Military Platoons and
Missions between the Battle of Uhud and the Battle of the Confederates
Uhuds misfortune left a bad impact
on both the credibility and military reputation of the Muslims. Their
dignity and power in peoples eyes were impaired. Troubles and
dangers spread everywhere in and out of Madinah. The Jews, hypocrites and
bedouins declared publicly their enmity to the Muslims and each party was
keen on degrading and, in the final place, exterminating their whole
existence.
Two months had almost passed after this
battle, when Banu Asad made preparations to raid Madinah, Udal and
Qarah tribes conspired against
the Muslims in the month of Safar, 4 A.H. and killed ten of the Prophet
s Companions.
Similarly Banu Amir plotted against them too, and seventy Companions
were killed in the battle of Mauna Well. During that period, Banu
Nadeer kept on announcing their enmity and were involved in a plot to kill
the Prophet Muhammad in
Rabi Al-Awwal in 4 A.H. Banu Ghatfan were about to attack Madinah in
Jumada Al-Ula in 4 A.H.
Thus we see that the Muslims turned into
an attractive target of several potential dangers after they had lost
their military credibility in the battle of Uhud. Muhammad
most wisely managed to hold
all those hostile currents at bay, and even redeem the lost dignity of the
Muslims and gain them anew fresh glory and noble standing. The first
initiative he took in this process was Hamra Al-Asad pursuit
operation, whereby he could retain the Muslim military reputation. He
succeeded in recovering his followers dignity and awe-inspiring
position in such a manner that astonished or even astounded both the Jews
and hypocrites, alike, then he proceeded to crown his successful attempts
by despatching military errands and missions:
Abi Salamah Mission:
The first people to take up arms against
the Muslims in the aftermath of Uhud reverse were Banu Asad bin Khuzaimah.
"The Intelligence Corps" of Madinah reported that Talhah and
Salamah, sons of Khuwailid have mustered some volunteers to fight the
Messenger of Allâh .
The Prophet immediately
despatched a 150-man-platoon of Helpers and Emigrants headed by Abu
Salamah. The Muslim leader took Bani Asad bin Khuzaimah by surprise in
their own homeland, neutralized their attempts, dispersed them and
captured their cattle. On his return, Abu Salamah had an inflammation of a
previous wound he sustained in Uhud, and caused him to die soon after.
This expedition took place on Muharram 1st, 4 A.H.[]
An Errand led by Abdullah bin
Unais:
On the fifth day of the same month
Muharram, 4 A.H., it was reported that Khalid bin Sufyan Al-Hudhali was
gathering some mob to raid the Muslim positions. Abdullah bin Unais,
at the behest of the Prophet
set out to destroy the enemies.
The Muslim military leader stayed away
for eighteen days during which he successfully fulfilled his task, killed
the head of the rebels and brought his head back to Madinah on Saturday,
seven days before the end of Muharram. The Prophet
, as a reward, gave him a
stick saying "This will function as a sign of recognition for you and
me on the Day of Resurrection." On his death bed, Abdullah
requested that the log be with him in his shroud.[]
The Event of Ar-Raji:
In Safar of the fourth year A.H., a
delegation from the tribes of Udal and Qarah came to Madinah and
asked the Prophet to send a
group of Companions to instruct them in religion, claiming the existence
of some Muslims among them. He sent six of his Companions, in another
version, ten headed by Murthid bin Abi Murthid Al-Ghanawi, or, according
to Al-Bukhari, Asim bin Thabit, the grandfather of Asim bin Umar
bin Al-Khattab. When they reached a spot called Ar-Raji between
Rabigh and Jeddah, a hundred archers of Banu Lihyan clan surrounded the
place and attacked them. The delegation of Muslims took shelter on some
high ground, Fudfud, and the bedouins offered them a pledge that they
would not be killed. Asim refused to come down, instead he fought
them until he and six of his companions were killed. Three men were left,
Khubaib, Zaid bin Ad-Dathna and another one. Once again, the bedouins
offered them a guarantee of safety and they accepted. When they descended,
the bedouins treacherously bound them. The third man rebuked them for
their insincerity and resisted them so they killed him. The other two men
who had killed some notables of Quraish at Badr were taken and sold in
Makkah. The first was Khubaib who was detained for some time and then it
was unanimously decided to crucify him. He was taken from the Holy
Sanctuary to At-Tanim for crucifixion. He requested a respite to
offer a two-Raka prayer. After the final greeting, he turned
to his executioners, and said: "Had I not been afraid that you would
think that I was afraid of death, I would have prayed for a long time."
