At length the groundwork
that Muhammed had to do to take charge of his duties and
responsibilities as the Last and the Greatest Messenger
of God to this world, was over.
The night of paganism, error and ignorance had been long,
dark, dreary and dismal. Mankind was in a state of
despair. It was at a loss to know if it would ever see
the light of dawn.
It was God's infinite Mercy which harkened to the
unspoken longing of mankind. In response to its silent
appeal, the Sun of Islam rose from the valley of Makka to
overpower the darkness of polytheism in the world, and to
proclaim the triumph of the doctrine of Tauheed
(monotheism).
Muhammed was 40 years old
when he was commanded by Allah, through His angel,
Gabriel, to declare His Oneness (Tauheed) to the
idolaters and polytheists of the whole world, and to
deliver the message of new hope and peace to an embattled
humanity.
In compliance with this command of Heaven, Muhammed
launched the momentous programme called Islam which was
to change the destiny of mankind forever. The basic
design of Islam, as he received it from Gabriel, was
perfected in Heaven, and now he had to present it to the
family of man.
Before he received his prophetic mission, Muhammed spent
days and nights in prayer and meditation both at home and
in the cave of Hira, as noted before. He was in Hira one
evening when the Archangel Gabriel appeared before him,
and brought to him
the tidings that Allah had chosen him to be His last
messenger to this world, and had imposed upon him the
duty of extricating mankind from the welter of sin, error
and ignorance, and to bring it into the light of
Guidance, Truth and Knowledge. Gabriel then bade Muhammed
to "read" the following verses:
(In the Name of Allah, Most Gracious, Most Merciful)
READ IN THE NAME OF THY LORD AND CHERISHER WHO CREATED:
CREATED MAN OUT OF A CLOT OF CONGEALED BLOOD. READ! AND
THY LORD IS MOST BOUNTIFUL, HE WHO TAUGHT THE USE OF PEN:
TAUGHT MAN THAT WHICH HE KNEW NOT.
These five verses were the
earliest revelation, and they came to Muhammed Mustafa on
the "Night of Power" or the "Blessed
Night" in Ramadan (the ninth month of the Islamic
calendar) of the 40th year of the Elephant.
1. RAMADHAN IS THE (MONTH) IN WHICH WAS
SENT
DOWN THE QURAN, AS A GUIDE TO MANKIND, ALSO
CLEAR (SIGNS) FOR GUIDANCE AND JUDGMENT
(BETWEEN RIGHT AND WRONG).
(Quran Majid. Chapter 2; verse 185)
2. WE HAVE INDEED REVEALED THIS
(MESSAGE)
IN THE NIGHT OF POWER.
(Quran Majid. Chapter 97; verse 1)
3. BY THE BOOK THAT MAKES THINGS CLEAR;
WE SENT IT DOWN DURING A BLESSED NIGHT...
(Quran Majid. Chapter 44; verses 2 and 3)
The Night of Power or the Blessed Night occurs, according
to tradition, during the last ten nights of Ramadan, and
could be the 21st or 23rd or 25th or 27th of the month.
According to the Gregorian calendar, the first revelation
came to the Prophet on
the 12th of February, 610, as per the calculations of
Mahmud Pasha al-Falaki of Egypt.
These five verses are at the beginning of the 96th
chapter of Quran Majid. The name of the chapter is Iqraa
(Read) or ~, (the Clot of Congealed Blood).
In their respective accounts of the
reception by Muhammed Mustafa of the First Revelation,
the Sunni and the Shia Muslims are not in agreement.
According to the Sunni tradition, the appearance of
Gabriel suprised Muhammed; and when the former ordered
him to ~ he said: "I cannot read." This
happened thrice, and each time when Muhammed declared his
inability to read, the angel pressed him hard to his
bosom. Eventually, he was able to repeat the five verses
whereupon the angel released him, and disappeared.
When Archangel Gabriel disappeared, Muhammed, who was now
"ordained" the Messenger of Allah, descended
from the cliffs of Hira, and repaired to his home in a
state of great trepidation. Apparently, Gabriel's sudden
intrusion had been a traumatic experience for him. He was
shivering with cold, and when he entered his house, he
asked his wife, Khadija, to cover him with a blanket
which she did. When he had sufficiently recovered from
the shock, he recounted to her the story of his strange
encounter with Archangel Gabriel in the cave of Hira.
