| 1. In the annals of men, individuals have 
                                  not been lacking who conspicuously devoted their lives to 
                                  the socio-religious reform of their connected peoples. We 
                                  find them in every epoch and in all lands. In India, there 
                                  lived those who transmitted to the world the Vedas, and 
                                  there was also the great Gautama Buddha; China had its 
                                  Confucius; the Avesta was produced in Iran. Babylonia gave 
                                  to the world one of the greatest reformers, the Prophet 
                                  Abraham (not to speak of such of his ancestors as Enoch and 
                                  Noah about whom we have very scanty information). The Jewish 
                                  people may rightly be proud of a long series of reformers: 
                                  Moses, Samuel, David, Solomon, and Jesus among others. 2. Two points are to note: Firstly these reformers 
                                    claimed in general to be the bearers each of a Divine 
                                    mission, and they left behind them sacred books 
                                    incorporating codes of life for the guidance of their 
                                    peoples. Secondly there followed fratricidal wars, and 
                                    massacres and genocides became the order of the day, causing 
                                    more or less a complete loss of these Divine messages. As to 
                                    the books of Abraham, we know them only by the name; and as 
                                    for the books of Moses, records tell us how they were 
                                    repeatedly destroyed and only partly restored.  Concept of God3. If one should judge from the relics of the past already 
                                    brought to light of the homo sapiens, one finds that 
                                    man has always been conscious of the existence of a Supreme 
                                    Being, the Master and Creator of all. Methods and approaches 
                                    may have differed, but the people of every epoch have left 
                                    proofs of their attempts to obey God. Communication with the 
                                    Omnipresent yet invisible God has also been recognised as 
                                    possible in connection with a small fraction of men with 
                                    noble and exalted spirits. Whether this communication 
                                    assumed the nature of an incarnation of the Divinity or 
                                    simply resolved itself into a medium of reception of Divine 
                                    messages (through inspiration or revelation), the purpose in 
                                    each case was the guidance of the people. It was but natural 
                                    that the interpretations and explanations of certain systems 
                                    should have proved more vital and convincing than others.
 3/a. Every system of metaphysical thought develops its 
                                    own terminology. In the course of time terms acquire a 
                                    significance hardly contained in the word and translations 
                                    fall short of their purpose. Yet there is no other method to 
                                    make people of one group understand the thoughts of another. 
                                    Non-Muslim readers in particular are requested to bear in 
                                    mind this aspect which is a real yet unavoidable handicap.  4. By the end of the 6th century, after the birth of 
                                    Jesus Christ, men had already made great progress in diverse 
                                    walks of life. At that time there were some religions which 
                                    openly proclaimed that they were reserved for definite races 
                                    and groups of men only, of course they bore no remedy for 
                                    the ills of humanity at large. There were also a few which 
                                    claimed universality, but declared that the salvation of man 
                                    lay in the renunciation of the world. These were the 
                                    religions for the elite, and catered for an extremely 
                                    limited number of men. We need not speak of regions where 
                                    there existed no religion at all, where atheism and 
                                    materialism reigned supreme, where the thought was solely of 
                                    occupying one self with one's own pleasures, without any 
                                    regard or consideration for the rights of others.  Arabia5. A perusal of the map of the major hemisphere (from 
                                    the point of view of the proportion of land to sea), shows 
                                    the Arabian Peninsula lying at the confluence of the three 
                                    great continents of Asia, Africa and Europe. At the time in 
                                    question. this extensive Arabian subcontinent composed 
                                    mostly of desert areas was inhabited by people of settled 
                                    habitations as well as nomads. Often it was found that 
                                    members of the same tribe were divided into these two 
                                    groups, and that they preserved a relationship although 
                                    following different modes of life. The means of subsistence 
                                    in Arabia were meagre. The desert had its handicaps, and 
                                    trade caravans were features of greater importance than 
                                    either agriculture or industry. This entailed much travel, 
                                    and men had to proceed beyond the peninsula to Syria, Egypt, 
                                    Abyssinia, Iraq, Sind, India and other lands.
 6. We do not know much about the Libyanites of Central 
                                    Arabia, but Yemen was rightly called Arabia Felix. 
                                    Having once been the seat of the flourishing civilizations 
                                    of Sheba and Ma'in even before the foundation of the city of 
                                    Rome had been laid, and having later snatched from the 
                                    Byzantians and Persians several provinces, greater Yemen 
                                    which had passed through the hey-day of its existence, was 
                                    however at this time broken up into innumerable 
                                    principalities, and even occupied in part by foreign 
                                    invaders. The Sassanians of Iran, who had penetrated into 
                                    Yemen had already obtained possession of Eastern Arabia. 
