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Attempts
made to check the Onward March of
Islam
Having fully perceived that Muhammad
[pbuh] could never be desisted from his Call, Quraish, in a
desperate attempt to quell the tidal wave of the Call, resorted to
other cheap means acting from base motives:
- Scoffing, degrading, ridiculing, belying and
laughter-instigating cheap manners, all of which levelled at the
new converts in general, and the person of Muhammad [pbuh] in
particular, with the aim of dragging the spirit of despair into
their morale, and slackening their ardent zealotry. They used to
denounce the Prophet [pbuh] as a man possessed by a jinn, or an
insane person:
"And they say: O you (Muhammad
[pbuh]) to whom the Dhikr (the Qur’ân) has been sent down!
Verily, you are a mad man." [Al-Qur'an 15:6]
or a liar practising
witchcraft,
"And they (Arab
pagans) wonder that a warner (Prophet Muhammad [pbuh]) has come to
them from among themselves! And the disbelievers say: "This
(Prophet Muhammad [pbuh]) is a sorcerer, a liar." [Al-Qur'an 38:4].
Their eyes would also look at the
good man as if they would ‘eat him up’, or trip him up, or disturb
him from the position of stability or firmness. They used all
sorts of terms of abuse ‘madman’ or ‘one possessed by an evil
spirit’, and so on:
"And verily,
those who disbelieve would almost make you slip with their eyes
through hatreds when they hear the Reminder (the Qur’ân), and they
say: Verily, he (Muhammad [pbuh]) is a madman!" [Al-Qur'an
68:51]
Amongst the early converts, there
was a group who had unfortunately no strong clan at their back to
support them. These innocent souls were ridiculed and jeered in
season and out of season. Referring to such people, the highbrow
Quraish aristocrats used repeatedly to ask the Prophet [pbuh],
with jest and scorn:
"Allâh has
favoured from amongst us?" [Al-Qur'an 6:53]
And Allâh said:
"Does not Allâh
know best those who are grateful?" [Al-Qur'an
6:53]
The wicked used to laugh at the
righteous in many ways:
- They would inwardly laugh at their Faith,
because they felt themselves so superior.
- In public places, when the righteous passed,
they used to insult and wink at them,
- In their own houses, they would run them
down.
- Whenever and wherever they saw them, they
reproached and called them fools who had lost their way. In the
Hereafter, all these tricks and falsehoods will be shown for
what they are, and the tables will be reversed. Allâh had
said:
"Verily! (During
the worldly life) those who committed crimes used to laugh at
those who believed; and whenever they passed by them, used to wink
one to another (in mockery); and when they returned to their own
people, they would return jesting; and when they saw them, they
said: ‘Verily! These have indeed gone astry!’ But they
(disbelievers, sinners) had not been sent as watchers over them
(the believers)." [Al-Qur'an 83:29-33]
- Distorting Muhammad’s teachings, evoking
ambiguities, circulating false propaganda; forging groundless
allegations concerning his doctrines, person and character, and
going to excess in such a manner in order to screen off any scope
of sound contemplation from the public. With respect to the
Qur’ân, they used to allege that it was:
"Tales of the
ancients, which he (Muhammad [pbuh]) has written down, and they
are dictated to him morning and afternoon." [Al-Qur'an
25:5]
The iniquitous went on ceaselessly
inculcating in people’s ears that the Qur’ân was not a true
Revelation:
"This (the
Qur’ân) is nothing but a lie that he (Muhammad [pbuh]) has
invented, and others have helped him at it." [Al-Qur'an
25:4]
The wicked would also attribute to
men of Allâh just such motives and springs of action as they
themselves would be guilty of in such circumstances. The pagans
and those who were hostile to the revelation of Allâh and Islam,
could not understand how such wonderful verses could flow from the
tongue of the Prophet [pbuh] without having someone to teach, and
claimed:
"It is only a
human being who teaches him." [Al-Qur'an 16:103]
They also raised another baseless
and superficial objection:
"Why does this
Messenger (Muhammad [pbuh]) eat food and walk about in the markets
(like ourselves)?" [Al-Qur'an 25:7]
They were sadly ignorant and
painfully at fault for they could not perceive that a teacher for
mankind is one who shares their nature, mingles in their life, is
acquainted with their doings, and sympathises with their joys and
sorrows.