The traditional Sunni account of this
event is given in an article written by Shaykh Ahmad Zaki
Hammad, Ph.D., captioned "Be Hopeful,"
published in the magazine, Islamic Horizons of the
Islamic Society of North America, Plainfield, Indiana,
May-June 1987, as follows:
"The Prophet (pbuh) in the early stages in Makkah,
feared that the revelation experience was an evil touch
preying upon him, playing with him mentally, upsetting
his tranquility and peace of mind. He was afraid that one
of the jinn had touched him. He expressed this to
Khadija. His fear increased to the point that --- and
please don't be surprised by an authentic report in
Bukhari --- the Prophet (pbuh) preferred to take his own
life rather than to be touched by evil, to be tampered
with, corrupted, or polluted."
But according to the accounts of the
Shia Muslims, Muhammed Mustafa, far from being suprised,
much less frightened, by the sudden appearance of
Archangel Gabriel, welcomed him as if he had been
expecting him. Gabriel brought the tidings that Allah had
chosen him to be His Last Messenger to Mankind, and
congratulated him on being selected to become the
recipient of the greatest of all honors for a mortal in
this world.
Muhammed had no hesitation in accepting the mission of
prophethood nor he had any difficulty in repeating the
verses of the First Revelation. He read them or repeated
them effortlessly, spontaneously. Gabriel, in fact, was
no stranger to him, and he also knew that as the slave of
Allah, his own raison d'etre was to carry out the mission
imposed upon him by Allah. He was
"mission-oriented" even before Gabriel's visit.
Gabriel only gave him the signal to begin.
The Shia Muslims also say that one thing that Gabriel
didn't have to do, was to apply physical pressure on
Muhammed to read. If he did, it would truly be a bizarre
mode of imparting to Muhammed, the ability to read - by
squeezing him or choking him. They further maintain that
Muhammed Mustafa did not contemplate suicide at any time
in his life, even in its most desolate moments; and that
it never occurred to him that he could ever be touched by
"evil" or that he could be "tampered with,
corrupted or polluted."
In this context, the Shia Muslims quote the following two
verses of Quran Majid which
appear to have a logical connection with this episode:
1. (Allah said to Iblis:)
"AS FOR MY SERVANTS,
NO AUTHORITY SHALT THOU HAVE OVER THEM." ENOUGH IS
THY LORD FOR A DISPOSER OF AFFAIRS.
(Chapter 17; verse 65)
Allah Himself protects His sincere and true slaves from
the clutches of Iblis (the Devil); he can have no
authority over them, and they can never be tampered with
or corrupted or polluted.
2. BUT GOD WILL DELIVER THE RIGHTEOUS
TO THEIR
PLACE OF SALVATION; NO EVIL SHALL TOUCH THEM. NOR SHALL
THEY GRIEVE.
(Chapter 39; verse 61)
No evil could touch Muhammed, the chosen one of God
Himself. Under God's protection, he was safe from every
evil. He lived under the jurisdiction of God at all
times.
Nevertheless, Muhammed felt alarm at
the magnitude of the task ahead of him. He realized that
in the execution of his duty, he would be confronted by
the massive, formidable, and determined opposition of the
pagans of the whole world. The state of his anxiety was
almost palpable. He was therefore in a somber frame of
mind as he left the cave to return home. And he did in
fact ask Khadija to drape him in a blanket as he sat down
to recapitulate the events in Hira to her.
When Khadija heard the story that Muhammed Mustafa told
her, she comforted him and reassured him by saying:
"O son of my uncle, be of good cheer. Allah has
chosen you to be His messenger. You are always kind to
your neighbors, helpful to your kinsfolk, generous to the
orphans, the widows and the poor, and friendly to the
strangers. Allah will never forsake you."
