Showing posts with label Prophet Youth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Prophet Youth. Show all posts

Chapter 42- The Dawn: The Prophet's Youth - Journey To Syria

When Muhammad was twelve years old, his uncle Abu Talib who was a trader, undertook a business trip to Syria. He was reluctant to take Muhammad with him because of the hardships of the journey. Muhammad was, however, unwilling to remain separated from his uncle. He clung to him and after a good deal of pleading prevailed upon his kind uncle to take him to Syria along with him. It was during this journey that he is said to have met Bahira, a Christian monk. This meeting has been time and again emphasized by several Christian scholars who deduce that it was from Bahira that he learned to hate the idols.

The authentic records of the life story of Rasulullah prove beyond all shadow of a doubt that there is not a grain of truth in this deduction. That Bahira met Muhammad is a fact, but the claim that he learned from the Christian monk the concept of God and hatred against idolatry is absolutely baseless. On the other hand, we learn that Rasulullah in his very first talk showed his utmost contempt for idol worship that had taken a firm hold on the minds of the people around him. We reproduce below a passage from Ibn Hisham in order to give an idea of what actually transpired between Rasulullah and Bahira:

When Bahira saw him he began to eye him keenly and to observe the features of his body so as to find out in him the signs (of prophethood) that he already knew (from the Holy Scriptures). Then, when the party had finished eating and had broken up, Bahira went up to him and said, "Young man! I adjure you by al-Lat and al-Uzza to answer my questions." Bahira said that to him only because he had heard his people swearing by these two. 

They say that Rasulullah said to him, "Do not ask by al-Lat and al-Uzza for by God there is absolutely nothing I detest so much as these two." So Bahira said to him, "Then, in God's name, answer what I ask you." "Ask what seems good to you," he said. So Bahira began to ask him about certain particulars of his condition in sleep. Then Rasulullah set about answering him and what he said agreed with the description of him in Bahira's (book)…

Then he (Bahira) went to his uncle Abu Talib and said:

Return to your own country with your nephew, and take care of him against the Jews, for, by God, if they see him and know what I know about him, they will desire evil; for great fortune is in store for your nephew. So hurry to your country with him.

His uncle Abu Talib set out with him quickly and soon reached Makkah on the completion of their trade in Syria. (1)

Muhammad was hardly fifteen (2) when the "sacrilegious" wars (harb al-fijar) - which continued with varying fortunes and considerable loss of human life for a number of years broke out at 'Ukaz between the Quraysh and the Banu Kinanah on the one side and the Qays Aylan on the other. In one of these battles, Rasulullah attended to his uncles but did not raise his arm against their opponent. Rasulullah efforts were confined to picking up the arrows of the enemy as they fell, and handing them over to his uncles.

At the conclusion of these wars, when peace was restored, people felt the need of forming a confederacy at Makkah for suppressing violence and injustice and vindicating the rights of the weak, the indigent, and the destitute. Muhammad played an important role in its conclusion and this league exercised a strong moderating influence amongst the different tribes of Arabia. (3)

The authorities agree in ascribing to the youth of Rasulullah a modesty of deportment and purity of manners rare among the people of Makkah. During all this time he proved himself to possess a noble and spotless character, to be an absolute believer in one God, and thoroughly trustworthy in respect of his companionship, help, and guidance. Rasulullah was affectionate, kind, and sympathetic to his compatriots; always considerate, truthful, and sincere; perfectly faithful in respect of all trusts and promises. Rasulullah kept himself aloof from gambling, drinking, vulgar wrangling, voluptuousness, and all the vices rampant among his compatriots. 

Rasulullah was always fair and honest in all his dealings; generous

and obliging to his friends and benefactors. He walked humbly and

thoughtfully in the midst of the arrogant, headstrong, and marauding

tribes of Arabia. He hated all appearances of show, vanity, and pride

and would readily attend to the addresses of children and spare no
 
pains in alleviating the sufferings of the poor, old, and weak. 