It was then that Khubaib first set the tradition of praying two Raka
before being executed. He then said:
"O Lord! Count them one by one,
exterminate them to the last one."
He then recited some verses of poetry
which speak eloquently of the atrocities borne by him, and testify to his
Faith in Allâh at this hour of suffering:
The confederates have gathered their
tribes around me,
And summoned all of them who could come.
They have gathered their women and
children,
I am bound fastly to a lofty trunk.
To Allâh alone I complain of my
helplessness and sufferings,
And of the death, the confederates have
prepared for me.
Lord of the Throne! Give me endurance
against their design,
They have cut my flesh bit by bit, and I
have been deprived of sustenance.
They let me choose infidelity but death
is preferable,
Tears roll out of my eyes, though not of
fear.
By Allâh! I fear not if I die a
Muslim,
On what side I fall for the sake of Allâh.
I will not show subservience to the
enemy,
If Lord so desires, He will bless my torn
limbs and broken joints.
Abu Sufyan then addressed him saying: "I
adjure you by Allâh, dont you wish that Muhammad
were here in your place so
that we might cut off his head, and that you were with your family?"
Khubaib answered, "By Allâh, I do not wish that Muhammad
now were in the place I
occupy or that a thorn could hurt him, and that I were sitting with my
family." Quraish ordered Uqbah bin Al-Harith, whose father had
been killed by Khubaib himself, to crucify him. They also appointed
someone to guard his corpse. Amr bin Omaiyah Ad-Damari played a
cunning trick and carried the corpse stealthily at night to bury it
somewhere. It was later reported that shortly before his crucifixion, he
was seen eating a bunch of grapes although there was not even one date
available in Makkah at that time. [In fact, it was nothing but sustenance
bestowed upon him by Allâh.]
Safwan bin Omaiyah purchased the second
man, Zaid bin Ad-Dathna, and killed him as an act of vengeance for his
fathers murder.
Quraish, whom Asim had killed one
of their notables, sent someone to fetch a portion of his body, but to
their disappointment, his corpse was inaccessible because a large swarm of
hornets had been shielding him against any malicious tampering. Asim
had already given his Lord a pledge to remain immune against any
polytheist tampering with respect to his body, and also stay detached from
any contact with the enemies of Allâh. Umar bin Al-Khattab,
when hearing this piece of news exclaimed, "Allâh verily
protects His believing slave after death just as He does during his
lifespan."[]
The Tragedy of Mauna Well:
Mauna Well tragedy, which was even
more horrible than that of Ar-Raji, took place in the same month.
Abu Bara Amir bin
Malik nicknamed Spear Player came to the
Messenger of Allâh in
Madinah. The Messenger of Allâh
called him to embrace Islam
but he neither agreed nor refused. He said: "O Messenger of Allâh,
if you dispatch some of your Companions to the people of Najd to call them
to Islam, I expect them to accept." "I am afraid the people of
Najd will kill them." Said the Messenger. But he replied, "I
will protect them." Ibn Ishaq confirms that forty men were sent to
them; but As-Sahih states that they were seventy Al-Mundhir
bin Amr, one of Bani Saida, nicknamed Freed to die
commanded that group, who were the best and most learned in the Qurân
and jurisprudence.
On their way to Najd they used to gather
firewood to buy food for the people of Ahl As-Suffah
as charity by day and study, meditate on the meanings of the Qurân
by night. They kept on doing that till they arrived at Mauna Well
which was a well in between Bani Amir, Harrah and Bani Saleem. They
stayed there and sent the Message of the Prophet
with Haram bin Milhan, the
brother of Umm Sulaim to the enemy of Allâh Amir bin
At-Tufail. Amir did not heed the Message but rather ordered a man to
spear Haram in the back. When the spear penetrated Harams body, he
saw the blood and said: "Allâhu Akbar! (i.e. Allâh
is the Greatest) By Lord of Al-Kabah I have won!"