                                    There was politico-social chaos at the capital (Mada'in = 
                                    Ctesiphon), and this found reflection in all her 
                                    territories. Northern Arabia had succumbed to Byzantine 
                                    influences, and was faced with its own particular problems. 
                                    Only Central Arabia remained immune from the demoralising 
                                    effects of foreign occupation.  7. In this limited area of Central Arabia, the existence 
                                    of the triangle of Mecca-Ta'if-Madinah seemed something 
                                    providential. Mecca, desertic, deprived of water and the 
                                    amenities of agriculture in physical features represented 
                                    Africa and the burning Sahara. Scarcely fifty miles from 
                                    there, Ta'if presented a picture of Europe and its frost. 
                                    Madinah in the North was not less fertile than even the most 
                                    temperate of Asiatic countries like Syria. If climate has 
                                    any influence on human character, this triangle standing in 
                                    the middle of the major hemisphere was, more than any other 
                                    region of the earth, a miniature reproduction of the entire 
                                    world. And here was born a descendant of the Babylonian 
                                    Abraham, and the Egyptian Hagar, Muhammad the Prophet of 
                                    Islam, a Meccan by origin and yet with stock related, both 
                                    to Madinah and Ta'if.  Religion8. From the point of view of religion, Arabia was 
                                    idolatrous; only a few individuals had embraced religions 
                                    like Christianity, Mazdaism, etc. The Meccans did possess 
                                    the notion of the One God, but they believed also that idols 
                                    had the power to intercede with Him. Curiously enough, they 
                                    did not believe in the Resurrection and Afterlife. They had 
                                    preserved the rite of the pilgrimage to the House of the One 
                                    God, the Ka'bah, an institution set up under divine 
                                    inspiration by their ancestor Abraham, yet the two thousand 
                                    years that separated them from Abraham had caused to 
                                    degenerate this pilgrimage into the spectacle of a 
                                    commercial fair and an occasion of senseless idolatry which 
                                    far from producing any good, only served to ruin their 
                                    individual behaviour, both social and spiritual.
 Society9. In spite of the comparative poverty in natural 
                                    resources, Mecca was the most developed of the three points 
                                    of the triangle. Of the three, Mecca alone had a city-state, 
                                    governed by a council of ten hereditary chiefs who enjoyed a 
                                    clear division of power. (There was a minister of foreign 
                                    relations, a minister guardian of the temple, a minister of 
                                    oracles, a minister guardian of offerings to the temple, one 
                                    to determine the torts and the damages payable, another in 
                                    charge of the municipal council or parliament to enforce the 
                                    decisions of the ministries. There were also ministers in 
                                    charge of military affairs like custodianship of the flag, 
                                    leadership of the cavalry etc.). As well reputed 
                                    caravan-leaders, the Meccans were able to obtain permission 
                                    from neighbouring empires like Iran, Byzantium and Abyssinia 
                                    - and to enter into agreements with the tribes that lined 
                                    the routes traversed by the caravans - to visit their 
                                    countries and transact import and export business. They also 
                                    provided escorts to foreigners when they passed through 
                                    their country as well as the territory of allied tribes, in 
                                    Arabia (cf. Ibn Habib, Muhabbar). Although not 
                                    interested much in the preservation of ideas and records in 
                                    writing, they passionately cultivated arts and letters like 
                                    poetry, oratory discourses and folk tales. Women were 
                                    generally well treated, they enjoyed the privilege of 
                                    possessing property in their own right, they gave their 
                                    consent to marriage contracts, in which they could even add 
                                    the condition of reserving their right to divorce their 
                                    husbands. They could remarry when widowed or divorced. 
                                    Burying girls alive did exist in certain classes, but that 
                                    was rare.
 Birth of the Prophet10. It was in the midst of such conditions and 
                                    environments that Muhammad was born in 569 after Christ. His 
                                    father, 'Abdullah had died some weeks earlier, and it was 
                                    his grandfather who took him in charge. According to the 
                                    prevailing custom, the child was entrusted to a Bedouin 
                                    foster-mother, with whom he passed several years in the 
                                    desert. All biographers state that the infant prophet sucked 
                                    only one breast of his foster-mother, leaving the other for 
                                    the sustenance of his foster-brother. When the child was 
                                    brought back home, his mother, Aminah, took him to his 
                                    maternal uncles at Madinah to visit the tomb of 'Abdullah. 