Rasulullahﷺ 
always impressed his people with his wise, tranquil, and piety-inspiring countenance and, by his genuine kindliness and graceful manners, won the heart of everyone who came into contact with him, passing by all the temptations of vice with a majestic indifference. The spotless character and honorable bearing of the unobtrusive youth won the approbation of his fellow citizens, and earned the titles, by common consent, of al-Amin and al-Sadiq, meaning trustworthy and truthful.

Another Version Of The Journey to Syam (Syria)

During 

Rasulullahﷺ 's trip to Syria with his uncle Abu Talib, the caravan camped near the monastery of Bahirah, a Christian monk. Astounded at having noticed a cloud hovering around the caravan and shading a certain person, as well as the branches of trees leaning forth to shelter someone from the sun near where the caravan had camped, the curious Bahirah decided to look into the intriguing matter and invite the Makkans inside the monastery for some food:

“I have prepared food for you all. I insist each and every member of the caravan to join, young and old, free and slave.”


The Makkans were taken aback by the invitation of Bahirah, since he had never seemed to take much interest in them before, during their numerous other trips to Syria. Nevertheless, everyone heeded the invitation. Inquisitively staring at all the faces of his guests upon their entrance, Bahirah felt he did not find what he had been looking for, a certain sign he wished to see:

“Did you leave someone behind?” he asked.

“No one”, they said, “except for a child left to keep an eye on the caravan and their belongings, chosen for the job since he was the youngest.”


But Bahirah insisted ;

Rasulullahﷺ comes for the meal as well. Once brought by the table, Bahirah recognized Muhammad -upon him blessings and peace- immediately. Taking him by the hand, he murmured:

“This is the Master of the Both Worlds…The Almighty’s Messenger, the Mercy of the Worlds!”


The Makkan elders asked him where he had gotten such an idea, to which Bahirah answered:

“I read his signs from our Holy Scriptures. As you approached, I noticed all trees and rocks bowing to him in respect. I am aware that it is only to prophets that these inanimate things bow in respect. I then became all the more convinced, once I looked further and noticed the his seal of prophethood between his shoulder blades.”


Bahîrah then continued to pose more questions to Abu Talib about his young nephew and each answer he received set his heart at greater ease regarding his premonition. Bahirah was now certain about the child’s prophethood.


“Take your nephew back to your homeland!” he then urged Abu Talib.  “Beware of the harm that may come from the Jews, for God forbid if they recognize your nephew, they will most certainly try to kill him. The Jews desire the next prophet to be raised from among them, from the children of Israel, yet this child is an Arab. Take him back…Awaiting him is a great future.”


Abu Talib listened to the advice of Bahirah and immediately turned back to Mecca, at the expense of cutting his business venture short. 

(Ibn Ishâq, p. 54-55; Ibn Saad, I, 153-155; Tirmidhî, Manâqıb, 3)


Some orientalists have exploited this incident in alleging that the Prophet -upon him blessings and peace- received all the vital information from Bahirah to establish his own religion; an unfounded accusation indeed. Bahirah, after all, was a Christian monk and the beliefs communicated in the textually corrupted Bible are contrary to the core of Islamic beliefs. So how could it be conceived that the Blessed Prophet -upon him blessings and peace- could imitate the ideas of Christians, or for that matter Jews, which he had set out to correct in the first place?


The God of Christianity, the faith professed by Bahirah, is attributed with anthropomorphic qualities, which results in in a materialistic idea of the Divine. The concept of God in Islam, on the other hand, the faith conveyed by the Final Messenger -upon him blessings and peace-, is deeply entrenched in the notion of Divine unity and transcendence and thus stands entirely different. Allah, glory unto Him, is transcendent, beyond all comprehension, and above all weaknesses and imperfections alike.

The Holy Quran, therefore, makes it clear, in no uncertain terms, that the People of the Book, the Torah, and the Gospels, who lived before the appearance of the Final Prophet -upon him blessings and peace-, merit salvation only if they abided by the original form of their religions.



