Khadija was born in Makka.
She was the daughter of Khuwayled bin Asad bin Abdul Uzza
bin Qusayy. Qusayy was the common progenitor of her line
as well as the line of Muhammed Mustafa of the clan of
Bani Hashim, and the future Prophet of Islam (may Allah
bless him and his Ahlel Bayt). She thus belonged to a
collateral branch of the Bani Hashim. Next to Bani Hashim
itself, her family was the noblest and the most honorable
in all Arabia. Her family was distinguished not only by
its opulence but also by Jl the content of its character.
Khuwayled, the father of Khadija, was, like most other
memhers of the tribe of the Quraysh of Makka, also a
merchant. Like most of them, he too had made a fortune in
foreign trade. The merchants of Makka put together two
caravans every year - one in summer and one in winter.
They sent the "summer caravan" to Syria and the
"winter caravan" to Yemen.
These caravans carried the produce of the desert, and the
goods manufactured in Makka and the surrounding areas,
and sold them in the markets of Syria and Yemen. They
also sold pedigreed horses in Syria. These horses were
valued very highly in Syria and in the neighboring
countries. After selling their merchandize and their
horses, the traders bought grain, olive oil, fruits,
coffee, textiles, luxury goods and other manufactured
items for sale in Makka. They thus made profit at both
ends of the journey.
(This trade of Makka has been referred to in Quran Majid
in Sura Quraysh, the 106th chapter).
Foreign trade was the entire basis of the economic life
of Makka. Makka had neither arable lands nor water for
irrigation.
The Makkans, therefore, could not grow their own food. To
feed themselves, they depended upon their trade with
Syria and Yemen. With the profits they made in their
trade, they bought grain and other necessities of life.
Each caravan had a leader. This leader had to be a man of
some exceptional qualities. Upon his judgment and
decisions depended the physical safety and the success of
the caravan in its business of selling and buying. He was
responsible for protecting the caravan from the brigands
and the predators of the desert. This he did by
recruiting warriors from various tribes, and by forming a
squad or squads out of them, depending upon the size of
the caravan. This squad accompanied the caravan to its
destination. All caravans bound for distant destinations
travelled under military escort.
The caravan-leader also had to be gifted with a
"sixth sense" to guide him in the trackless
desert during the day, and he had to have the ability to
determine directions at night. He, therefore, had to have
the knowledge of the relative position of the stars. He
also had to assure beforehand the availability of water
during the long journey north to Syria or south to Yemen.
He also had to take precautionary measures against such
unforeseen hazards as sand-storms and flash floods. He
also had to have the ability to administer "first
aid" to a traveller if he became sick or was
injured. In other words, he had to be a man capable of
handling any emergency. The merchants of Makka,
therefore, selected a leader for their caravans after
thoroughly investigating his antecedents. A screening
panel of experienced travellers appraised all candidates
for the post.
The panel was not satisfied by anything less than the
proven ability of a candidate to "navigate"
skillfully in the uncharted "sea" of sand, and
his success in bringing the convoys of the "ships of
the desert," (= the camels), and their cargoes, home
safely. To be acceptable to the panel, a candidate had to
show that he had thorough familiarity with the logistics
of the caravans; and his "credentials" had to
be impeccable.
Khadija's mother had died in or around A D. 575; and
Khuwayled, her father, died in or around AD. 585. Upon
his death, his children inherited his fortune, and
divided it among themselves. Wealth has its own perils.
It can tempt one to live a life of idleness and luxury.
Khadija subconsciously understood the ambivalent
character of wealth, and made up her mind not to let it
make her an idler. She was endowed with such
extraordinary intelligence and force of character that
she overcame the challenge of prosperity, and decided to
build an empire upon her patrimony. She had many siblings
but among all of them, she alone had
"inherited" their father's ability to become
rich. But she demonstrated very soon that even if she had
not inherited a fortune from her father, she would have
made one for herself.
After the death of Khuwayled, Khadija took charge of the
family business, and rapidly expanded it. With the
profits she made, she helped the poor, the widows, the
orphans, the sick and the disabled. If there were any
poor girls, Khadija married them off, and gave them
dowry. One of her uncles acted as her adviser in business
matters, and other members of the family also assisted
her in the management of business if and when she sought
their assistance. But she didn't depend upon anyone else
to make her decisions. She trusted her own judgment even
though she welcomed advice and considered it. The senior
members of her family knew that one thing she didn't like
was paternalism.
Most of the traders who had cargo to sell in Syria or
Yemen, travelled with the caravans to oversight all
transactions in person. But there were occasions when a
trader was unable to leave Makka. In such an event, he
engaged a man to go in his stead, with the caravan. The
man chosen for this purpose, had to be one with good
reputation for his probity and for his sound business
sense. Such a man was called an agent or a manager.
