?' Gabriel replied in the   affirmative. Then it was said. 'He is welcomed. What an excellent visit his   is!' The gate was opened, and when I went over the first heaven, I saw Adam   there. Gabriel said to me: 'This is your father, Adam; pay him your   greetings.' So I greeted him and he returned the greetings to me and said:   'You are welcomed, O pious son and pious Prophet.' Then Gabriel ascended with   me till we reached the second heaven. Gabriel asked for the gate to be   opened. It was asked: 'Who is it?' Gabriel answered: 'Gabriel.' It was asked:   'Who is accompany you?' Gabriel replied, 'Muhammad.' It was asked: 'Has he   been called?' Gabriel answered in the affirmative. Then it was said: 'He is   welcomed. What an excellent visit his is!' The gate was opened.  "When   I went over the second heaven, here I saw John (Yahya) and Jesus (Isa), who   were cousins of each other. Gabriel said to me: "These are John and   Jesus; pay them your greetings.' So I greeted them and both of them returned   my greetings to me and said, 'You are welcomed, O pious brother and pious   Prophet.' Then Gabriel ascended with me to the third heaven and asked for its   gate to be opened. IT was asked 'Who is it?' And Gabriel replied: 'Gabriel.'   It was asked, 'Who is accompany you?' Gabriel replied, 'Muhammad.' It was   asked, 'Has he been called?' Gabriel replied in the affirmative. Then it was   said: 'He is welcomed, what an excellent visit his is!' The gate was opened,   and when I went over the third heaven there I saw Joseph (Yusuf), Gabriel   said to me: 'This is Joseph, pay him your greetings.' So I greeted him and he   returned the greetings to me and said: 'You are welcomed, O pious brother and   pious Prophet.' Then Gabriel ascended with me to the fourth heaven and asked   for its gate to be opened. IT was asked 'Who is it?' Gabriel replied,   'Gabriel' It was asked: 'Who is accompany you?' Gabriel replied: 'Muhammad.'   It was asked: 'Has he been called?' Gabriel replied in the affirmative. Then   it was said: 'He is welcomed, what an excellent visit his is!'  "The   gate was opened, and when I went over the fourth heaven, there I saw Enoch   (Idris), Gabriel said to me: 'This is Enoch; pay him your greetings.' So I   greeted him and he returned the greetings to me and said: 'You are welcomed O   pious brother and pious Prophet.' Then Gabriel ascended with me to the fifth   heaven and asked for its gate to be opened. It was asked: 'Who is it?'   Gabriel replied: 'Gabriel.' It was asked: 'Who is accompany you?' Gabriel   replied 'Muhammad.' It was asked: 'Has he been called?' Gabriel replied in   the affirmative. Then it was said: 'He is welcomed, what an excellent visit   his is!' So when I went over the fifth heaven, there I saw Aaron (Harun),   Gabriel said to me: "This is Aaron; pay hyour greetings.' So I greeted   him and he returned the greetings to me and said: "You are welcomed, O   pious brother and pious Prophet." The Gabriel ascended with me to the   sixth heaven and asked for its gate to be opened. It was asked: 'Who is it?'   Gabriel replied: 'Gabriel.' It was asked: 'Who is accompanying you?' Gabriel   replied: 'Muhammad.' It was said: 'Has he been called?' Gabriel replied in   the affirmative. It was said: 'He is welcomed. What an excellent visit his   is!'  "When   I went over the sixth heaven, there I saw Moses (Musa). Gabriel said to me:   "This is Moses; pay him your greeting. So I greeted him and he returned   the greetings to me and said: "You are welcomed, O pious brother and   pious Prophet." When I left him (Moses) he wept. Someone asked him:   'What makes you weep?' Moses said: 'I weep because after me there has been   sent (as Prophet) a young man whose followers will enter Paradise   in greater numbers than my followers.' Then Gabriel ascended with me to the   seventh heaven and asked for its gate to be opened. It was asked: 'Who is   it?' Gabriel replied: 'Gabriel.' It was asked: 'Who is accompanying you?'   Gabriel replied: 'Muhammad.' It was asked: 'Has he been called?' Gabriel   replied in the affirmative. Then it said: 'He is welcomed. What an excellent   visit his is!'  "So   when I went (over the seventh heaven), there I saw Abraham (Ibrahim). Gabriel   said to me: 'This is your father; pay your greetings to him.' So I greeted   him and he returned the greetings to me and said: 'You are welcomed, O pious   son and pious Prophet.' Then I was made to ascend to Sidrat-ul-Muntaha (the   Lote Tree of the utmost boundary). Behold! Its fruits were like the jars of   Hajr (a place near Medina)   and its leaves were as big as the ears of elephants. Gabriel said: "This   is the Lote Tree of the utmost and boundary.' Behold! There ran four rivers,   two were hidden and two were visible, I asked: 'What are these two kinds of   rivers, O Gabriel?' He replied: 'As for the hidden rivers, they are two   rivers in Paradise and the visible rivers are the Nile and the Euphrates.'  "Then   Al-Bait-ul-Ma'mur (the Sacred House) was shown to me and a container full of   wine and another full of milk and a third full of honey were brought to me. I   took the milk. Gabriel remarked: 'This is the Islamic religion which you and   your followers are following.' Then the prayers were enjoined on me: they   were fifty prayers a day. When I returned, I passed by Moses, who asked me;   'What have you been ordered to do?' I replied: 'I have been ordered to offer   fifty prayers a day.' Moses said: 'Your followers cannot bear fifty prayers a   day, and by Allah I have tested people before you, and I have tried my level   best with Bani Israel in vain. Go back to your Lord and ask for reduction to   lessen your followers'' burden.' So I went back, and Allah reduced ten   prayers for me. Then again I came to Moses, but he repeated the same as he   had said before. Then again I went back to Allah, and He reduced ten more   prayers. When I came to Moses he said the same. I went back to Allah, and He   ordered m to observe ten prayers a day. When I came back to Moses, he   repeated the same advice, so I went back to Allah and was ordered to observe   five prayers a day.  "When   I came back to Moses, he said: 'What have you been ordered?' I replied: 'I   have been ordered to observe five prayers a day.' He said: 'Your followers   cannot bear fear prayers a day, and no doubt, I have got an experience of the   people before you, and I have tried my level best with Bani Israel, so go   back to your Lord and ask for reduction to lesson your followers' burden.' I   said: 'I have requested so much of my Lord that I feel ashamed, but I am   satisfied now and surrender to Allah's Order.' When I left, I heard a voice   saying: 'I have passed My order and have lessened the burden of My   worshippers.'"  In this   year, twelve men of Yathrib, of whom ten were of the Jewish tribe of Khazraj   and the other two of Aws, came to Meccan and took an oath of fidelity to the   Prophet at Al-Aqaba, a hill on the north of that city. This oath was called   the Women's' Oath, not that any women were present at this time, but because   a man was not thereby obliged to take up arms in defense of the Prophet or   his religion, it being the same oath that was afterwards exacted of the   women. This oath was as follows: "We will not associate anything with   Allah; we will not steal nor commit adultery or fornication, nor kill our   children (as the pagan Arabs used to do when they apprehended that they would   not be able to maintain them), nor forge calumnies; we will obey the Prophet   in everything that is reasonable, and we will be faithful to him in well and   sorrow." When they had solemnly engaged to do all this, the Prophet sent   one of his disciples, Mus'ab Ibn Umair, home with them to teach them the   fundamental doctrines and ceremonies of the religion. Mus'ab, having arrived   at Yathrib by the assistance of those who had been formerly converted, gained   several new converts, particularly Usaid Ibn Khudair, a chief of man of the   city, and Sa'd Ibn Mu'adh, prince of the tribe of Aws. Islam spread so fast   that there was a scarce a house that did not have some Muslims in it.  