R V. C Bodley
"God is my protection, Oh Abul
Kasim!" said Khadija, "Rejoice and be of good
cheer. He in Whose hands stands the life of Khadija, is
my Witness that thou wilt be the Messenger of His
people!" Then she added, "Hast thou not been
loving to thy kinsfolk, kind to thy neighbors, charitable
to the poor, hospitable to the stranger, faithful to thy
word, and ever a defender of the truth?"
(The Messenger, the Life of Mohammed, 1946)
It is possible that Muhammed was
momentarily overwhelmed by the thought of his
accountability to Allah in carrying the enormous burden
of his new responsibilities, but when he heard Khadija's
soothing words, he immediately felt the tensions within
him decompressing. She reassured him and convinced him
that with God's Hand on his shoulder, he would rise equal
to his duties and would overcome all obstacles.
Muhammed rallied. He knew from that moment that Khadija
was the "instrument" through which God would
reinforce his courage if it ever flagged, and would
boslter his morale if it ever sagged.
The following verse of Quran Majid also appears to
support the Shia point of view:
AND REMEMBER WE TOOK FROM THE PROPHETS
THEIR COVENANT: AS (WE DID) FROM THEE: FROM NOAH,
ABRAHAM, MOSES, AND JESUS THE SON OF MARY: WE TOOK FROM
THEM A SOLEMN COVENANT: THAT (ALLAH) MAY QUESTION THE
(CUSTODIANS) OF TRUTH CONCERNING THE TRUTH THEY (WERE
CHARGED WITH):
(Chapter 33; verses 7,8)
Translator's Note
There is an implied covenant on all created things to
follow God's Law, which is the law of their being. But
there is a special implied covenant with all Prophets,
strict and solemn, that they shall carry out their
mission, proclaim God's Truth without fear or favor, and
be ever ready in His service in all circumstances. That
gives them their position and dignity and their
tremendous responsibility in respect of the people whom
they come to instruct and lead to the Right Way. (A.
Yusuf
The Shia Muslims point out that Allah
had taken a Covenant from Muhammed to deliver His Last
Message to Mankind. Therefore, they do not agree with
those historians who allege that Muhammed reacted to
Gabriel's visit with surprise, shock and fear. Such
reactions, they say, simply do not jibe with his
temperament, and are not consistent with the character of
his solemn Covenant.
After a brief interval, Gabriel appeared once again
before Muhammed when the latter was in the cave of Hira,
and presented to him the second Revelation which reads as
follows:
O THOU WRAPPED UP (IN A MANTLE)! ARISE
AND DELIVER THY WARNING! AND THY LORD DO THOU MAGNIFY!
(Chapter 74; verses 1, 2, 3)
The commandment from Heaven to "arise and warn"
was the signal to Muhammed (the wrapped up in a blanket)
to begin his work. Gabriel expounded to him his new
duties the foremost of which was to destroy the worship
of false gods, and to plant the banner of Tauheed - the
doctrine of the Unity of the Creator - in the world; and
he had to invite mankind to the True Faith Islam. Islam
means to surrender to Allah and to acknowledge Muhammed
as His slave and His messenger.
A.L.R. A BOOK WHICH WE HAVE REVEALED
UNTO YOU, IN ORDER THAT YOU MIGHT LEAD MANKIND OUT OF THE
DEPTHS OF DARKNESS INTO LIGHT - BY THE LEAVE OF THEIR
LORD - TO THE WAY OF (HIM) THE EXALTED IN POWER, WORTHY
OF ALL PRAISE.
(Quran Majid. Chapter 14, verse 1)
Muhammed had to lead mankind out of the
depths of darkness into light.
How was Muhammed to lead mankind out of the depths of
Darkness into Light? This question is answered by Quran
Majid in the following verse:
A SIMILAR (FAVOR HAVE YOU ALREADY
RECEIVED) IN THAT WE HAVE SENT AMONG YOU AN APOSTLE OF
YOUR OWN, REHEARSING TO YOU OUR SIGNS, AND SANCTIFYING
YOU, AND INSTRUCTING YOU IN SCRIPTURE AND WISDOM, AND IN
NEW KNOWLEDGE.