Khadija herself was a homebody and her brothers and
cousins also did not show any interest in travelling with
the caravans. She, therefore, recruited an agent whenever
a caravan was outfitted to go abroad, and made him
responsible for carrying her merchandize to the foreign
markets and for selling it in those markets. By judicious
selection of her agents, and by selling and buying at the
right time and at the right place, she was able to make
fantastic profits, and in due course, became the richest
merchant in Makka. Ibn Sa'ad says in his Tabqaat that
whenever caravans of the Makkan merchants set out on
their journey, the cargo of Khadija alone was equal to
the cargo of all other merchants of Quraysh put together.
She had, it was obvious to everyone, the proverbial
"golden touch." If she touched dust, it turned
into gold. The citizens of Makka, therefore, bestowed
upon her the title of the Princess of the QuMysh. They
also called her the Princess of Makka.
Arabia at this time was a
pagan society, and the Arabs worshipped a multitude of
idols and fetishes who, they believed, had the power to
bring good fortune to them. But their idolatry was crude
and primitive, and their habits, customs and
characteristics were repulsive. Drunkenness was one of
their many vices, and they were incorrigible gamblers.
They were wallowing in a pit of error and ignorance.
Quran Majid has borne testimony to their condition in the
following verse:
IT IS HE WHO HAS SENT AMONGST THE UNLETTERED AN APOSTLE
FROM AMONG THEMSELVES, TO REHEARSE TO THEM HIS SIGNS, TO
SANCTIFY THEM, AND TO INSTRUCT THEM IN SCRIPTURE AND
WISDOM, - ALTHOUGH THEY HAD BEEN, BEFORE, IN MANIFEST
ERROR;
(Chapter 62; verse 2)
But the country was not altogether
devoid of individuals who found idolatry repugnant. These
individuals, who were very few in number, were called
"Hanifs," i.e., men and women "who had
turned away from idol worship." Makka also had a
sprinkling of these "hanifs," and some of them
were in the clan of Khadija herself. One of them was her
first cousin, Waraqa bin Naufal.
Waraqa was the eldest of all his siblings, and his hair
had all turned grey. He castigated the Arabs for
worshipping idols and for deviating from the true faith
of their forebears - the prophets Ibrahim (Abraham) and
Ismael. Ibrahim and Ismael had taught the lesson of
Tauheed - the doctrine of the Unity of the Creator. But
the Arabs had forgotten that lesson, and had become
polytheists. Waraqa despised them for their polytheism
and their moral turpitude. He himself followed the
religion of Prophet Ibrahim, the true and faithful slave
of Allah. He never associated any partner(s) with Allah.
He did not drink and he did not gamble. And he was
generous to the poor and the needy.
One of the most hideous customs of the Arabs of the times
was that they buried their female infants alive. Whenever
Waraqa heard that someone intended to bury his daughter
alive, he went to see him, dissuaded him from killing his
daughter, and if the reason for the contemplated murder
was poverty, he ransomed her, and brought her up as his
own child. In most cases, the father later regretted his
error, and came to claim his daughter. Waraqa exacted
from him a pledge to love his daughter, and to treat her
well, and only then let him take her back.
Waraqa lived in the twilight of the pagan world. That
world was soon going to be flooded with the Light of
Islam - the Religion of Allah, par excellence - the
Pristine Faith, first promulgated, many centuries
earlier, by Ibrahim (Abraham), the Friend and Messenger
of Allah. Allah had already chosen His slave, Muhammed
Mustafa ibn Abdullah, of the clan of Bani Hashim, to be
His new and His last Messenger to the world. The latter
was living in Makka at the same time as Waraqa but had
not proclaimed his mission yet.
Waraqa was one of the very few people in Makka who were
educated. He is reported to have translated the Bible
from Hebrew into Arabic. He had also read other books
written by the Jewish and Christian theologians. He was a
desperate seeker of truth in the darkness of a world
growing darker, and longed to find it before his own
death, but did not know how.
Khadija was strongly influenced by the ideas of Waraqa,
and she shared his contempt for the idols and the
idolaters. She did not associate any partner(s) with the
Creator. Like Waraqa and some other members of the
family, she too was a follower of the prophets Ibrahim
and Ismael.
Khadija was a Muwahhid (monotheist)!
What Khadija did not know at this time was that within a
few years, her destiny was going to be intertwined with
the destiny of Muhammed Mustafa, the apostle of
Monotheism (Tauheed); and with the destiny of Islam, the
creed of Monotheism.