The next   year, being the thirteenth of the mission (AD 622) Mus'ab returned from   Yathrib accompanied by seventy-three men and two women of that city who had   adopted Islam, besides others who were as yet unbelievers. On their arrival,   these Yathribites immediately sent to the Prophet and invited him to their   city. The Prophet was not in great need of such assistance, for his opponents   had by this time grown so powerful in Mecca   that he could not stay there much longer without imminent danger. He   therefore accepted their proposal and met them one night by appointment at Al   Aqaba attended by his uncle Al-Abbas, who, though he as not then a convert,   wished his nephew well. Al Abbas made a speech to those of Yathrib wherein he   told them that, as the Prophet Muhammad was obliged to quit his native city   and seek shelter elsewhere, and they had offered him their protection, they   would do well not to deceive him; and that if they were not firmly resolved   to defend and not to betray him, they had better declare their minds and let   him provide for his safety in some other manner. Upon their professing their   sincerity, the Prophet swore to be faithful to them, on condition that they   should worship none but Allah observe the precepts of Islam, obey the Prophet   in all that was right, and protect him against all insults as heartily as   they would their wives and families. They then asked him what would be their   return, if they should happen to be killed in the cause of Allah; he   answered: "Paradise," whereupon   they pledged their faith to him and his cause. The Prophet then selected   twelve men out of their number to act as his delegates. Thus was concluded   the second covenant of Al Aqaba. The Yathribites returned home leaving the   Prophet to arrange for the journey to their city. The Prophet directed his   followers to seek immediate safety at Yathrib, which they accordingly did.   About one hundred families silently disappeared from Mecca and proceeded to Yathrib, where they   were received with enthusiasm and much ho spitality. Finally, all the   disciples had gone to Yathrib. The Prophet alone remained at Mecca, keeping with him only his young   cousin, 'Ali, and his devoted friend Abu Bakr.  The   Meccans, fearing the consequence of this new alliance, began to think   seriously of preventing Muhammad from escaping to Yathrib. They met in all   haste. After several milder expedients had been rejected, they decided that   he should be killed. They agreed that one man should be chosen out of every   tribe and that each man should strike a blow at him with his sword so that   responsibility of the guilt would rest equally on all tribes. The Bani   Hashim, Muhammad's own tribe, were much inferior and therefore would not be   able to revenge their kinsman's death.  A number   of noble youths were selected for the bloody deed. As the night advanced, the   assassins posted themselves round the Prophet's dwelling. They watched all   night long, waiting to murder Muhammad when he should leave his house at the   early dawn. By some the Prophet had warned of the danger, and he directed   'Ali to lie down in his place and wrap himself up in his green clock, which   he did. The Prophet miraculously escaped through the window and he repaired   to the house of Abu Bakr, unperceived by door. These, in the meantime,   looking through a crevice and seeing 'Ali, whom they mistook for Muhammad   himself, asleep, continued watching there until morning. When 'Ali arose,   they found themselves deceived. The fury of the Quraish was now unbounded.   The news that the would be assassins had returned unsuccessful and that   Muhammad had escaped aroused their whole energy. A price of a hundred camels   was set upon Muhammad's head.  Narrated   'Aisha Bint Abu Bakr (the wife of the Prophet): "I never remembered my   parents believing in any religion other than the true religion (Islam), and   (I don't remember) a single day passing without our being visited by Allah's   Messenger in the morning and in the evening. When the Muslims were put to   test (troubled by the pagans), Abu Bakr set out migrating to the land of Abyssinia   (Ethiopia), and when he reached Bark-al-Ghimad, Ibn Ad-Daghina, the chief of   the tribe of Qara, met him and said, 'O Abu Bakr! Where are you going?' Abu   Bakr replied: 'My people have turned me out (of my country), so I want to   wander on the earth and worship my Lord.' Ibn Ad-Dhagina said: 'O Abu Bakr! A   man like you should not leave his homeland, nor should he be driven out,   because you help the destitute, earn their living, and you keep good   relations with your kith and kin, help the weak and the poor, entertain   guests generously, and help the calamity-stricken persons. Therefore, I am   your protector. Go back and worship your Lord in your town.'  "So   Abu Bakr returned and Ibn Ad-Daghina accompanied him. In the evening Ibn   Ad-Dhagina visited the nobles of Quraish and said to them. 'A man like Abu   Bakr should not leave his homeland, nor should he be driven out. Do you   (Quraish) drive out a man who helps the destitute, earns their living, keeps   good relations with his kith and kin, helps the weak and poor, entertain   guests generously and helps the calamity-stricken persons?' So the people of   Quraish could not refuse Ibn Ad-Dhagina's protection, and they said to Ibn   Ad-Daghina: 'Let Abu Bakr worship his Lord in his house. He can pray and   recite there whatever he likes, but he should not hurt us with it, and should   not do it publicly, because we are afraid that he may affect our women and   children." Ibn Ad-Dhagina told Abu Bakr all of that. Abu Bakr stayed in   that state, worshipping his Lord in his house. He did not pray publicly, nor   did he recite Quran outside his house.  "Then   a thought occurred to Abu Bakr to build a mosque in front of his house, and   there he used to pray and recite the Quran. The women and children of the   pagans began to gather around him in great number. They used to wonder at him   and look at him. Abu Bakr was a man who used to weep too much, and he could   not help weeping or reciting the Quran. That situation scared the nobles of   the pagans of Quraish, so they sent for Ibn Ad-Daghina. When he came to them,   they said: 'We accepted your protection of Abu Bakr on condition that he   should worship his Lord in his house, but he has violated the conditions and   he has built a mosque in front of his house where he prays and recites the   Quran publicly. We are not afraid that he may affect our women and children   unfavorably. So, prevent him from that. If he likes to confine the worship of   his Lord to his house, he may do so, but if he insists on doing that openly,   ask him to release you from your obligation to protect him, for we dislike to   break our pact with you, but we deny Abu Bakr the right to announce his act   publicly.' Ibn Ad-Dhagina went to Abu Bakr and said: 'O Abu Bakr! You know   well what contract I have made on your behalf; now, you are either to abide   by it, or else release me from my obligation of protecting you, because I do   not want the Arabs hear that my people have dishonored a contract I have made   on behalf of another man.' Abu Bakr replied: 'I release you from your pact to   protect me and am pleased with the protection from Allah.' Aisha's   narration's continues: "At that time the Prophet was in Mecca, and he   said to the Muslims: 'In a dream I have been shown your migration place, a   land of date palm trees, between two mountains, the two stony tracts.' So,   some people migrated to Medina, and most of   those people who had previously migrated to the land   of Ethiopia, returned to Medina. Abu Bakr also   prepared to leave for Medina,   but Allah's Messenger said to him: 'Wait for awhile, because I hope that I   will be allowed to migrate also.' Abu Bakr replied: 'Do you indeed expect   this? Let my father be sacrificed for you!' The Prophet said: 'Yes.' So Abu   Bakr did not migrate for the sake of Allah's Messenger in order to accompany   him. He fed two she camels he possessed with the leaves of As-Samur tree that   fell on being struck by a stick for four months.  "One   day, while we were sitting in Abu Bakr's house at noon, someone said to Abu   Bakr: 'This is Allah's Messenger with his head covered coming at a time at   which he never used to visit us before.' Abu Bakr said: 'May my parents be   sacrificed for him. By Allah he has not come at this hour except for a great   necessity.' So Allah's Messenger came and asked permission to enter, and he   was allowed to enter. When he entered, he said to Abu Bakr: "Tell   everyone who is present with you to go away.' Abu Bakr replied: 'There are   none but your family, May my father be sacrificed for you, O Allah's   Messenger!' The Prophet said: 'I have been given permission to migrate.' Abu   Bakr said: 'Shall I accompany you? May my father be sacrificed for you, O   Allah's Messenger!' Allah's Messenger said: 'Yes.' Abu Bakr said, 'O Allah's   Messenger! May my father be sacrificed for you, take one of these two   she-camels of mine.' Allah's Messenger replied: 'I will accept it with   payment.' So we prepared the baggage quickly and put some journey food in a   leather bag for them. Asma, Abu Bakr's daughter, cut a piece from her waist   belt and tied the mouth of the leather bag with it, and for that reason she   was named 'Dhat-un-Nitaqain' (the owner of two belts).  "Then   Allah's Messenger and Abu Bakr reached a cave on the mountain of Thaur   and stayed there for three nights. Abdullah Ibn Abi Bakr who was an   intelligent and sagacious youth, used to stay with them overnight. He used to   leave them before daybreak so that in the morning he would be with Quraish as   if he had spent the night in Mecca.   He would keep in mind any plot made against them and when it became dark he   would go and inform them of it. 'Amir Ibn Fuhaira, the freed slave of Abu   Bakr, used to bring the milch sheep (of his master, Abu Bakr) to them a   little while after nightfall in order to rest the sheep there. So they always   had fresh milk at night, the milk of their sheep, and the milk which they   warmed by throwing heated stones in it. 'Amir Ibn Fuhaira would then call the   herd away when it was still dark (before daybreak). He did the same in each   of those three nights. Allah's Messenger and Abu Bakr had hired a man from   the tribe of Bani Ad-Dail from the family of Bani Abd Ibn Adi as an expert   guide, and he was in alliance with the family of Al-As Ibn Wail As-Sahmi and   he was in the religion of the infidels of Quraish. The Prophet and Abu Bakr   trusted him and gave him their two she-camels and took his promise to bring   their two she-camels to the cave of the mountain of Thaur   in the morning after three nights later. And when they set out, Amir Ibn   Futhaira and the guide went along with them and the guide led them, along the   seashore." (Sahih Al-Bukhari).  The   nephew of Suraqa Ibn Ju'sham said that his father informed him that he heard   Suraqa Ibn Jusham saying: "The messengers of the pagans of Quraish came   to us declaring that they had assigned for the persons who would kill or arrest   Allah's Messenger and Abu Bakr, a reward equal to their bloodmoney. While I   was sitting in one of the gatherings of my tribe, Bani Mudlij, a man from   them came to us and stood up while we were sitting and said: 'O Suraqa! No ,   I have just seen some people far away on the seashore, and I think they are   Muhammad and his companions.' I, too, realized that it must have been they.   But I said: 'No, it is not they, but you have seen so-and-so and so-and-so,   whom we saw set out.' I stayed in the gathering for a while and then got up   and left for my home, and ordered my slave-girl to get my horse, which was   behind a hillock, and keep it ready for me.  "Then   I took my spear and left by the back door of my house dragging the lower end   of the spear on the ground and keeping it low. Then I reached my horse,   mounted it and made it gallop. When I approached them (Muhammad and Abu   Bakr), my horse stumbled and I fell down from it. Then I stood up, gold hold   of my quiver and took out the divining arrows and drew lots as to whether I   should harm them or not, and the lot which I disliked came out. But I   remounted my horse and let it gallop, giving no importance to the divining   arrows. When I heard the recitation of the Qur'an by Allah's Messenger who   did not look hither and thither while Abu Bakr was doing it often, suddenly   the forelegs of my horse sank into the ground up to the knees, and I fell   down from it. Then I rebuked it, and it got up but could hardly take out its   forelegs from the ground, and when it stood up straight again, its forelegs   caused dust to rise up in the sky like smoke. Then again I drew lots with the   divining arrows, and the lot which I disliked came out. So I called upon them   to feel secure. They stopped, and I remounted my horse and went to them. When   I saw how I had been hampered from harming them, it came to my mind that the   cause of Allah's Messenger (Islam) would become victorious. So I said to   them: 'Your people have assigned a reward equal to bloodmoney for your head.'   Then I told them all the plans the people of Mecca had made concerning them. Then I   offered them some journey food and goods, but they refused to take anything   and did not ask for anything, but the Prophet said: 'Do not tell others about   us.' Then I requested him to write for me a statement of security and peace.   He ordered 'Amir Ibn Fuhaira, who wrote it for me on a parchment, and then   Allah's Messenger proceeded on his way." (Sahih Al-Bukhari)  "Narrated   'Urwa Ibn Az-Zubair: "Allah's Messenger met Az Zubair in a caravan of   Muslim merchants who were returning from Sham. Az -Zubair provided Allah's   Messenger and Abu Bakr with white clothes to wear. When the Muslims of Medina   heard the new of the departure of Allah's Messenger from Mecca   (towards Medina),   they started going to the Harra every morning,. They would wait for him till   the heat of the noon forced them to return. One day, after waiting for a long   while, they returned home, and when they went into their houses, a Jew   climbed up to the roof of one of the forts of his people to look for   something, and he saw Allah's Messenger and his companions, dressed in white   clothes, emerging out of the desert mirage.  "The   Jew could not help shouting at the top of his voice: 'O you Arabs! Here is   your great man whom you have been waiting for!' So all the Muslims rushed to   their arms and received Allah's Messenger on the summit of Harra. The Prophet   turned with them to the right and alighted at the quarters of Bani Amr Ibn   Auf, and this was on Monday in the month of Rabi ul Awal. Abu Bakr stood up,   receiving the people, while Allah's Messenger sat down and kept silent. Some   of the Ansar who came and had not seen Allah's Messenger before began   greeting Abu Bakr, but when the sunshine fell on Allah's Messenger and Abu   Bakr came forward and shaded him with his sheet, only then the people came to   know Allah's Messenger. Allah's Messenger stayed with Bani Amr Ibn Auf for   ten nights and established the mosque (Mosque of Quba) which was founded on   piety. Allah's Messenger prayed in it and then mounted his she-camel and   proceeded on, accompanied by the people till his she-camel knelt down at the   place of the Mosque of Allah's Messenger at Medina. Some Muslims used to pray there in   those days, and that place was a yard for drying dates belonging to Suhail   and Sahl, the orphan boys who were under the guardianship of Asad In Zurara.   When his she-camel knelt down, Allah's Messenger said: 'This place, Allah   willing, will be our abiding place.' Allah's Messenger then called the two   boys and told them to suggest a price for that yard so that he might take it   as a mosque. The two boys said: 'No, but we will give it as a gift, O Allah's   Messenger!' Allah's Messenger then built a mosque there. The Prophet himself   started carrying unburned bricks for its building and while doing so, he was   saying: 'This load is better than the load of Khaibar, for it is more pious   in the Sight of Allah and purer and better rewardable.' He was also saying:   'O Allah! The actual reward is the reward in the Hereafter, so bestow Your   Mercy on the Ansar and the Emigrants.' Thus the Prophet recited (by way of   proverb) the poem of some Muslim poet whose name is unknown to me." (Ibn   Shibab said, 'In the hadiths, it does not occur that Allah's Messenger   recited a complete poetic verse other than this one.') (Sahih Al-Bukhari)  Thus was   accomplished the hijrah, or the flight of Muhammad as called in European   annals, from which the Islamic calendar dates.  