Then the enemy of Allâh, promptly,
called out Bani Amir to fight the rest. Bani Amir refused
because they were under the protection of Abu Bara. Therefore he
turned to Bani Saleem for help. The people of Usaiyah, Rial
and Dhakwan, who were folks of Bani Saleem, responded to his call. The
Companions of the Prophet ,
who were encompassed by idolaters, kept on fighting till they were all
killed. The only survivor was Kab bin Zaid bin An-Najjar who was
carried wounded from among the dead. It was in Al-Khandaq (the
trench) Battle that he was killed.
Amr bin Omaiyah Ad-Damari and
Al-Mundhir bin Uqbah bin Amir, who were entrusted with the
Muslims animals far from them, saw the birds circling in the air
over the battleground. Al-Mundhir rushed to share in the fight till he was
killed. But Amr bin Omaiyah was captured. Amir set him free
when he knew that he was of Mudar tribe but that was after he had cut his
hair. He did that to fulfil a pledge of his mothers to set a slave
free.
Returning to the Prophet
Amr bin Omaiyah
conveyed the news of the painful disaster, which resulted in the murder of
seventy of the best believers, and recalled the tragedy of Uhud but with
the difference that those of Uhud were killed in a clear war but those of
Mauna were killed in a disgraceful treachery. On his way back to
Qarqara, Amr bin Omaiyah rested in the shade of a tree, and there
two men of Bani Kilab joined him. When they slept, Amr killed them
both, thinking that by doing that he would avenge some of his killed
companions. Then he found out that they had been given a pledge of
protection by the Prophet .
He told the Messenger of Allâh
what he had done. The
Messenger of Allâh
said to Amr: "You have killed two people; their blood-money
shall be a debt I have to discharge." He then engaged himself
collecting their blood-money from the Muslims and their allies, the Jews[].
This very act was later to trigger the invasion of Bani An-Nadeer.
The Prophet
was so deeply moved by this
tragedy and that of Ar-Raji that he used to invoke Allâhs
wrath against those people and tribes who killed his Companions. Anas
reported that for thirty days the Prophet
supplicated Allâh
against those who killed his Companions at Mauna Well. Every dawn
prayer he would invoke Allâhs wrath against Ril,
Dhakwan, Lihyan and Usaiyah. He would say, " Usaiyah
disobeyed Allâh and His Messenger." Therefore Allâh The
Exalted, sent down unto His Messenger a Qurânic verse that we
kept on reciting till it was abrogated later on: Inform our folk
that we have encountered our Lord and He is satisfied with us and we are
satisfied with Him. So the Messenger of Allâh
stopped his invocation.[]
Bani An-Nadeer Invasion:
We have already spoken about the
disgraceful behaviour of the Jews and how they were always thirsting to
shed the blood of the Muslims and undermine the cause of Islam despite all
the covenants and pledges they had given to the Prophet
. Their behaviour fluctuated
between resignation and slackness after the Banu Qainuqa event and
the murder of Kab bin Al-Ashraf, and rebellion coupled with
treacherous clandestine contacts with Quraish and the hypocrites in order
to establish an alliance against the Muslims after the battle of Uhud[].
Being inexperienced in war tactics, they resorted to conspiracy and
intrigue hatching. They first of all declared open hatred and enmity, and
chose to play all sorts of tricks that might harm the Muslims, but were
very careful not to initiate any sort of hostilities that might involve
them in open war.
The Prophet
, on his part, exercised the
highest degree of patience with them but they went too far in their
provocative deeds, especially after Ar-Raji and Mauna Well
events; they even made an attempt on his life.