                                    During the return journey, he lost his mother who died a 
                                    sudden death. At Mecca, another bereavement awaited him, in 
                                    the death of his affectionate grandfather. Subjected to such 
                                    privations, he was at the age of eight, consigned at last to 
                                    the care of his uncle, Abu-Talib, a man who was generous of 
                                    nature but always short of resources and hardly able to 
                                    provide for his family.
 11. Young Muhammad had therefore to start immediately to 
                                    earn his livelihood; he served as a shepherd boy to some 
                                    neighbours. At the age of ten he accompanied his uncle to 
                                    Syria when he was leading a caravan there. No other travels 
                                    of Abu-Talib are mentioned, but there are references to his 
                                    having set up a shop in Mecca. (Ibn Qutaibah, Ma'arif). 
                                    It is possible that Muhammad helped him in this enterprise 
                                    also.  12. By the time he was twenty-five, Muhammad had become 
                                    well known in the city for the integrity of his disposition 
                                    and the honesty of his character. A rich widow, Khadijah, 
                                    took him in her employ and consigned to him her goods to be 
                                    taken for sale to Syria. Delighted with the unusual profits 
                                    she obtained as also by the personal charms of her agent, 
                                    she offered him her hand. According to divergent reports, 
                                    she was either 28 or 40 years of age at that time, (medical 
                                    reasons prefer the age of 28 since she gave birth to five 
                                    more children). The union proved happy. Later, we see him 
                                    sometimes in the fair of Hubashah (Yemen), and at least once 
                                    in the country of the 'Abd al-Qais (Bahrain-Oman), as 
                                    mentioned by Ibn Hanbal. There is every reason to believe 
                                    that this refers to the great fair of Daba (Oman), where, 
                                    according to Ibn al-Kalbi (cf. Ibn Habib, Muhabbar), 
                                    the traders of China, of Hind and Sind (India, Pakistan), of 
                                    Persia, of the East and the West assembled every year, 
                                    travelling both by land and sea. There is also mention of a 
                                    commercial partner of Muhammad at Mecca. This person, Sa'ib 
                                    by name reports: "We relayed each other; if Muhammad led the 
                                    caravan, he did not enter his house on his return to Mecca 
                                    without clearing accounts with me; and if I led the caravan, 
                                    he would on my return enquire about my welfare and speak 
                                    nothing about his own capital entrusted to me."  An Order of Chivalry13. Foreign traders often brought their goods to Mecca for 
                                    sale. One day a certain Yemenite (of the tribe of Zubaid) 
                                    improvised a satirical poem against some Meccans who had 
                                    refused to pay him the price of what he had sold, and others 
                                    who had not supported his claim or had failed to come to his 
                                    help when he was victimised. Zuhair, uncle and chief of the 
                                    tribe of the Prophet, felt great remorse on hearing this 
                                    just satire. He called for a meeting of certain chieftains 
                                    in the city, and organized an order of chivalry, called  Hilf al-fudul, with the aim and object of aiding the 
                                    oppressed in Mecca, irrespective of their being dwellers of 
                                    the city or aliens. Young Muhammad became an enthusiastic 
                                    member of the organisation. Later in life he used to say: "I 
                                    have participated in it, and I am not prepared to give up 
                                    that privilege even against a herd of camels; if somebody 
                                    should appeal to me even today, by virtue of that pledge, I 
                                    shall hurry to his help."
 Beginning of Religious 
                                    Consciousness14. Not much is known about the religious practices 
                                    of Muhammad until he was thirty-five years old, except that 
                                    he had never worshipped idols. This is substantiated by all 
                                    his biographers. It may be stated that there were a few 
                                    others in Mecca, who had likewise revolted against the 
                                    senseless practice of paganism, although conserving their 
                                    fidelity to the Ka'bah as the house dedicated to the One God 
                                    by its builder Abraham.