When the   Prophet Muhammad and his companions settled at Yathrib, this city changed its   name, and henceforth was called, Al-Medina, Al-Munawara, the Illuminated City,   or more shortly, Medina,   the City. It is situated about eleven-day's journey to the north of Mecca. At that time it   was ruled by two Kahtanite tribes, Aws and Khazraj. These two tribes,   however, were constantly quarreling among themselves. It was only about that   time when the Prophet announced his mission at Mecca that these tribes, after long years   of continuous warfare, entered on a period of comparative peace. When the   Prophet settled at Medina,   the tribes of Aws and Khazraj forgot entirely their old feuds and were united   together in the bond of Islam. Their old divisions were soon effaced and the   Ansar", the Helpers of the Prophet, became the common designation of all   Medinites who had helped the Prophet in his cause. Those who emigrated with   him from Mecca   received the title of "Muhajereen" or the Emigrants. The Prophet,   in order to unite both classes in closer bonds, established between them a   brotherhood, which linked them together as children of the same parents, with   the Prophet as their guardian.  The   first step the Prophet took, after his settlement at Medina, was to built a mosque for the   worship of Allah according to principles of Islam. Also, houses for the   accommodation of the emigrants were soon erected.  Medina and its suburb were at this time   inhabited by three distinct parties, the Emigrants, the Helpers, and the   Jews. In order to weld them together into an orderly federation, the Prophet   granted a charter to the people, clearly defining their rights and   obligations. This charter represented the framework of the first commonwealth   organized by the Prophet. It started thus: 'In the name of he Most Merciful   and Compassionate Lord, this charter is given by Muhammad, the Messenger of   Allah to all believers, whether of Quraish or Medina, and all individuals of   whatever origin who have made common cause with them, who shall all   constitute one nation."  The   following are some extracts from the charter: The state of peace and war shall   be common to all Muslims; no one among them shall have the right of   concluding peace with, or declaring war against, the enemies of his   co-religionists. The Jews who attach themselves to our commonwealth shall be   protected from all insults and vexations; they shall have an equal right with   our people to our assistance and good offices. The Jews of the various   branches and all others doiciled in Medina   shall form with the Muslims one composite nation; they shall practice their   religion as freely as the Muslims. The allies of the Jews shall enjoy the   same security and freedom. The guilty shall be pursued and punished. The Jews   shall join the Muslims in defending Medina   all enemies. The interior of Medina   shall be a sacred place for all who accept this charter. All true Muslims   shall hold in abhorrence every man guilty of crime, injustice or disorder; no   one shall uphold the culpable, though he be his nearest kin.  After   dealing with the interior management of the State, the charter concluded as   follows: "All future disputes arising among those who accept this   charter shall be referred, under Allah to the Prophet."  Thus   this charter put an end to the state of anarchy that prevailed among the   Arabs. It constituted the Prophet Muhammad as chief magistrate of the nation.    The   party of the Ansars, or Helpers, included some lukewarm converts who retained   an ill-concealed predilection for idolatry. These were headed by Abdullah Ibn   Ubai, a man with some claims to distinction. They ostensibly joined Islam,   but in secret were disaffected. They often were a source of considerable   danger to the newborn commonwealth and required unceasing watchfulness on the   part of the Prophet. Towards them he always showed the greatest patience and   forbearance, hoping in the end to win them over to the faith, which   expectations were fully justified by the result. While the death of Abdullah   Ibn Ubai, his party which were known as the party of the   "Munafiqeen" (the Hypocrites) disappeared.  The Jews   who constituted the third party of the Medinites were, however, the most   serious element of danger. No kindness or generous treatment on the part of   the Prophet would seem to satisfy them. They soon broke off and ranged   themselves with the enemies of the new faith. They did not hesitate to declare   openly that they preferred idolatry, with its attendant evils, to the faith   of Islam. Thus, the Prophet had to keep an eye on his enemies outside Medina, on the one   hand, and those within the city on the other. The Meccans who had sworn   Muhammad's death were well acquainted, thanks to the party of the Hypocrites   and of the Jews at Medina,   with the real forces of the Muslims. They also knew that the Jews had   accepted Muhammad's alliance only from motives of temporary expedience and   that they would break away from him to join the idolaters as soon as the   latter showed themselves in the vicinity of Medina. The safety of the state required   the proscription of the traitors who were secretly giving information to the   common enemy. About six men were executed for high treason of this nature.  Towards   the second year of the hijrah, the idolaters of Mecca began a series of hostile acts   against the Muslims of Medina. They sent men in parties to commit   depredations on the fruit trees of the Muslims of Medina and to carry away   their flocks. Now came the moment of severest trial to Islam. It became the   duty of the Prophet to take serious measures to guard against any plot rising   from within or a sudden attack from without. He put Medina in a state of military discipline.   He had to send frequent reconnoitering parties to guard against any sudden   onslaught. No sooner did the Prophet organize hi state than a large   well-equipped army of the Meccans was afield. A force constituting of one   thousand men marched under Abu Jahl, a great enemy of Islam, towards Medina to attack the   city. The Muslims received timely notice of their enemies' intention. A body   of three hundred adherents, of whom two thirds were citizens of Medina, was gathered to forestall the idolaters by   occupying the valley of Badr, situated near the sea between Mecca and Medina.   When the Prophet saw the army of the infidels approaching the valley, he   prayed that the little band of Muslims might not be destroyed.  The army   of the Meccans advanced into the open space which separated the Muslims from   the idolaters. According to Arab usage, the battle was began by simple   combats. The engagement that became general. The result of the battle was   that the Meccans were driven back with great loss. Several of their chiefs   were slain, including Abu Jahl. A large number of idolaters remained   prisoners in the hands of the Muslims. They were, contrary to all usage and   traditions of the Arabs, treated with the greatest humanity. The Prophet gave   strict orders that sympathy should be shown to them in their misfortune and   that they should be treated with kindness. These instructions were faithfully   obeyed by the Muslims to whose care the prisoners were confided. Dealing with   this event, Sir William Muir, in his book Life of Muhammad, quotes one of the   prisoners saying: "Blessing be on the men of Medina; they made us ride, while they   themselves walked; they gave us wheaten bread to eat, when there was little   of it, contenting themselves with dates."  