Arabia, before Islam, had no political
organization in any form, and had no basic structure of
any kind. There were no courts or police or a system of
justice. Therefore, there was no apparatus to control
crime, or to inhibit criminals. If an Arab committed a
crime, he didn't feel any remorse. Instead, he boasted
that he was capable of being utterly reckless, brutal and
ruthless.
The whole peninsula was a masculine-dominated society. A
woman had no status whatsoever. Many Arabs believed that
women were bringers of bad luck. In general, they treated
women more like chattel than like individuals. A man
could marry any number of women he liked. And when he
died, his eldest son "inherited" all of them
except his own mother. In other words, he married all his
step-mothers. Such a thing as a code of ethics simply did
not exist to inhibit him in any way. Islam placed this
foul practice under proscription.
The pre-Islamic Arabs were semi-savages. An Arab spent
his life in lawless warfare. Killing and plundering were
his favorite professions. He tortured his prisoners of
war to death, and torturing animals was one of his
favorite pastimes. He had a perverse sense of honor which
led him to kill his own infant daughters. If his wife
gave birth to a daughter, he was unable to conceal his
anguish and displeasure.
WHEN NEWS IS BROUGHT TO ONE OF THEM, OF
(THE BIRTH OF) A FEMALE (CHILD), HIS FACE DARKENS, AND HE
IS FILLED WITH INWARD GRIEF!
WITH SHAME DOES HE HIDE HIMSELF FROM HIS PEOPLE, BECAUSE
OF THE BAD NEWS HE HAS HAD! SHALL HE RETAIN IT ON
(SU~RANCE AND) CONTEMPT, OR BURY IT IN THE DUST?
AH! WHAT AN EVIL (CHOICE) THEY DECIDE ON.
(Quran Majid. Chapter 16; verses 58, 59)
In most cases an Arab killed his
daughter out of his fear that she would be made a
prisoner in the inter-tribal wars, and therefore, a slave
of the enemy, and her status as a slave would bring
disgrace to his family and tribe. He could also kill her
out of his fear of poverty. He believed that his daughter
would become an economic liability to him. Islam made the
killing of children a capital offence.
KILL NOT YOUR CHILDREN FOR FEAR OF
WANT: WE SHALL PROVIDE SUSTENANCE FOR THEM AS WELL AS FOR
YOU. VERILY THE KILLING OF THEM IS A GREAT SIN.
(Quran Majid. Ch. 17; verse 31)
There were also those Arabs who did not
kill their daughters but they deprived them of all their
rights. They figured that since their daughters, when
married, would go to other men's homes, they ought not to
spend anything on them.
It was such an environment in which Khadija was born,
grew up and lived - an "anti-woman~ environment.
From her home in Makka, Khadija controlled an
ever-growing business which spread into the neighboring
countries. What she had succeeded in achieving, would be
remarkable in any country, in any age, and for anyone -
man or woman. But her achievement becomes doubly
remarkable when one takes into account the
"anti-woman" orientation of the Arab society.
This is proof of her ability to master her destiny by her
intelligence, strength of will and force of character.
Her compatriots acknowledged her achievements when they
called her the princess of the Quraysh and the princess
of Makka, as noted before.
But even more remarkably, Khadija also earned a third
title. She was called "Tahira" which means
"the pure one." Who bestowed the title of
Tahira upon her? Incredibly, it was bestowed upon her by
the same Arabs who were notorious for their arrogance,
conceit, vanity and male chauvinism. But Khadija's
conduct was so consistently exemplary that it won
recognition even from them, and they called her "the
pure one."
It was the first time in the history of Arabia that a
woman was called the Princess of Makka and was also
called Tahira. The Arabs called Khadija the princess of
Makka because of her affluence, and they called her
Tahira because of the immaculacy of her reputation. They
were also aware that she was a highly cultivated lady.
She was thus a personage of distinction even in the times
before Islam - the Times of Ignorance.
It was inevitable that Khadija would attract the
attention of the Arab nobles and princes. Many among them
sent proposals of marriage to her. But she did not
consider any of them. Many of these nobles and princes
were persistent in seeking her hand in marriage. Not
discouraged by her refusal, they sought out men and women
of influence and prestige to intercede for them with her.
But she still spurned them all. She perhaps didn't attach
much importance to the guardians of the male-dominated
and "anti-woman" society.
Khadija's refusal to accept the offers of marriage sent
by the high and the mighty of Arabia, gave rise to much
speculation as to what kind of man she would like to
marry. It was a question that Khadija herself could not
answer. But her destiny knew the answer; she would marry
a man who was not only the best in all Arabia but was
also the very best in all creation. It was her destiny
which prompted her to turn down offers of marriage sent
by commonplace mortals.