 15. About the year 605 of the Christian era, the 
                                    draperies on the outer wall of the Ka'bah took fire. The 
                                    building was affected and could not bear the brunt of the 
                                    torrential rains that followed. The reconstruction of the 
                                    Ka'bah was thereupon undertaken. Each citizen contributed 
                                    according to his means; and only the gifts of honest gains 
                                    were accepted. Everybody participated in the work of 
                                    construction, and Muhammad's shoulders were injured in the 
                                    course of transporting stones. To identify the place whence 
                                    the ritual of circumambulation began, there had been set a 
                                    black stone in the wall of the Ka'bah. dating probably from 
                                    the time of Abraham himself. There was rivalry among the 
                                    citizens for obtaining the honour of transposing this stone 
                                    in its place. When there was danger of blood being shed, 
                                    somebody suggested leaving the matter to Providence, and 
                                    accepting the arbitration of him who should happen to arrive 
                                    there first. It chanced that Muhammad just then turned up 
                                    there for work as usual. He was popularly known by the 
                                    appellation of al-Amin (the honest), and everyone 
                                    accepted his arbitration without hesitation. Muhammad placed 
                                    a sheet of cloth on the ground, put the stone on it and 
                                    asked the chiefs of all the tribes in the city to lift 
                                    together the cloth. Then he himself placed the stone in its 
                                    proper place, in one of the angles of the building, and 
                                    everybody was satisfied.  16. It is from this moment that we find Muhammad becoming 
                                    more and more absorbed in spiritual meditations. Like his 
                                    grandfather, he used to retire during the whole month of 
                                    Ramadan to a cave in Jabal-an-Nur (mountain of light). The 
                                    cave is called `Ghar-i-Hira' or the cave of research. There 
                                    he prayed, meditated, and shared his meagre provisions with 
                                    the travellers who happened to pass by.  Revelation17. He was forty years old, and it was the fifth consecutive 
                                    year since his annual retreats, when one night towards the 
                                    end of the month of Ramadan, an angel came to visit him, and 
                                    announced that God had chosen him as His messenger to all 
                                    mankind. The angel taught him the mode of ablutions, the way 
                                    of worshipping God and the conduct of prayer. He 
                                    communicated to him the following Divine message:
 
                                    With the name of God, the Most Merciful, the 
                                      All-Merciful. Read: with the name of thy Lord Who created,
 Created man from what clings,
 Read: and thy Lord is the Most Bounteous,
 Who taught by the pen,
 Taught man what he knew not. (Quran 96:1-5)
 18. Deeply affected, he returned home and related to his 
                                    wife what had happened, expressing his fears that it might 
                                    have been something diabolic or the action of evil spirits. 
                                    She consoled him, saying that he had always been a man of 
                                    charity and generosity, helping the poor, the orphans, the 
                                    widows and the needy, and assured him that God would protect 
                                    him against all evil.  19. Then came a pause in revelation, extending over three 
                                    years. The Prophet must have felt at first a shock, then a 
                                    calm, an ardent desire, and after a period of waiting, a 
                                    growing impatience or nostalgia. The news of the first 
                                    vision had spread and at the pause the sceptics in the city 
                                    had begun to mock at him and cut bitter jokes. They went so 
                                    far as to say that God had forsaken him.  20. During the three years of waiting. the Prophet had 
                                    given himself up more and more to prayers and to spiritual 
                                    practices. The revelations were then resumed and God assured 
                                    him that He had not at all forsaken him: on the contrary it 
                                    was He Who had guided him to the right path: therefore he 
                                    should take care of the orphans and the destitute, and 
                                    proclaim the bounty of God on him (cf. Q. 93:3-11). This was 
                                    in reality an order to preach. Another revelation directed 
                                    him to warn people against evil practices, to exhort them to 
                                    worship none but the One God, and to abandon everything that 
                                    would displease God (Q. 74:2-7). Yet another revelation 
                                    commanded him to warn his own near relatives (Q. 26:214); 
                                    and: "Proclaim openly that which thou art commanded, and 
                                    withdraw from the Associators (idolaters). Lo! we defend 
                                    thee from the scoffers" (15:94-5). According to Ibn Ishaq, 
                                    the first revelation (n. 17) had come to the Prophet during 
                                    his sleep, evidently to reduce the shock. Later revelations 
                                    came in full wakefulness.  The Mission21. The Prophet began by preaching his mission 
                                    secretly first among his intimate friends, then among the 
                                    members of his own tribe and thereafter publicly in the city 
                                    and suburbs. He insisted on the belief in One Transcendent 
                                    God, in Resurrection and the Last Judgement. He invited men 
                                    to charity and beneficence. He took necessary steps to 
                                    preserve through writing the revelations he was receiving, 
                                    and ordered his adherents also to learn them by heart. This 
                                    continued all through his life, since the Quran was not 
                                    revealed all at once, but in fragments as occasions arose.