“Those who believe (in the Qur’an), and those who follow the Jewish (scriptures), and the Christians and the Sabians,- any who believe in Allah and the Last Day, and work righteousness, shall have their reward with their Lord; on them shall be no fear, nor shall they grieve.” 

(al-Baqara, 62)

Rasulullahﷺ being the Final Prophet encompasses all times and places and consequentially abrogates all previous religions and their validity. Not professing faith in Allah, glory unto Him, and His Prophet Muhammad -upon him blessings and peace- is tantamount to disbelief. Even devout adherents from among the People of the Book today are therefore excluded from the compass of people referred to in the above ayah.

Subsequent to professing faith comes the life of worship and the rules of conduct. Islam has implemented an organized life of worship, aligning social life with justice, morality, and righteousness, in relation to which it decrees punishments for those who violate the law. The aspects of worship in the religion Bahirah practiced at the time, on the other hand, had already been falsified, already devoid of the laws that regulate social conduct.

Moreover, the Prophet Muhammad -upon him blessings and peace- was also unlettered. As clearly mentioned in the Holy Quran, neither did he know how to read nor write:



“And you (O Muhammad) were not a reader of any scripture before it, nor did you write it with your right hand, for then might those have doubted, who follow falsehood. But it is clear revelations in the hearts of those who have been given knowledge, and none deny Our revelations save wrong-doers. ” 

(al-Ankabut, 48-49)

The Blessed Rasulullah- was only twelve years old at the time he met Bahirah and the meeting was a very short one at that. It would be inconceivable to even momentarily entertain the idea that an unlettered boy of twelve could memorize six thousand odd verses of a Book in such a fleeting time and furthermore, keep each and every one of them intact in his memory for twenty-eight long years, then all of a sudden come out and gradually begin to communicate them at the age of forty. 


Nobody in their right mind could dispute the fact that Islam, as a universally accepted religion, has brought a comprehensive way of life that simply cannot be conjured up out of the blue by even a scholar of expertise, let alone by a child.


What’s more, had Bahirah really known all this as alleged, then why would he not proclaim the religion himself instead of leaving the honors to a boy whom he had never met before?

Another aspect that should also be noted is that the language spoken by Bahirah was not Arabic, in contrast to the characteristically clear and eloquent Arabic of the Holy Quran:

“We know indeed that they say, ‘It is a man that teaches him.’ The tongue of him they wickedly point to is notably foreign, while this (Quran) is Arabic, pure and clear.” 

(an-Nahl, 103)

The Quran, moreover, uses the Arabic language so powerfully that it mounts what is an insurmountable challenge against the entire Arab poets and their literary abilities. The Divine origin of the Quran and the sure failure awaiting those who attempt to imitate its powerful literary majesty is bluntly expressed in the verse:

“Say: Verily, though mankind and the jinn should assemble to produce the like of this Qur’an, they could not produce the like thereof though they were helpers one of another.”

Considering that Rasulullah meeting with Bahira was witnessed by many Makkans, had the orientalist claimed any truth to it, the Makkans who severely rejected Islam would have surely used this as a pretext to reject the Religion. Although historical accounts abundantly attest to the fact that the idolaters did not forego the slightest opportunity that came up to attack Islam, there exists no reference to a polemic based on this meeting, which suggests that even they must have thought taking such a claim seriously was absurd.


1.Ibn Hisham, I, p. 182. Some of the modern critics of Hadith and of the early biographers of the Holy Prophet have said that this incident is not authenticated by authentic traditions, but it is not correct. 'Asqalani says that the incident as recorded in Tirmidhi is authentic even according to the criteria in respect of transmission.

2. Ibid, p. 184.

3. Ibn Sa'd, Vol. I, p. 129.

Chapter 62: BATTLES OF HILF AL FUDUL- The Event that happened before Muhammad chosen to be a Prophet.

The Ḥarb al-fijār, the sacrilegious war, took place during the reign of al-Nuʿmān III (580-602 CE) who irrigated Quraysh, the controller of ...

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