Almighty   Allah said: And Allah has already made you victorious at Badr, when you   were a weak little force. So fear Allah much (abstain from all kinds of sins   and evil deeds which He has forbidden and love Allah much, perform all kinds   of good deeds which He has ordained) that you may be grateful. (Remember)   when you (Muhammad) said to the believers, "is it not enough for you   that your Lord (Allah) should help you with three thousand angels; sent down?   Yes, if you hold on to patience and piety, and the enemy comes rushing at   you; your Lord will help you with five thousand angels having marks of   distinction. Allah made it not but as a message of good news for you and as   an assurance to your hearts. And there is no victory except from Allah the   All Mighty, the All Wise. That He might cut off a part of those who   disbelieve, or expose them to infamy, so that they retire frustrated."   (Ch 3:123-127 Quran).  The   remarkable circumstances, which led to the victory of Badr, and results,   which followed from it, made a deep impression on the minds of the Muslims;   the angels of the heaven had battled on their side against their enemies. The   division of the spoils created some dissension between the Muslim warriors.   For the moment, the Prophet divided it equally among all. Subsequently, a   Qur'an revelation laid down a rule for future division of the spoils.   According to this rule, a fifth was reserved for the public treasury for the   support of the poor and indigent, while the distribution of the remaining   four fifths was left to the discretion of the Chief of the State.  The next   battle between the Quraish and the Muslims was the battle of Uhud, a hill   about four miles to the north of Medina.   The idolaters, to revenge their loss at Badr, made tremendous preparations   for a new attack upon the Muslims. They collected an army of three thousand   strong men, of whom seven hundred were armed with coats of mail, and two   hundred horses. These forces advanced under the conduct of Abu Sufyan and   encamped at a village six miles from Medina,   where they gave themselves up to spoiling the fields and flocks of the   Medinites. The Prophet, being much inferior to his enemies in number, at   first determined to keep himself within the town and to receive them there;   but afterwards, the advice of some of his companions prevailing he marched   out against them at the head of one thousand men, of whom one hundred were   armed with coats of mail; but he had no more than one horse, besides his own,   in his whole army. With these forces he halted at Mount Uhud.   He was soon abandoned by Abdullah Ibn Ubai, the leader of the Hypocrites,   with three hundred of his followers. Thus, the small force of the Prophet was   reduced to seven hundred.  At Mount Uhud the Muslim troops passed the   night, and in the morning, after offering their prayers, they advanced into   the plain. The Prophet contrived to have the hill at his back, and, the   better to secure his men from being surrounded, he placed fifty archers on   the height in the rear, behind the troops, and gave them strict orders not to   leave their posts whatever might happen. When they came to engage, the   Prophet had superiority at first. But afterward, his archers left their   position for the sake of plunder, thus allowing the enemy to attack the   Muslims in the fear and surround them. The Prophet lost the day and very   nearly lost his life. He was struck down by a shower of stones and wounded in   the face by two arrows, and one of his front teeth was broken. Of the   Muslims, seventy men were killed, among whom was the Prophet's uncle Hamza.   Of the infidels, twenty-two men were lost.  The   Quraish were too exhausted to follow up their advantage, either by attacking Medina or by driving   the Muslims from the heights of Uhud. They retreated from the Medinite   territories after barbarously mutilating the corpses of their dead enemies.  Almighty   Allah said: So do not become weak (against your enemy), nor be sad, and   you will be superior (in victory) if you are indeed (true) believers. If a   wound (and killing ) has touched you, be sure a similar wound (and killing)   has touched the others. And so are the days (good and not so good), We give   to men by turns, that Allah may test those who believe, and that He may take   martyrs from among you. And Allah likes not the Zalimeen (polytheists and   wrongdoers).  And that   Allah may test (or purify) the believers (from sins) and destroy the   disbeliveers. Do you think that you will enter Paradise   before Allah tests those of you who fought (in His Cause) and (also) tests   those who are patient? You did indeed wish for death (Ash-shahadah- martyrdom)   before you met it. Now you have seen it openly with your own eyes." (Ch   3:139-143 Quran)  Allah   the Exalted also said: We shall cast terror into the hearts of those who   disbelieve, because they joined others in worship with Allah for which He has   sent no authority; their abode will be the Fire and how evil is the abode of   the Zalimeen (polytheists and wrong-doers). And Allah did indeed fulfil His   Promise to you when you were killing them (your enemy) with His Permission;   until (the moment) you lost your courage and fell to disputing about the   order, and disobeyed after He showed you (of the booty) which you love. Among   you are some that desire this world and some that desire the Hereafter. Then   He made you flee from them (your enemy), and He might test you. But surely,   He forgave you, and Allah is most Gracious to the believers.  And   remember when you ran away (dreadfully) without even a casting a side-glance   at anyone, and the Messenger (Muhammad) was in your rear calling you back.   There did Allah give you one distress after another by way of requital to   teach you not to grieve for that which had escaped you, nor that which had   befallen you. And Allah is Well Aware of all that you do.  Then   after the distress, He sent down security for you. Slumber overtook a party   of you, while another party was thinking about themselves (as how to save   their ownselves, ignoring the others and the Prophet) and thought wrongly of   Allah - the thought of ignorance. They said, "Have we any part in the   affair?" Say you (O Muhammad): "Indeed the affair belongs wholly to   Allah." They hide within themselves what they dare not reveal to you,   saying: "If we had anything to do with the affair, none of us would have   been killed here." Say: "Even if you had remained in your homes,   those for whom death was decreed would certainly have gone forth to the place   of their death," but that Allah might test what is in your breasts; and   to Mahis (to test, to purify, to get rid of) that which was in your hearts   (sins), and Allah is All Knower of what is in (your) breasts." (Ch   3:151-154 Quran).  Narrated   Al-Baraa' Ibn Azib: "The Prophet appointed Abdullah Ibn Jubair as the   commander of the infantry men (archers) who were fifty on the day (of the   battle) of Uhud. He instructed them: 'Stick to your place, and don't leave it   even if you see birds snatching us, till I send for you; and if you see that   we have defeated the infidels and made them flee, even then you should not   leave your place till I send for you.' Then the infidels were defeated. By   Allah I saw the women fleeing lifting up their clothes revealing their leg   bangles and their legs. So, the companions of Abdullah Ibn Jubair said:   "The booty! O people, the booty! Your companions have become victorious,   what are you waiting for now?" Abdullah Ibn Jubair said: "Have you   forgotten what Allah's Messenger said to you?" They replied: "By   Allah! We will go to the people (the enemy) and collect our share from the   war booty." But when they went to them, they were forced to turn back   defeated. At that time Allah's Messenger in their rear was calling them back.   Only twelve men remained with the Prophet, and the infidels martyred seventy   men from us.  "The   Prophet and his companions caused the Pagans to lose one hundred and forty   men, seventy of whom were captured and seventy were killed. Then Abu Sufyan   asked three times: 'Is Muhammad present among these people?' The Prophet   ordered his companions not to answer him. Then he asked three times: 'Is Ibn   Abu Quhafa present amongst these people?' He asked again three times: 'Is Ibn   Al Khattab present among these people?' He then returned to his companions   and said: 'As for these (men), they have been killed.' 'Umar could not   control himself and said to Abu Sufyan: ' You told a lie, by Allah! O enemy   of Allah! All those you have mentioned are alive, and the thing which will   make you unhappy is still there.' Abu Sufyan said: 'Our victory today   compensates for yours in the Battle of Badr, and in war (the victory) is   always undecided and is shared in turns by the belligerents. You will find   some of your killed men mutilated, but I did not urge my men to do so, yet I   do not feel sorry for their deed.' After that he started reciting cheerfully:   'O Hubal, be superior!' On that the Prophet said (to his companions): 'Why   don't you answer hiback?' They said: 'O Allah's Messenger! What shall we   say?' He said: 'Say, Allah is Higher and more Sublime.' Then Abu Sufyan said:   'We have the idol of Al-Uzza, and you have no 'Uzza.' The Prophet said (to   his companions): 'Why don't you answer him back?' They asked: 'O Allah's   Messenger! What shall we say?' He said: 'Say Allah is our Helper and you have   no helper.'" (Sahih Al Bukhari)  The   moral effect of this disastrous battle was such as to encourage some   neighboring nomad tribes to make forays upon the Medinte territories, but   most of these were repelled.  The Jews   also were not slow to involve in trouble the Prophet and his followers. They   tried to create disaffection among his people and slandered him and his   adherents. They mispronounced the words of the Qur'an so as to give them an   offensive meaning. They also caused their poets, who were superior in culture   and intelligence, to use their influence to sow sedition among the Muslims.   One of their distinguished poets, called Ka'b, of the Bani An-Nadir, spared   no efforts in publicly deploring the ill success of the idolaters after their   defect at Badr.  By his   satires against the Prophet and his disciples, and his elegies on the Meccans   who had fallen at Badr, Ka'b succeeded in exciting the Quraish to that frenzy   of vengeance which broke out at Uhud. He then returned to Medina, where he continued to attack the   Prophet and the Muslims, men and women, in terms of the most obscene   character. Though he belonged to the tribe of Bani An Nadir, which had   entered into the compact with the Muslims and pledged itself both for the   internal and external safety of the State, he openly directed his acts   against the commonwealth of which he was a member.  Another   Jew, Sallam by name, of the same tribe, behaved equally fiercely and bitterly   against the Muslims. He lived with a party of his tribe at Khaibar, a village   five days' journey northwest of Medina.   He made every effort to excite the neighboring Arab tribes against the   Muslims. The Muslim commonwealth with the object of securing safety among the   community, passed a sentence of outlawry upon Ka'b and Sallam.  The   members of another Jewish tribe, namely Bani Qainuqa', were sentenced to   expulsion from the Medinite territory for having openly and knowingly   infringed the terms of the compact. It was necessary to put an end to their   hostile actions of the sake of maintaining peace and security. The Prophet   had to go to their headquarters, where he required them to enter definitively   into the Muslim commonwealth by embracing Islam or to leave Medina. To this they replied in the most   offensive terms: "You have had a quarrel with men ignorant of the art of   war. If you are desirous of having any dealings with us, we shall show you   that we are men." They then shut themselves up in their fortress and set   the Prophet and his authority at defiance. The Muslims decided to reduce them   and laid siege to their fortress without loss of time. After fifteen days   they surrendered. Though the Muslims at first intended to inflict some severe   punishment on them, they contented themselves by banishing the Bani Qainuqa'.    The Bani   An-Nadir had now behaved in the same way as Bani Qainuqa'. The had likewise,   knowingly and publicly, disregarded the terms of the Charter. The Prophet   sent them a message similar to that which was sent to their brethren, the   Qainuqa'. Then, relying on the assistance of the Hypocrites' party, returned   for a defiant reply. After a siege of fifteen days, they sued for terms. The   Muslims renewed their previous offer, and the Jews of An Nadir chose to   execute Medina.   They were allowed to take with them all their movable property, with the   exception of their arms. Before leaving Medina,   they destroyed all their dwellings in immovable property and arms which they   could not carry away with them were distributed by the Prophet with the   consent of the Ansar and the Emigrants. A principle was henceforth adopted   that any acquisition not made in actual warfare should belong to that state   and that its disposal should be left to the discretion of the ruling   authorities.  Almighty   Allah said: (And there is also a share in this booty) for the poor   emigrants, who were expelled from their homes and their property, seeking   Bounties from Allah and to please Him. And helping Allah (helping His   Religion) and His Messenger (Muhammad). Such are indeed the truthful (to what   we say); and those who, before them, had homes (in Al Madina) and had adopted   the Faith, love, those who emigrate to them, and have no jealousy in their breasts   for that which they have been given (from the booty of Bani An Nadir), and   give them (emigrants) preference over themselves, even though they were in   need of that. And whosoever is saved from his own covetousness, such are they   who will be the successful." (Ch 59:8-9 Quran)  The   expulsion of the Bani An-Nadir took place in the fourth year of the hijrah.   The remaining portion of this year and the early part of the next were passed   in repressing the hostile attempts of the nomadic tribes against the Muslims   and inflicting punishment for various murderous forays on the Medinite   territories. Of this nature was the expedition against the Christian Arabs of   Dumat Al Jandal (a place about seven days' journey to the south of Damascus), who had stopped the Medinites traffic with Syria and even threatened a raid upon Medina. These   marauders, however, fled on the approach of the Muslims, and the Prophet   returned to Medina   after concluding a treaty with a neighboring chief, to whom he granted   permission of pasturage in the Medinite territories.  In the   same year, the enemies of Islam made every possible attempt to stir up the   tribes against the Muslims. The Jews also took an active, if hidden, part in   those intrigues. An army of ten thousand well-equipped men, marched towards Medina under the   command of Abu Sufyan. They encamped near Mount Uhud,   a few miles from the city. The Muslims could gather only an army of three   thousand men. Seeing their inferiority in numbers on the one hand, and the   turbulence of the Hypocrites within the town on the other, they preferred to   remain on the defensive. They dug a deep moat round the unprotected quarters   of Medina and   encamped outside the city with a trench in front of them. They relied for   safety of the other side upon their allies, the Quaraiza, who possessed   several fortresses at a short distance towards the south and were bound by   the compact to assist the Muslim s against any raiders. These Jews, however,   were induced by the idolaters to violate their pledge and to join the Quraish.   As these Jews were acquainted with the Hypocrites within the walls of the   city were waiting for an opportunity to play their part, the situation of the   Muslims was most dangerous.  