 22. The number of his adherents increased gradually, but 
                                    with the denunciation of paganism, the opposition also grew 
                                    intenser on the part of those who were firmly attached to 
                                    their ancestral beliefs. This opposition degenerated in the 
                                    course of time into physical torture of the Prophet and of 
                                    those who had embraced his religion. These were stretched on 
                                    burning sands, cauterized with red hot iron and imprisoned 
                                    with chains on their feet. Some of them died of the effects 
                                    of torture, but none would renounce his religion. In 
                                    despair, the Prophet Muhammad advised his companions to quit 
                                    their native town and take refuge abroad, in Abyssinia, 
                                    "where governs a just ruler, in whose realm nobody is 
                                    oppressed" (Ibn Hisham). Dozens of Muslims profited by his 
                                    advice, though not all. These secret flights led to further 
                                    persecution of those who remained behind.  23. The Prophet Muhammad [was instructed to call this] 
                                    religion "Islam," i.e. submission to the will of God. Its 
                                    distinctive features are two:  
                                    A harmonius equilibrium between the temporal and the 
                                      spiritual (the body and the soul), permitting a full 
                                      enjoyment of all the good that God has created, (Quran 7:32), enjoining at the same time on everybody duties 
                                      towards God, such as worship, fasting, charity, etc. Islam 
                                      was to be the religion of the masses and not merely of the 
                                      elect. A universality of the call - all the believers 
                                      becoming brothers and equals without any distinction of 
                                      class or race or tongue. The only superiority which it 
                                      recognizes is a personal one, based on the greater fear of 
                                      God and greater piety (Quran 49:13).  Social Boycott24. When a large number of the Meccan Muslims 
                                    migrated to Abyssinia, the leaders of paganism sent an 
                                    ultimatum to the tribe of the Prophet, demanding that he 
                                    should be excommunicated and outlawed and delivered to the 
                                    pagans for being put to death. Every member of the tribe, 
                                    Muslim and non-Muslim rejected the demand. (cf. Ibn Hisham). 
                                    Thereupon the city decided on a complete boycott of the 
                                    tribe: Nobody was to talk to them or have commercial or 
                                    matrimonial relations with them. The group of Arab tribes 
                                    called Ahabish, inhabiting the suburbs, who were allies of 
                                    the Meccans, also joined in the boycott, causing stark 
                                    misery among the innocent victims consisting of children, 
                                    men and women, the old and the sick and the feeble. Some of 
                                    them succumbed yet nobody would hand over the Prophet to his 
                                    persecutors. An uncle of the Prophet, Abu Lahab, however 
                                    left his tribesmen and participated in the boycott along 
                                    with the pagans. After three dire years, during which the 
                                    victims were obliged to devour even crushed hides, four or 
                                    five non-Muslims, more humane than the rest and belonging to 
                                    different clans proclaimed publicly their denunciation of 
                                    the unjust boycott. At the same time, the document 
                                    promulgating the pact of boycott which had been hung in the 
                                    temple, was found, as Muhammad had predicted, eaten by white 
                                    ants, that spared nothing but the words God and Muhammad. 
                                    The boycott was lifted, yet owing to the privations that 
                                    were undergone the wife and Abu Talib, the chief of the 
                                    tribe and uncle of the Prophet died soon after. Another 
                                    uncle of the Prophet, Abu-Lahab, who was an inveterate enemy 
                                    of Islam, now succeeded to the headship of the tribe. (cf. 
                                    lbn Hisham, Sirah).
 The Ascension25. It was at thIs time that the Prophet Muhammad was 
                                    granted the mi'raj (ascension): He saw in a vision 
                                    that he was received on heaven by God, and was witness of 
                                    the marvels of the celestial regions. Returning, he brought 
                                    for his community, as a Divine gift, the [ritual prayer of 
                                    Islam, the salaat], which constitutes a sort of communion 
                                    between man and God. It may be recalled that in the last 
                                    part of Muslim service of worship, the faithful employ as a 
                                    symbol of their being in the very presence of God, not 
                                    concrete objects as others do at the time of communion, but 
                                    the very words of greeting exchanged between the Prophet 
                                    Muhammad and God on the occasion of the former's mi'raj: 
                                    "The blessed and pure greetings for God! - Peace be with 
                                    thee, O Prophet, as well as the mercy and blessing of God! - 
                                    Peace be with us and with all the [righteous] servants of 
                                    God!" The Christian term "communion" implies participation 
                                    in the Divinity. Finding it pretentious, Muslims use the 
                                    term "ascension" towards God and reception in His presence, 
                                    God remaining God and man remaining man and no confusion 
                                    between the twain.