(Chapter 2; verse 151)
Quran is precise and specific in defining the concept of
his duty for Muhammed Mustafa. He had to lead mankind out
of "the depths of darkness" into the light, by:
1. rehearsing the Signs of Allah; 2. sanctifying mankind;
3. instructing mankind in scripture and wisdom; and 4.
imparting new knowledge to it.
Gabriel and Muhammed then went out of
the cave. Gabriel taught him how to take ablutions
(ritual purification before saying prayers). Muhammed
took ablutions, and then, with Gabriel in the lead, both
of them offered prayers.
When the prayer was over, Gabriel bade farewell to
Muhammed, and disappeared in the sky.
That evening Muhammed returned home conscious and
conscientious of his new duty to "arise and
warn." He had to preach Islam, the Religion of
Allah, to the whole world, and he had to begin from his
own home - by preaching it to his wife.
Muhammed told Khadija about the second visit of Gabriel,
and the duty imposed upon him by Allah to invite her to
Islam.
For Khadija, the antecedents and the moral integrity of
her husband were an incontrovertible attestation that he
was a divine messenger, and she readily accepted Islam.
In fact, between her and Islam, an "ideological
affinity" had pre-existed. Therefore, when Muhammed
Mustafa presented Islam to her, she at once
"recognized" it, and rosily embraced it. She
believed that the Creator was One and that Muhammed was
His messenger, and she declared:
I BEAR WITNESS THAT THERE IS NO GOD BUT
ALLAH; AND I BEAR WITNESS THAT MUHAMMED IS HIS SLAVE AND
HIS MESSENGER.
Muhammed, the new messenger of Allah, had won his first
convert - Khadija - his wife. She was the first one, the
very first to affirm her faith in Tauheed (Oneness of the
Creator), and she was the very first to acknowledge
Muhammed as God's messenger to all mankind. She was the
first Muslima.
Muhammed had "introduced" Islam to Khadija. He
explained to her its meaning, and he initiated her into
it. He told her that obedience to and love for Allah were
central to the whole system called Islam.
Then Muhammed showed Khadija how to take ablutions and
how to say prayers. She took ablutions and both of them
offered their prayers, with Muhammed as the leader. After
the prayer, both of them thanked Allah for bestowing upon
them the blessing of Islam. They also thanked Him for the
blessing of prayers (Salat) through which He gave them
audience.
Prayer was, Khadija soon found out, the "Gate"
to Allah's Tribunal of Grace and Mercy. The humble slaves
of Allah have to pass through this "Gate" to
get access to His Tribunal and to receive Grace and Mercy
from Him. She also found out that prayer (Salat) was
perpetual renewal and sanctification.
Khadija is the first Muslima - the very first to submit
to Allah - next to her husband. Now no matter who
compiles the list of the earliest converts to Islam, her
name will always be on top. No venal historian can change
this fact. The honor of being the first Muslima belongs
to Khadija, and it will be hers to all Eternity.
After her induction into Islam, Khadija adopted the
following credo:
SAY: "VERILY, MY LORD HATH GUIDED
ME TO A WAY THAT IS STRAIGHT, - A RELIGION OF RIGHT, THE
PATH (TROD) BY ABRAHAM THE TRUE IN FAITH, AND HE
(CERTAINLY) JOINED NOT GODS WITH ALLAH."
SAY: "TRULY, MY PRAYER AND MY SERVICE OF SACRIFICE,
MY LIFE AND MY DEATH, ARE (ALL) FOR ALLAH, THE CHERISHER
OF THE WORLDS:
NO PARTNER HATH HE: THIS I AM
COMMANDED, AND I AM THE FIRST OF THOSE WHO BOW TO HIS
WILL.
(Quran Majid. Chapter 6, verses 161,
162, 163)
Washington Ilving
After the first encounter with Gabriel,
Mohammed came trembling and agitated to Khadija. She saw
everything with the eye of faith. "Joyful tidings
dost thou bring," exclaimed she, by Him, in Whose
hand is the soul of Khadija, I will henceforth regard
thee as the Prophet of our nation. Rejoice," added
she, "Allah will not suffer thee to fall to shame.