Once the Prophet
with some of his Companions
set out to see Banu Nadeer and seek their help in raising the blood-money
he had to pay to Bani Kalb for the two men that Amr bin Omaiyah
Ad-Damari had killed by mistake. All of that was in accordance with the
clauses of the treaty that both parties had already signed. On hearing his
story they said they would share in paying the blood-money and asked him
and his Companions Abu Bakr, Umar, Ali and others to sit under
a wall of their houses and wait. The Jews held a short private meeting and
conspired to kill the Prophet .
The most wicked among them, Amr bin Jahsh, volunteered to climb up
the wall and drop a large millstone on his head. One of them, Salam bin
Mashkam, cautioned them against perpetrating such a crime, predicting that
Allâh would divulge their plot to him, and added that such an act
would constitute a manifest violation of the pact concluded with the
Muslims.
In fact, Gabriel did come down to reveal
to the Prophet their wicked
criminal intention, so he, with his Companions, hurried off back to
Madinah. On their way, he told his Companions of the Divine Revelation.
Soon after, the Prophet
delegated Muhammad bin
Maslamah to communicate an ultimatum to Bani Nadeer to the effect that
they should evacuate Madinah within ten days, otherwise, their heads would
be cut off. The chief of the hypocrites, Abdullah bin Ubai, urged
the Jews not to pay heed to the Prophet
s words and to stay in
their habitations, offering to run to their support with two thousands of
his followers, and assuring them of help to come from Quraizah tribe and
former allies Banu Ghatfan. In this regards, Allâh says:
"If you are expelled, we (too)
indeed will go out with you, and we shall never obey anyone against you,
and if you are attacked (in fight), we shall indeed help you."
[59:11]
The Jews regained their confidence and
were determined to fight. Their chief Huyai bin Akhtab relied hopefully on
what the chief of the hypocrites said. So he sent to the Messenger of Allâh
saying: "We will not
leave our houses. Do whatever you like to do."
Undoubtedly the situation was awkward for
the Muslims. Launching a war against their opponents at this critical
stage could entail terrible far reaching ramifications in the light of the
unfavourable conditions they were passing through, besides the hostile
environment growing in power and hatred around them, the harbinger of
which assumed the form of killing the Muslim missions, as it has been
already introduced.
The Jews of Bani Nadeer were also a power
to count for, and the prospects of inflicting a military defeat on them
was precarious; consequently forcing them into war engagement would be
attended with unpredictable risks. On the other hand, the continual state
of repeated assassinations and acts of treachery carried out against the
Muslims individually and collectively brought about unbearable headache to
Muhammad s followers.
Having judged all the prevalent status quo in this perspective, and in the
light of the disgraceful attempt on the life of the Prophet
, the Muslims made the
decisive decisions of taking up arms whatever turn the consequences could
assume.
When the Messenger of Allâh
received the reply of Huyai
bin Akhtab he said: "Allâhu Akbar, Allâhu Akbar."
(Allâh is the Greatest of all) and his Companions repeated after
him. Then he set out to fight them after appointing Ibn Umm Maktum to
dispose the affairs of Madinah during his absence. The standard was
entrusted to Ali bin Abi Talib. He laid siege to their forts for six
nights in another version, fifteen.
Banu Nadeer resorted to their castles,
mounted them and started shooting arrows and pelting stones at the Muslims
enjoying the strategic advantage that their thick fields of palm trees
provided. The Muslims were therefore ordered to fell and burn those trees.
In this respect, Allâh, the All-Mighty, states in the Qurân:
"What you (O Muslims) cut down of
the palm-trees (of the enemy), or you left them standing on their stems,
it was by leave of Allâh." [59:5]
Quraizah tribe remained neutral, and the
hypocrite Abdullah bin Ubai as well as Ghatfan failed to keep their
promises of support. In this regard Allâh says:
"(Their allies deceived them) like
Satan, when he says to man: Disbelieve in Allâh. But
when (man) disbelieves in Allâh, Satan says: I am free of you."