 26. The news of this celestial meeting led to an increase 
                                    in the hostility of the pagans of Mecca; and the Prophet was 
                                    obliged to quit his native town in search of an asylum 
                                    elsewhere. He went to his maternal uncles in Ta'if, but 
                                    returned immediately to Mecca, as the wicked people of that 
                                    town chased the Prophet out of their city by pelting stones 
                                    on him and wounding him.  Migration to Madinah27. The annual pilgrimage of the Ka'bah brought to 
                                    Mecca people from all parts of Arabia. The Prophet Muhammad 
                                    tried to persuade one tribe after another to afford him 
                                    shelter and allow him to carry on his mission of reform. The 
                                    contingents of fifteen tribes, whom he approached in 
                                    succession, refused to do so more or less brutally, but he 
                                    did not despair. Finally he met half a dozen inhabitants of 
                                    Madinah who being neighbour of the Jews and the Christians, 
                                    had some notion of prophets and Divine messages. They knew 
                                    also that these "people of the Books" were awaiting the 
                                    arrival of a prophet - a last comforter. So these Madinans 
                                    decided not to lose the opportunity of obtaining an advance 
                                    over others, and forthwith embraced Islam, promising further 
                                    to provide additional adherents and necessary help from 
                                    Madinah. The following year a dozen new Madinans took the 
                                    oath of allegiance to him and requested him to provide with 
                                    a missionary teacher. The work of the missionary, Mus'ab, 
                                    proved very successful and he led a contingent of 
                                    seventy-three new converts to Mecca, at the time of the 
                                    pilgrimage. These invited the Prophet and his Meccan 
                                    companions to migrate to their town, and promised to shelter 
                                    the Prophet and to treat him and his companions as their own 
                                    kith and kin. Secretly and in small groups, the greater part 
                                    of the Muslims emigrated to Madinah. Upon this the pagans of 
                                    Mecca not only confiscated the property of the evacuees, but 
                                    devised a plot to assassinate the Prophet. It became now 
                                    impossible for him to remain at home. It is worthy of 
                                    mention, that in spite of their hostility to his mission, 
                                    the pagans had unbounded confidence in his probity, so much 
                                    so that many of them used to deposit their savings with him. 
                                    The Prophet Muhammad now entrusted all these deposits to 
                                    'Ali, a cousin of his, with instructions to return in due 
                                    course to the rightful owners. He then left the town 
                                    secretly in the company of his faithful friend, Abu-Bakr. 
                                    After several adventures, they succeeded in reaching Madinah 
                                    in safety. This happened in 622, whence starts the Hijrah 
                                    calendar.
 Reorganization of the Community28. For the better rehabilitation of the displaced 
                                    immigrants, the Prophet created a fraternization between 
                                    them and an equal number of well-to-do Madinans. The 
                                    families of each pair of the contractual brothers worked 
                                    together to earn their livelihood, and aided one another in 
                                    the business of life.
 29. Further he thought that the development of the man as 
                                    a whole would be better achieved if he co-ordinated religion 
                                    and politics as two constituent parts of one whole. To this 
                                    end he invited the representatives of the Muslims as well as 
                                    the non-Muslim inhabitants of the region: Arabs, Jews, 
                                    Christians and others, and suggested the establishment of a 
                                    City-State in Madinah. With their assent, he endowed the 
                                    city with a written constitution - the first of its kind in 
                                    the world - in which he defined the duties and rights both 
                                    of the citizens and the head of the State - the Prophet 
                                    Muhammad was unanimously hailed as such - and abolished the 
                                    customary private justice. The administration of justice 
                                    became henceforward the concern of the central organisation 
                                    of the community of the citizens. The document laid down 
                                    principles of defence and foreign policy: it organized a 
                                    system of social insurance, called ma'aqil, in cases of too 
                                    heavy obligations. It recognized that the Prophet Muhammad 
                                    would have the final word in all differences, and that there 
                                    was no limit to his power of legislation. It recognized also 
                                    explicitly liberty of religion, particularly for the Jews, 
                                    to whom the constitutional act afforded equality with 
                                    Muslims in all that concerned life in this world (cf. infra 
                                    n. 303).  30. Muhammad journeyed several times with a view to win 
                                    the neighbouring tribes and to conclude with them treaties 
                                    of alliance and mutual help. With their help, he decided to 
                                    bring to bear economic pressure on the Meccan pagans, who 
                                    had confiscated the property of the Muslim evacuees and also 
                                    caused innumerable damage. Obstruction in the way of the 
                                    Meccan caravans and their passage through the Madinan region 
                                    exasperated the pagans, and a bloody struggle ensued.  31. In the concern for the material interests of the 
                                    community, the spiritual aspect was never neglected. Hardly 
                                    a year had passed after the migration to Madinah, when the 
                                    most rigorous of spiritual disciplines, the fasting for the 
                                    whole month of Ramadan every year, was imposed on every 
                                    adult Muslim, man and woman.  Struggle Against Intolerance and 
                                    Unbelief32. Not content with the expulsion of the Muslim 
                                    compatriots, the Meccans sent an ultimatum to the Madinans, 
                                    demanding the surrender or at least the expulsion of 
                                    Muhammad and his companions but evidently all such efforts 
                                    proved in vain. A few months later, in the year 2 H., they 
                                    sent a powerful army against the Prophet, who opposed them 
                                    at Badr; and the pagans thrice as numerous as the Muslims, 
                                    were routed. After a year of preparation, the Meccans again 
                                    invaded Madinah to avenge the defeat of Badr. They were now 
                                    four times as numerous as the Muslims. After a bloody 
                                    encounter at Uhud, the enemy retired, the issue being 
                                    indecisive. The mercenaries in the Meccan army did not want 
                                    to take too much risk, or endanger their safety.
