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The Message:
In or about the year
570 the child who would be named Muhammad and who would become the
Prophet of one of the world's great religions, Islam, was born into
a family belonging to a clan of Quraysh, the ruling tribe of Mecca,
a city in the Hijaz region of northwestern Arabia.
Originally the site
of the Ka'bah, a shrine of ancient origins, Mecca had with the
decline of southern Arabia (see Chapter l ) become an important
center of sixth-century trade with such powers as the Sassanians,
Byzantines, and Ethiopians. As a result the city was dominated by
powerful merchant families among whom the men of Quraysh were
preeminent.
Muhammad's father, 'Abd
Allah ibn'Abd al-Muttalib, died before the boy was born; his mother,
Aminah, died when he was six. The orphan was consigned to the care
of his grandfather, the head of the clan of Hashim. After the death
of his grandfather, Muhammad was raised by his uncle, Abu Talib. As
was customary, Muhammad as a child was sent to live for a year or
two with a Bedouin family. This custom, followed until recently by
noble families of Mecca, Medina, Tayif, and other towns of the Hijaz,
had important implications for Muhammad. In addition to enduring the
hardships of desert life, he acquired a taste for the rich language
so loved by the Arabs, whose speech was their proudest art, and
learned the patience and forbearance of the herdsmen, whose life of
solitude he first shared and then came to understand and appreciate.
About the year 590,
Muhammad, then in his twenties, entered the service of a widow named
Khadijah as a merchant actively engaged with trading caravans to the
north. Sometime later Muhammad married Khadijah, by whom he had two
sons - who did not survive - and four daughters.
During this period
of his life Muhammad traveled widely. Then, in his forties he began
to retire to meditate in a cave on Mount Hira outside of Mecca,
where the first of the great events of Islam took place. One day, as
he sat in the cave, he heard a voice, later identified as that of
the Angel Gabriel, which ordered him to:
Recite: In the name
of thy Lord who created, Created man from a clot of blood.
Three times Muhammad
pleaded his inability to do so, but each time the command was
repeated. Finally, Muhammad recited the words of what are now the
first five verses of the 96th surah or chapter of the Quran - words
which proclaim God the Creator of man and the Source of all
knowledge.
At first Muhammad
divulged his experience only to his wife and his immediate circle.
But as more revelations enjoined him to proclaim the oneness of God
universally, his following grew, at first among the poor and the
slaves, but later also among the most prominent men of Mecca. The
revelations he received at this time and those he did so later are
all incorporated in the Quran, the Scripture of Islam.
The sun
rises over Jabal al-Rahmah, the Mount of Mercy, where Muhammad in
his farewell sermon told the assembled Muslims, "I have delivered
God's message to you and left you with a clear command: the Book of
God and the practice of His Prophet. If you hold fast to this you
will never go astray."
Not everyone
accepted God's message transmitted through Muhammad. Even in his own
clan there were those who rejected his teachings, and many merchants
actively opposed the message. The opposition, however, merely served
to sharpen Muhammad's sense of mission and his understanding of
exactly how Islam differed from paganism. The belief in the unity of
God was paramount in Islam; from this all else followed. The verses
of the Quran stress God's uniqueness, warn those who deny it of
impending punishment, and proclaim His unbounded compassion to those
who submit to His will. They affirm the Last Judgment, when God, the
Judge, will weigh in the balance the faith and works of each man,
rewarding the faithful and punishing the transgressor. Because the
Quran rejected polytheism and emphasized man's moral responsibility,
in powerful images, it presented a grave challenge to the worldly
Meccans.
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