[59:16]
The siege did not last long for Allâh,
the All-Mighty, cast horror into the hearts of the Jews, and they
willingly offered to comply with the Prophet
s order and leave
Madinah. The Prophet accepted
their request and allowed them to carry as much luggage as their camels
could lift, arms were excepted. Of course, they had no choice but to carry
out the orders, so they took with them everything they could carry even
the pegs and beams of ceilings. Their caravan counted 600 loaded camels
including their chiefs, Huyai bin Akhtab and Salam bin Abi Al-Huqaiq, who
left for Khaibar whereas another party shifted to Syria. Two of them
embraced Islam, Yameen bin Amr and Abu Sad bin Wahab, and so
they retained their personal wealth.
The Messenger of Allâh
seized their weapons, land,
houses, and wealth. Amongst the other booty he managed to capture, there
were 50 armours, 50 helmets, and 340 swords.
This booty was exclusively the Prophet
s because no fighting
was involved in capturing it. He divided the booty at his own discretion
among the early Emigrants and two poor Helpers, Abu Dujana and Suhail bin
Haneef. Anyway the Messenger of Allâh
spent a portion of this
wealth on his family to sustain their living the year around. The rest was
expended to provide the Muslim army with equipment for further wars in the
way of Allâh.
The invasion of Bani An-Nadeer took place
in Rabi Al-Awwal, 4 A.H. i.e. in August 625 A.D. Almost all the
verses of Sûrah Al-Hashr (Chapter 59 - The Gathering)
describe the banishment of the Jews and reveal the disgraceful manners of
the hypocrites. The verses manifest the rules relevant to the booty. In
this Chapter, Allâh, the All-Mighty, praises the Emigrants and
Helpers. This Chapter also shows the legitimacy of cutting down and
burning the enemys land and trees for military purposes. Such acts
cannot be regarded as phenomena of corruption so long that they are in the
way of Allâh.
In this very Chapter, Allâh
recommends the believers to be pious and prepare themselves for the world
to come and He ends it with a compliment upon Himself and a manifestation
of His Holy Names and Attributes.
As this Chapter concentrates on Bani
An-Nadeer and their banishment, Ibn Abbas used to describe it as An-Nadeer
Chapter.[]
The Invasion of Najd:
With the peaceful victory that the
Muslims achieved at Bani An-Nadeer invasion, their control over Madinah
was undisputedly established, and the hypocrites receded to a state of
silence and stopped their artful machinations publicly. Consequently the
Prophet had ample time to
direct all his energies and human resources towards suppressing the desert
bedouins and curbing their harmful provocations and wicked malicious
practices of killing his missionaries and even contemplating an invasion
of Madinah itself.[]
Meanwhile, the Muslim scouting groups reported building up of bedouin
troops of Bani Muharib and Thalabah of Ghatfan around Madinah. The
Prophet , with the Muslims,
hurriedly set out to discipline those new outlaws, cast fear into their
hearts and deter them from perpetrating further wicked practices. These
deterring operations were carried out repeatedly and did produce effective
results. The rebellious hard-hearted desert bedouins were terrorized into
the mountains, and Madinah remained completely immune against their raids.
In the context of these invasions, it is
interesting to draw some prominence to a significant one ¾ Dhat
Ar-Riqa (rags) campaign ¾ which some scholars claim, took
place in Najd ( a large area of tableland in the Arabian Peninsula) in
Rabi Ath-Thani or Jumada Al-Ula, 4 A.H. They substantiate their
claim by saying that it was strategically necessary to carry out this
campaign in order to quell the rebellious bedouins in order to meet the
exigencies of the agreed upon encounter with the polytheists, i.e. minor
Badr Battle in Shaban, 4 A.H. The most authentic opinion, however,
is that Dhat Ar-Riqa campaign took place after the fall of
Khaibar. This is supported by the fact that Abu Hurairah and Abu Musa
Al-Ashari - may Allah be pleased with him - witnessed the battle.
Abu Hurairah embraced Islam only some days before Khaibar, and Abu Musa
Al-Ashari came back from Abyssinia (Ethiopia) and joined the Prophet
at Khaibar. The rules
relating to the prayer of fear which the Prophet
observed at Dhat Ar-Riqa
campaign, were revealed at Asfan Invasion and this beyond a shadow
of doubt took place after Al-Khandaq (the trench) Battle in late 5
A.H.