 33. In thc meanwhile the Jewish citizens of Madinah began 
                                    to foment trouble. About the time of the victory of Badr, 
                                    one of their leaders, Ka'b ibn al-Ashraf, proceeded to Mecca 
                                    to give assurance of his alliance with the pagans, and to 
                                    incite them to a war of revenge. After the battle of Uhud, 
                                    the tribe of the same chieftain plotted to assassinate the 
                                    Prophet by throwing on him a mill-stone from above a tower, 
                                    when he had gone to visit their locality. In spite of all 
                                    this, the only demand the Prophet made of the men of this 
                                    tribe was to quit the Madinan region, taking with them all 
                                    their properties, after selling their immovables and 
                                    recovering their debts from the Muslims. The clemency thus 
                                    extended had an effect contrary to what was hoped. The 
                                    exiled not only contacted the Meccans, but also the tribes 
                                    of the North, South and East of Madinah, mobilized military 
                                    aid, and planned from Khaibar an invasion of Madinah, with 
                                    forces four times more numerous than those employed at Uhud. 
                                    The Muslims prepared for a siege, and dug a ditch to defend 
                                    themselves against this hardest of all trials. Although the 
                                    defection of the Jews still remaining inside Madinah at a 
                                    later stage upset all strategy, yet with a sagacious 
                                    diplomacy, the Prophet succeeded in breaking up the 
                                    alliance, and the different enemy groups retired one after 
                                    the other.  34. Alcoholic drinks, gambling and games of chance were 
                                    at this time declared forbidden for the Muslims.  The Reconciliation35. The Prophet tried once more to reconcile the 
                                    Meccans and proceeded to Mecca. The barring of the route of 
                                    their Northern caravans had ruined their economy. The 
                                    Prophet promised them transit security, extradition of their 
                                    fugitives and the fulfillment of every condition they 
                                    desired, agreeing even to return to Madinah without 
                                    accomplishing the pilgrimage of the Ka'bah. Thereupon the 
                                    two contracting parties promised at Hudaibiyah in the 
                                    suburbs of Mecca, not only the maintenance of peace, but 
                                    also the observance of neutrality in their conflicts with 
                                    third parties.
 36. Profiting by the peace, the Prophet launched an 
                                    intensive programme for the propagation of his religion. He 
                                    addressed missionary letters to the foreign rulers of 
                                    Byzantium, Iran, Abyssinia and other lands. The Byzantine 
                                    autocrat priest - Dughatur of the Arabs - embraced Islam, 
                                    but for this, was lynched by the Christian mob; the prefect 
                                    of Ma'an (Palestine) suffered the same fate, and was 
                                    decapitated and crucified by order of the emperor. A Muslim 
                                    ambassador was assassinated in Syria-Palestine; and instead 
                                    of punishing the culprit, the emperor Heraclius rushed with 
                                    his armies to protect him against the punitive expedition 
                                    sent by the Prophet (battle of Mu'tah).  37. The pagans of Mecca hoping to profit by the Muslim 
                                    difficulties, violated the terms of their treaty. Upon this, 
                                    the Prophet himself led an army, ten thousand strong, and 
                                    surprised Mecca which he occupied in a bloodless manner. As 
                                    a benevolent conqueror, he caused the vanquished people to 
                                    assemble, reminded them of their ill deeds, their religious 
                                    persecution, unjust confiscation of the evacuee property, 
                                    ceaseless invasions and senseless hostilities for twenty 
                                    years continuously. He asked them: "Now what do you expect 
                                    of me?" When everybody lowered his head with shame, the 
                                    Prophet proclaimed: "May God pardon you; go in peace; there 
                                    shall be no responsibility on you today; you are free!" He 
                                    even renounced the claim for the Muslim property confiscated 
                                    by the pagans. This produced a great psychological change of 
                                    hearts instantaneously. When a Meccan chief advanced with a 
                                    fulsome heart towards the Prophet, after hearing this 
                                    general amnesty, in order to declare his acceptance of 
                                    Islam, the Prophet told him: "And in my turn, I appoint you 
                                    the governor of Mecca!" Without leaving a single soldier in 
                                    the conquered city, the Prophet retired to Madinah. The 
                                    Islamization of Mecca, which was accomplished in a few 
                                    hours, was complete.  38. Immediately after the occupation of Mecca, the city 
                                    of Ta'if mobilized to fight against the Prophet. With some 
                                    difficulty the enemy was dispersed in the valley of Hunain, 
                                    but the Muslims preferred to raise the siege of nearby Ta'if 
                                    and use pacific means to break the resistance of this 
                                    region. Less than a year later, a delegation from Ta'if came 
                                    to Madinah offering submission. But it requested exemption 
                                    from prayer, taxes and military service, and the continuance 
                                    of the liberty to adultery and fornication and alcoholic 
                                    drinks. It demanded even the conservation of the temple of 
                                    the idol al-Lat at Ta'if. But Islam was not a materialist 
                                    immoral movement; and soon the delegation itself felt 
                                    ashamed of its demands regarding prayer, adultery and wine. 