The   siege had already lasted for twenty days. The enemy made great efforts to   cross the trench, but every attempt was fiercely repulsed by the small Muslim   force. Disunion was now rife in the midst of the besieging army. Their horses   were perishing fast, and provisions were becoming less every day. During the   night, a storm of wind and rain caused their tents to be overthrown and their   lights extinguished. Abu Sufyan and the majority of his army fled, and the   rest took refuge with the Quraiza. The Muslims, though they were satisfied   with the failure of their enemies, could not help thinking that the victory   was unsatisfactory so long as the Quraiza, who had violated their sworn   pledge, remained so near. The Jews might at any time surprise Medina from their side.   The Muslims felt it their duty to demand an explanation of the violation of   the pledge. This was utterly refused. Consequently, the Jews were besieged   and compelled to surrender at discretion. They only asked that their   punishment should be left to the judgment of Sa'd Ibn Mu'adh, the prince of   the tribe of Aws. This chief, who was a fierce soldier, had been wounded in   the attack, and, indeed, died of his wounds the following day. Infuriated by   the treacherous conduct of the Bani Quraiza, he gave judgment that the   fighting men should be to death and that the women and children should become   the slaves of the Muslims. The sentence was carried into execution.  It was   about this time that the Prophet granted tot he monks of the Monastry of St.   Catherine, near Mount Sinai, his liberal   charter by which they secured for the Christians noble and generous   privileges and immunities. He undertook himself and enjoined his followers,   to protect the Christians, to defend their churches and the residences of   their priests and to guard them from all injuries. They were not to be unfairly   taxed; no bishop was to be driven out of his diocese; nor Christian was to be   forced to reject his religion; no monk was to be expelled from his Monastry;   no pilgrim was to be stopped from his pilgrimage; nor were the Christian   churches to be pulled down for the sake of building mosques or houses for the   Muslims. Christian women married to Muslims were to enjoy their own religion   and not to be subjected to compulsion or annoyance of any kind. If the   Christians should stand in need of assistance for the repair of their   churches or monasteries, or any other matter pertaining to their religion,   the Muslims were to assist them. This was not to be considered as supporting   their religion, but as simply rendering them assistance in special   circumstances. Should the Muslims be engaged in hostilities with outside   Christians, no Christian resident among the Muslims should be treated with   contempt on account of his creed. The Prophet declared that any Muslim   violating any clause of the charter should be regarded as a transgressor of   Allah's commandments, a violator of His testament and neglectful of His   faith.  Six   years had already elapsed since the Prophet and his Meccan followers had fled   from their birthplace. Their hearts began to yearn for their homes and for their   Sacred House the Ka'ba. As the season of the pilgrimage approached, the   Prophet announced his intention to visit the holy center, and numerous voices   of his disciples responded to the call. Preparations were soon made for the   journey to Mecca.   The Prophet, accompanied by seven or eight hundred Muslims, Emigrants and   Ansars, all totally unarmed, set out on the pilgrimage. The Quraish, who were   still full of animosity towards the Muslims, gathered a large army to prevent   them from entering Mecca   and maltreated the envoy whom the Prophet had sent to ask permission to visit   the holy places. After much difficulty, a treaty was concluded by which it   was agreed that all hostilities should cease for ten years; that anyone   coming from the Quraish to the Prophet without the permission of the guardian   or chief should be given back to the idolaters; that any Muslim persons going   over to the Meccans should not be surrendered; that any tribe desirous of   entering into alliance, either with the Quraish or with the Muslims, should   be at liberty to do so without disputes; that the Muslims should go back to   Medina on the present occasion and stop advancing further; that they should   be permitted in the following year to visit Mecca and to remain there for   three days with the arms they used on journeys, namely, their scimitars in   sheaths.  The   Treaty of Hudaibiya thus ended, the Prophet returned with his people to Medina.  About   this time it was revealed to the Prophet that his mission should be   universal. He dispatched several envoys to invite the neighboring sovereigns   to Islam. The embassy to the king of Persia, Chosroes Parvis, was   received with disdain and contumely. He was haughtily amazed at the boldness   of the Mecca   fugitive in addressing him on terms of equality. He was so enraged that he   tore up into pieces the Prophet's letter of invitation to Islam and dismissed   the envoy from his presence with great contempt. When the Prophet received   information on this treatment, he calmly observed: "Thus will the Empire   of Chosroes be torn to pieces."  The   embassy to Heraclitus, the Emperor of the Romans, was received much more   politely and reverentially. He treated the ambassador with great respect and   sent the Prophet a gracious reply to his message.  Another   envoy was sent to an Arab price of the Ghassanite tribe, a Christian   feudatory of Heraclius. This prince, instead of receiving the envoy with any   respect, cruelly murdered him. This act caused great consternation among the   Muslims, who considered it as an outrage of international obligations.  Narrated   Abdullah Ibn Abbas: Abu Sufyan Ibn Harb informed me that Heraclius had sent a   messenger to him while he had been accompanying a caravan from Quraish. They   were merchants doing business in Sham (Syria,   Palestine, Lebanon,   and Jordan)   at the time when Allah's Messenger had a truce with Abu Sufyan and Quraish   infidels. So Abu Sufyan and his companions went to Heraclius at Ilya (Jerusalem).  Heraclitus   called them in the court and he had all the senior Roman dignitaries around   him. He called for his translator who, translating Heraclius's question, said   to them: "Who among you is closely related to that man who claims to be   a Prophet?" Abu Sufyan replied: "I am the nearest relative to him   (amongst the group)."  Heraclius   said: "Bring him (Abu Sufyan) close to me and make his companions stand   behind him." Abu Sufyan added: "Heraclius told his translator to   tell my companions that he wanted to put some questions to me regarding that   man (The Prophet) and if I told a lie they (my companions) should contradict   me. By Allah! Had I not been afraid of my companions labeling me a liar, I   would have not have spoken the truth about the Prophet." Abu Sufyan's   narration continues:  "The   first question he asked me about him was;  What is   his family status among you?"  "I   replied: "He belongs to a good noble family amongst us."  Heraclius   further asked: "Has anybody among you ever claimed the same (to be a   Prophet) before him?"  I   replied: "No."  He said:   "Was anybody amongst his ancestors a king?"  I   replied: "No."  Heraclius   asked: "Do the nobles or the poor follow him?"  I   replied: "It is the poor who follow him."  He said:   "Are his followers increasing or decreasing (day by day)?"  I   replied: "They are increasing."  He then   asked: "Does anybody amongst those who embrace his religion become   displeased and renounce the religion afterwards?"  I   replied: "No."  Heraclius   said: "Have you ever accused him of telling lies before his claim (to be   a Prophet)?"  I   replied: "No."  Hereaclius   said: "Does he break his promises?"  I   replied: "No. We are at truce with him but we do not know what he will   do in it." I could not find opportunity to say anything against him   except that.  Heraclius   asked: "Have you ever had a war with him?"  I   replied: "Yes."  Then he   said: "What was the outcome of the battles?"  I   replied: "Sometimes he was victorious and sometimes we."  