Hast thou not been loving to thy kinsfolk, kind to thy
neighbours, charitable to the poor, hospitable to the
stranger, faithful to thy word, and ever a defender of
the truth?"
(Life of Mohammed)
Yusuf Ali
At twenty-five he (Muhammed) was united
in the holy bonds Of wedlock with Khadija the Great, the
noble lady Who befriended him when he had no worldly
resources, Trusted him when his worth was little known,
Encouraged and understood him in his spiritual struggles,
Believed in him when with trembling steps He took up the
Call and withstood obloquy, Persecution, insults,
threats, and tortures,
And was a lifelong helpmate till she
was gathered To the saints in his fifty-first year, A
perfect woman, the mother of those that believe.
When Muhammed was ordained messenger of
Allah, his young cousin, Ali ibn Abi Talib, was ten years
old. As young as he was, he showed remarkable grasp of
the events taking place around him, and was richly
endowed with the capacity for participating in his
guardian's religious experience. He therefore eagerly
declared what he believed - that God was One, and
Muhammed was His messenger. And he could not wait long
enough to offer prayers with Muhammed and Khadija. He
wished to go into the presence of Allah in the company of
His Own messenger.
(Introduction to the Translation and Commentary of the
Holy Quran)
Muhammed Mustafa taught Ali how to take
ablutions and how to pray. Since then, Muhammed was never
seen at prayer except when Ali was with him. The boy also
memorized the verses of Quran Majid as and when they were
revealed to Muhammed. In this manner, he literally grew
up with Quran. In fact, Ali and Quran "grew up"
together as "twins" in the house of Muhammed
Mustafa and Khadija-tul-Kubra.
Ali lived in an ambience vibrant with the ethos of Islam.
Through such osmotic action, Islam became a part of the
blood-stream of Ali ibn Abi Talib, Muhammed's young
protege. Islam became the very texture of his being.
Muhammed, the Messenger of Allah, had found the hrst
Muslima in Khadija, and he found the first Muslim in Ali
ibn Abi Talib.
Muhammad Ishaq
Ali was the first male to believe in
the Apostle of God, to pray with him and to believe in
his divine message, when he was a boy of ten. God favored
him in that he was brought up in the care of the Apostle
before Islam began.
(The Life of the Messenger of Allah)
Muhammad Husayn Haykal
Ali was then the first youth to enter
Islam. He was followed by Zayd ibn Harithah, Muhammad's
client. Islam remained confined to the four walls of one
house. Besides Muhammad himself, the converts of the new
faith were his wife, his cousin, and his client. (The
Life of Muhammed, Cairo, 1935)
Mannaduke Pickthall
The first of all his (Muhammad's)
converts was his wife, Khadija; the second his first
cousin Ali, whom he had adopted; the third his servant
Zeyd, a former slave.
(Introduction to the Translation of Holy Quran, 1975)
Abdullah Yusuf Ali
To his (Muhammed's) cousin Ali, the
well-beloved, Born when he was thirty, he appeared As the
very pattern of a perfect man, As gentle as he was wise
and true and strong, The one in whose defence and aid He
spent his utmost strength and skill, Holding life cheap
in support of a cause so high,
And placing without reserve his chivalry, His prowess,
his wit and learning, and his sword At the service of
this mighty Messenger of God. Khadija believed, exalted
in faith Above all women; Ali, the well-beloved, Then a
child of ten, but lion-hearted, Plighted his faith, and
became from that moment The Right Hand of Islam.
(Introduction to the Translation and Commentary of the
Holy Qur'an)
The third "witness" who
accepted Islam, was Zayd bin Haritha, the freed man of
Muhammed, and a member of his household.
Tor Andre
Zaid was one of the first to accept
Islam, in fact the third after Khadija and Ali.
(Mohammed, the Man and his Faith, 1960)
Ali ibn Abi Talib was the first male to
accept Islam, and his precedence in accepting Islam, is
beyond any question. Dr. Sir Muhammad Iqbal, the
poet-philosopher of Indo-Pakistan, calls him, not the
first, but "the foremost Muslim."
Ali's was the foremost Muslim in point of time. No man
preceded him in accepting Islam. But he was also the
foremost Muslim in service to Islam and to its
Messenger-Prophet as the years to come were to reveal.