                                    The Prophet consented to concede exemption from payment of 
                                    taxes and rendering of military service; and added: You need 
                                    not demolish the temple with your own hands: we shall send 
                                    agents from here to do the job, and if there should be any 
                                    consequences, which you are afraid of on account of your 
                                    superstitions, it will be they who would suffer. This act of 
                                    the Prophet shows what concessions could be given to new 
                                    converts. The conversion of the Ta'ifites was so whole 
                                    hearted that in a short while, they themselves renounced the 
                                    contracted exemptions, and we find the Prophet nominating a 
                                    tax collector in their locality as in other Islamic regions.  39. In all these "wars," extending over a period of ten 
                                    years, the non-Muslims lost on the battlefield only about 
                                    250 persons killed, and the Muslim losses were even less. 
                                    With these few incisions, the whole continent of Arabia. 
                                    with its million and more of square miles, was cured of the 
                                    abscess of anarchy and immorality. During these ten years of 
                                    disinterested struggle, all thc peoples of the Arabian 
                                    Peninsula and the southern regions of Iraq and Palestine had 
                                    voluntarily embraced Islam. Some Christian, Jewish and Parsi 
                                    groups remained attached to their creeds, and they were 
                                    granted liberty of conscience as well as judicial and 
                                    juridical autonomy.  40. In the year 10 H., when the Prophet went to Mecca for Hajj (pilgrimage), he met 140,000 Muslims there, who 
                                    had come from different parts of Arabia to fulfil their 
                                    religious obligation. He addressed to them his celebrated 
                                    sermon, in which he gave a resume of his teachings: "Belief 
                                    in One God without images or symbols, equality of all the 
                                    Believers without distinction of race or class, the 
                                    superiority of individuals being based solely on piety; 
                                    sanctity of life, property and honour; abolition of 
                                    interest, and of vendettas and private justice; better 
                                    treatment of women; obligatory inheritance and distribution 
                                    of the property of deceased persons among near relatives of 
                                    both sexes, and removal of the possibility of the cumulation 
                                    of wealth in the hands of the few." The Quran and the 
                                    conduct of the Prophet were to serve as the bases of law and 
                                    a healthy criterion in every aspect of human life.  41. On his return to Madinah, he fell ill; and a few 
                                    weeks later, when he breathed his last, he had the 
                                    satisfaction that he had well accomplished the task which he 
                                    had undertaken - to preach to the world the Divine message.  42. He bequeathed to posterity, a religion of pure 
                                    monotheism; he created a well-disciplined State out of the 
                                    existent chaos and gave peace in place of the war of 
                                    everybody against everybody else; he established a 
                                    harmonious equilibrium between the spiritual and the 
                                    temporal, between the mosque and the citadel; he left a new 
                                    system of law, which dispensed impartial justice, in which 
                                    even the head of the State was as much a subject to it as 
                                    any commoner, and in which religious tolerance was so great 
                                    that non-Muslim inhabitants of Muslim countries equally 
                                    enjoyed complete juridical, judicial and cultural autonomy. 
                                    In the matter of the revenues of the State, the Quran fixed 
                                    the principles of budgeting, and paid more thought to the 
                                    poor than to anybody else. The revenues were declared to be 
                                    in no wise the private property of the head of the State. 
                                    Above all, the Prophet Muhammad set a noble example and 
                                    fully practised all that he taught to others. |