Heraclius   said: "What does he order you to do?"  I said:   "He tells us to worship Allah and Allah alone and not to worship   anything along with Him, and to renounce all that our ancestors had said. He   orders us to pray, to speak the truth, to be chaste and to keep good   relations with our kith and kin."  Heraclius   asked the translator to convey to me the following: "I asked you about   his family and your reply was that he belonged to a very noble family. In   fact, all the Messengers come from noble families among their respective   peoples. I questioned you whether anybody else among you claimed such a   thing; your reply was in the negative. If the answer had been in the   affirmative, I would have thought that this man was following the previous   man's statement. Then I asked you whether anyone of his ancestors was a king.   Your reply was in the negative, and if it had been in the affirmative, I   would have thought that this man wanted to take back his ancestral kingdom. I   further asked whether he was ever accused of telling lies before he said what   he said and your reply was in the negative. So I wondered how a person who   does not tell a lie about others could ever tell a lie about Allah. I then   asked you whether the rich people followed him or the poor. You replied that   it was the poor who followed him. And, in fact, all the Messengers have been   followed by this veryclass of people. Then I asked you whether his followers   were increasing or decreasing. You replied that they were increasing, and, in   fact, this is the way of true faith, till it is complete in all respects. I   further asked you whether there was anybody, who, after embracing his   religion, became displeased and discarded his religion. You reply was in the   negative, and, in fact this is (the sign of) true faith, when its delight   enters the hearts and mixes with them completely. I asked you whether he had   ever betrayed. You replied in the negative, and likewise the Messengers never   betray. Then I asked you what he ordered you to do. You replied that he   ordered you to worship Allah and Allah alone and not to worship anything   along with Him, and forbade you to worship idols, and ordered you to pray, to   speak the truth and to be chaste. If what you have said is true, he will very   soon occupy this place underneath my feet and I kne w it (from the   scriptures) that he was going to appear but I did not know that he would be   from you, and if I could reach him definitely, I would go immediately to meet   him and if I were with him, I would certainly wash his feet."  Heraclius   then asked for the letter addressed by Allah's Messenger which had been   delivered by Dihya to the Governor of Busra, who forwarded it to Heraclius to   read. The contents of the letter were as follows: "In the name of Allah,   the Beneficent, the Merciful. (This letter is) from Muhammad, the slave of   Allah and His Messenger to Heraclius the ruler of Byzantine. Peace be upon   him who follows the right path. Furthermore, I invite you to Islam, and if   you become a Muslim you will be safe, and Allah will double your reward, and   if you reject this invitation of Islam, you will be committing a sin by   misguiding your subjects.  And I   recite to you Allah's Statement: SAY (O Muhammad): 'O People of the Scripture   (Jews & Christians): Come to a word that is just between us and you, that   we worship none but Allah, and that we associate no partners with Him and   that none of us shall take others as lords besides Allah.' Then, if they turn   away, say: 'Bear witness that we are Muslims.' "  Abu   Sufyan then added: When Heraclius had finished his speech and had read the   letter, there was a great hue and cry in the Royal Court. So we turned out of the   court. I told my companions that the question of Ibn-Abi-Kabsha (the Prophet   Muhammad) had become so prominent that even the King of Bani Al-Asfar   (Byzantine) was afraid of him. Then I started to become sure that he (the   Prophet) would be the conqueror in the near future till I embraced Islam   (Allah guided me to it).  The sub   narrator added that Ibn An-Natur was the Governor of Ilya (Jerusalem) and Heraclius was the head of   the Christians of Sham. Ibn An-Natur narrated that once while Heraclius was   visiting Ilya (Jerusalem),   he got up in the morning with a sad mood. Some of his priests asked him why   he as in that mood. Hreaclius was a foreteller and an astrologer. He replied:   "At night when I looked at the stars, I saw that the leader of those who   practice circumcision had appeared (become the conqueror). Who are they who   practice circumcision?" The people replied: "Except the Jews,   nobody practices circumcision, so you should not be afraid of them (Jews).   Just Issue orders to kill very Jew present in the country.'  While   they were discussing it, a messenger sent by the king of Ghassan to convey   the news of Allah's Messenger to Heraclius was brought in. Having heard the   news, he (Heraclius) ordered the people to go and see whether the messenger   of Ghassan was circumcised. The people, after seeing him, told Heraclius that   he was circumcised. Heraclius then asked him about the Arabs. The messenger   replied: "Arabs also practice circumcision."  After   hearing that Heraclius remarked that sovereignty of the Arabs had appeared.   Heraclius then wrote a letter to his friend in Rome who was as good as Heraclius in   knowledge. Heraclius then left for Homs (a   town in Syria)   and stayed there till he received the reply of his letter from his friend,   who agreed with him in his opinion about the emergence of the Prophet and the   fact that he was a Prophet. On that, Heraclius invited all the heads of the   Byzantines to assemble in his palace at Homs.   When they assembled, he ordered that all the doors of his palace be closed.   Then he came out and said: "O Byzantines! If success is your desire and   if you seek right guidance and want your empire to remain, then give a pledge   of allegiance to this Prophet (embrace Islam)."  (on   hearing the views of Heraclius) the people ran towards the gates of the   palace like onagers but found the doors closed. Heraclius realized their   hatred towards Islam and when he lost the hope of their embracing Islam, he   ordered that they should be brought back in audience.  (When   they returned) he said: "What was already said was just to test the   strength of your conviction and I have seen it." The people prostrated   before him and became pleased with him, and this was the end of Heraclius's   story (in connection with his faith). (Sahih Al-Bukhari)  In the   same year the Jews of Khaibar, a strongly fortified territory at a distance   of four days' journey from Medina,   showed implacable hatred towards the Muslims. United by alliance with the   tribe of Ghatfan, as well as with other cognate tribes, the Jews of Khaibar   made serious attempts to for ma coalition against the Muslims. The Prophet   and his adherents were apprised of this movement and immediate measures were   taken in order to repress any new attack upon Medina. An expedition of fourteen hundred   men was soon prepared to march against Khaibar. The allies of the Jews left   them to face the war with the Muslims all alone. The Jews firmly resisted the   attacks of the Muslims, but eventually all their fortress had to be   surrendered, one after the other to their enemies. They prayed for   forgiveness, which was accorded to them on certain conditions. Their lands   and immovable property were secured to them, together with the free practice   of their religion. After subduing Khaibar, the Muslims returned to Medina in safety.  Before   the end of the year, it being the seventh year of the hijrah, the Prophet and   his adherents availed themselves of their armistice with the Quraish to visit   the holy Ka'ba. The Prophet, accompanied by two hundred Muslims, went to Mecca to perform the   rites of pilgrimage. On this occasion the Quraish evacuated the city during   the three days which the ceremonies lasted.  | 
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