The Invasion of Badr, the Second:
When the Muslims destroyed the power of
the Arab-desert tribes and guarded themselves against their evils, they
started preparations to encounter their great enemy. A year elapsed since
they fought Quraish at Uhud. So it was due time to meet them and start war
again in order to determine which of the two parties was worthy of
survival.[]
In Shaban 4 A.H., January 626 A.D.,
the Messenger of Allâh
set out to Badr accompanied by one thousand and five hundred fighters and
ten mounted horsemen, and with Ali bin Abi Talib as standard bearer.
Abdullah bin Rawahah was given authority over Madinah during the
Prophet s absence.
Reaching Badr, the Muslims stayed there waiting for the idolaters to come.
Abu Sufyans forces comprised two
thousand footmen and fifty horsemen. They reached Mar Az-Zahran, some
distance form Makkah, and camped at a water place called Mijannah. Being
reluctant, discouraged and extremely terrified of the consequences of the
approaching fight, Abu Sufyan turned to his people and began to introduce
cowardice-based flimsy pretexts in order to dissuade his men from going to
war, saying: "O tribe of Quraish! Nothing will improve the condition
you are in but a fruitful year a year during which your animals
feed on plants and bushes and give you milk to drink. And I see that this
is a rainless year, therefore I am returning now and I recommend you to
return with me."
It seems that his army were also
possessed of the same fears and apprehensions, for they readily obeyed him
without the least hesitation.
The Muslims, who were then at Badr,
stayed for eight days waiting for their enemy. They took advantage of
their stay by selling goods and earning double as much the price out of
it. When the idolaters declined to fight, the balance of powers shifted to
rest in favour of the Muslims, who thus regained their military
reputation, their dignity and managed to impose their awe-inspiring
presence over the whole of Arabia. In brief, they mastered and controlled
the whole situation.
This invasion had many a name. It is
called Badr the Appointment, Badr, the Second, Badr,
the Latter, and Badr Minor.[]
The Invasion of Doumat Al-Jandal:
With the Messenger
s return from Badr,
peace and security prevailed the whole area; and the Islamic headquarters,
Madinah, enjoyed full security. The Prophet
then deemed it fit and
appropriate to head for the most distant areas of Arabia in order to
subdue all hostile elements in order to force undisputed recognition out
of friend and enemy alike.
After a six-month lull of military
activities, the Prophet was
reported that some tribes, in the vicinity of Doumat Al-Jandal, on the
borders of Syria, were involved in highway robbery and plundering, and
were on their way to muster troops and raid Madinah itself. He immediately
appointed Siba bin Arfatah Al-Ghifari to dispose the affairs
of Madinah during his absence, and set out at the head of 1000 Muslims in
late Rabi Al-Awwal, 5 A.H. taking with him a man, named Madhkur,
from Bani Udhrah, as a guide.
On their way to Doumat Al-Jandal, they
used to march by night and hide by day, so that they might take the enemy
by surprise. When they drew near their destination, the Muslims discovered
that the highway men had moved to another place, so they captured their
cattle and shepherds. The inhabitants of Doumat Al-Jandal had also fled in
all directions for their lives and evacuated their habitations. The
Prophet stayed there for 5
days during which he despatched expeditionary forces to hunt for the enemy
personnel but they detected none. He then returned to Madinah but en route
he entered into a peace treaty with Uyainah bin Hisn. Doumat
Al-Jandal is located at about a distance of fifteen days march from
Madinah and five from Damascus.
With this decisive and steady progress
and wise strict plans, the Prophet
managed to spread security,
control the situation and make peace prevail the whole area. He also
succeeded in shifting the course of events for the welfare of the Muslims
by reducing the incessant internal and external troubles. The hypocrites
were silenced, a tribe of the Jews evacuated while the other continued to
fake good neighbourliness and seemingly faithful adherence to the
covenants, the desert bedouins subdued and finally the archenemy Quraish
no longer keen on attacking the Muslims. This secure strategic attitude
created optimum circumstances for the Muslims to resume their logical
course in propagating Islam and communicating the Messages of the Lord to
all worlds.
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