Muhammad ibn Ishaq, the biographer of Muhammed Mustafa,
reports the following in his Seera:
From Yahya b. al-Ash'ath b. Qays al-Kindi from his
father, from his grandfather Afiif: Al-Abbas b. Abdul
Muttalib was a friend of mine who used to go often to the
Yaman to buy aromatics and sell them during the fairs.
While I was with him in Mina, there came a man in the
prime of life and performed the full rites of ablution
and then stood up and prayed. Then a woman came out and
did her ablution and stood up and prayed.
Then a boy came out just approaching manhood, took his
ablutions, stood up and prayed by his side. I asked Abbas
what were they doing, and he said that it was his nephew,
Muhammad b. Abdullah b. Abdul Muttalib, who claims that
Allah has sent him as an Apostle; the other is my
brother's son, Ali ibn Abi Talib, who has followed him in
his religion; the third is his wife, Khadija daughter of
Khuwayled who also follows him in his religion...
Afiif said after he had become a Muslim and Islam was
firmly established in his heart, "Would that I had
been a fourth."
The fourth "witness" who
accepted Islam, was Abu Bakr, a merchant of Makka.
In the beginning, Muhammed preached
Islam secretly. He invited only those people to Islam he
could trust, and who were like his personal friends. The
handful of neophytes he won, kept a "low
profile" in Makka.
Muhammad Husayn Haykal
Fearful of arousing the enmity and
antagonism of Quraysh for their departure from idol
worship, the new Muslims used to hide the fact of their
conversion.
(The Life of Muhammad, Cairo, 1935)
Among the earliest converts to Islam
were Yasar; his wife, Sumayya; and their son, Ammar. They
are remarkable for the fact that they were the first
family all members of which accepted Islam
simultaneouslv, thus making up the first Muslim familv.
outside the family of the Prophet of Islam himsel£
Another early convert to Islam was Abu Dharr el-Ghiffari
of the tribe of Ghiffar, noted in later years, for his
uncompromising love of Justice and Truth.
Through the efforts of Abu Bakr, the
fourth Muslim, a few other Makkans also accepted Islam.
Among them were Uthman bin Affan, a future khalifa of the
Muslims; Talha; Zubayr; Abdur Rahman ibn Auf; Saad ibn
Abi Waqqas; and Obaidullah Aamir ibn al-Jarrah.
Abu Abdulah Arqam bin Abil Arqam was a
young man of twenty. He belonged to the Makhzoom clan of
Quraysh, and was a successful businessman. He lived in a
spacious house in the valley of Safa. He too heard the
Call of Islam and responded to it, and he put his house -
Dar-al-Arqam - at the service of the Prophet of Islam.
The Muslims at this time were so few in number that they
did not dare to say their prayers in Kaaba or in public.
The Prophet
gratefully accepted Arqam's offer, and Muslims gathered
in his house to offer their congregational prayers.
Dar-al-Arqam thus became Dar-al-Islam - the missionary
center of Islam, and the first meeting place of the
Muslims.
Three years passed in this manner but
in the fourth year of the Call, Muhammed was commanded by
Allah to invite his own folks to Islam openly.
AND ADMONISH THY NEAREST KINSMEN
(Quran Majid. Chapter 26, verse 214)
Muhammed's kinsmen included all members of Bani Hashim
and Bani al-Muttalib. He ordered his young cousin, Ali,
to invite their chief men to a banquet. Forty of them
came.
The guests gathered in a hall in the house of Abu Talib,
and when they had partaken of the repast, Muhammed, the
Messenger of Allah, rose to address them. Among the
guests, there was one Abu Lahab, an uncle of Muhammed on
his father's side. He had probably heard what his nephew
was doing secretly, and guessed the reason why he had
invited the Bani Hashim to a feast. Muhammed had just
begun to speak when Abu Lahab rudely interrupted him, and
himself addressed the assembly, saying:
Brothers, cousins and uncles: Do not listen to this
"renegade," and do not leave your ancestral
religion, if he invites you to a new one. If you do, then
remember that you will rouse the anger of all Arabs
against you. You do not have the strength to fight
against all of them. After all, you are a mere handful.