The Noble Qur’ân has vehemently
refuted their charges and allegations and has explained that the
utterances of the Prophet [pbuh] are the Revelations of the Lord
and their nature and contents provide a bold challenge to those
who attribute his Prophetic expressions to some base origin, at
times to the mental throes of a dreaming reformer, at others to
the effusion of a frenzied poet or the incoherent drivelling of an
insane man.
- Contrasting the Qur’ân with the mythology of the
ancients in order to distract people’s interests from Allâh’s
Words. Once An-Nadr bin Harith addressed the Quraishites in the
following manner: "O Quraish! You have experienced an
unprecedented phenomenon before which you have so far been
desperately helpless. Muhammad [pbuh] grew up here among you and
always proved to be highly obliging, the most truthful and
trustworthy young man. However, later on when he reached manhood,
he began to preach a new faith alien to your society, and opposed
to your liking so you began to denounce him at a time as a
sorcerer, at another as a soothsayer, a poet, or even an insane
man. I swear by Allâh he is not anyone of those. He is not
interested in blowing on knots as magicians are, nor do his words
belong to the world of soothsaying; he is not a poet either, for
his mentality is not that of a rambler, nor is he insane because
he has never been witnessed to develop any sort of hallucinations
or insinuations peculiar to madmen. O people of Quraish, it is
really a serious issue and I recommend that you reconsider your
attitude."
It is narrated that
An-Nadr, at a
later stage, headed for Heerah where he got conversant with the
traditions of the kings of Persia and the accounts of people like
Rustum and Asphandiar, and then returned to Makkah. Here he would
always shadow the Messenger’s steps in whatever audiences the
later held to preach the new faith and to caution people against
Allâh’s wrath. An-Nadr would directly follow the Prophet [pbuh]
and narrate to the same audience long tales about those people of
Persia. He would then always append his talk with a question
cunningly inquiring if he did not outdo Muhammad [pbuh].[Ibn Hisham 1/299,300,358; Tafheem-ul-Qur'an
4/8,9]. Ibn ‘Abbas [R] related that An-Nadr used to
purchase songstresses who would through their bodily charms and
songs entice away from Islam anyone developing the least
attachment to the Prophet [pbuh]; in this regard, Allâh
says:
"And of mankind
is he who purchases idle talks (i.e. music, singing, etc.) to
mislead (men) from the Path of Allâh." [Al-Qur'an 31:6]
[Tafheem-ul-Qur'an
4/9]
- In a fresh attempt to dissuade Muhammad
[pbuh]
from his principled stand, Quraish invited him to compromise on
his teachings and come to terms with their pre-Islamic practices
in such a way that he quits some of his religion and the
polytheists do the same. Allâh, the All-High says:
-
"They wish that
you should compromise (in religion out of courtesy) with them, so
they (too) would compromise with you." [Al-Qur'an
68:9].
On the authority of Ibn Jareer and
At-Tabarani, the idolaters offered that Muhammad [pbuh] worship
their gods for a year, and they worship his Lord for a year. In
another version, they said: "If you accept our gods, we would
worship yours." Ibn Ishaq related that Al-Aswad bin Al-Muttalib,
Al-Waleed bin Al-Mugheerah, Omaiyah bin Khalaf and Al-‘As bin
Wa’il As-Sahmy, a constellation of influential polytheists,
intercepted the Prophet [pbuh] while he was circumambulating in
the Holy Sanctuary, and offered him to worship that they
worshipped, and they worship that he worshipped so that, according
to them, both parties would reach a common denominator. They added
"Should the Lord you worship prove to be better than ours, then it
will be so much better for us, but if our gods proved to be better
than yours, then you would have benefit from it." Allâh, the
Exalted, was decisive on the spot and revealed the following
Chapter:
"Say: "O
Al-Kâfirűn (disbelievers in Allâh, in His Oneness, in His
Angels, in His Books, in His Messengers, in the Day of
Resurrection, in Al-Qadar, etc.)! I worship not that which
you worship, nor will you worship that which I worship. And I
shall not worship that which you are worshipping, nor will you
worship that which I worship. To you be your religion, and to me
my religion (Islamic Monotheism). [Al-Qur'an 109] [Ibn Hisham 1/362]
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