Therefore, it will be in your interest to be steadfast in
your traditional religion.
Abu Lahab, by his brief speech, succeeded in throwing the
assembly into confusion. Everyone stood up milling around
and jostling against each other. They then began to
leave, and soon the hall was empty.
Muhammed's first attempt to convert his
own clan to Islam had failed. But unfazed by this initial
setback, he ordered his cousin, Ali, to invite the same
guests a second time.
A few days later the guests came, and
when they had eaten supper, Muhammed addressed them as
follows:
"I offer thanks to Allah for His
mercies. I praise Allah and I seek His guidance. I
believe in Him, and I put my trust in Him. He is
Beneficent and Benevolent; and He is Gracious and
Merciful."
After this doxology, the Prophet went on to say:
"I bear witness that there is no god except Allah;
He has no partners, and I am His messenger. Allah has
commanded me to invite you to His religion Islam - by
saying: AND WARN THY NEAREST KINSMEN.
I, therefore, warn you that you should abandon false
worship, and call upon you to testify that there is no
god but Allah, and that I am His messenger. O ye sons of
Abdul Muttalib, no one ever came to you with anything
better than what I have brought to you. By accepting it,
your welfare will be assured in this world and in the
Hereafter. Who among you will support me in carrying out
this momentous duty? Who will share the burden of work
with me? Who will respond to my call? Who will become my
vicegerent, my deputy and my wazir?"
There were forty guests in the hall. Muhammed paused to
assess the impact of his words upon them. But no one
among them responded. No one in the audience seemed to
stir. At last, when the silence became too oppressive,
young Ali stood up and said that he would support the
Messenger of Allah; would share the burden of his work;
and would become his vicegerent, his deputy and his
wazir.
But Muhammed beckoned Ali to sit down,
and said: "Wait! Perhaps someone older than you
might respond to my call."
Muhammed renewed his invitation but still there was no
answer, and he was greeted only by an uneasy silence.
Once again Ali offered his services but the Apostle still
wishing that some senior member of the clan would accept
his invitation, asked him to wait. He then appealed to
the clan a third time to consider his invitation, and the
same thing happened again. No one in the assembly showed
any interest in what he told them. He surveyed the crowd
and transfixed everyone in it with his gaze but no one
moved. At length he beheld the solitary figure of Ali
rising above the silent figures of the adults, to
volunteer his services to him a third time.
This time Muhammed Mustafa, the Messenger of Allah,
accepted Ali's offer. He drew him close, pressed him to
his heart, and said to the assembly: "This is my
wazir; my successor; and my vicegerent. Listen to him and
obey his commands."
Edward Gibbon
Three years were silently employed in
the conversion of fourteen proselytes, the first fruits
of his (Mohammed's) mission; but in the fourth year he
assumed the prophetic office, and resolving to impart to
his family the light of divine truth, he prepared a
banquet for the entertainment of forty guests of the race
of Hashim. "Friends and kinsmen," Mohammed said
to the assembly. "I offer you, and I alone can
offer, the most precious gifts, the treasures of this
world and of the world to come. God has commanded me to
call you to His service. Who among you will support my
burden? Who among you will be my companion and my vizir?
No answer was returned, till the silence of astonishment
and doubt, and contempt was at length broken by the
impatient courage of Ali, a youth in the fourteenth year
of his age. "O Prophet, I am the man, whoever rises
against thee, I will dash out his teeth, tear out his
eyes, break his legs, rip up his belly. O Prophet, I will
be thy vizir over them." Mohammed accepted his offer
with transport, and Abu Talib was ironically exhorted to
respect the superior dignity of his son.
(The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire)
Washington Ilving
"O children of Abd
al-Muttalib," cried he (Mohammed) with enthusiasm,
"to you, of all men, has Allah vouchsafed these most
precious gifts. In His name I offer you the blessings of
this world, and endless joys hereafter. Who among you
will share the burden of my offer? Who will be my
brother, my lieutenant, my vizir?"
All remained silent; some wondering; others smiling with
incredulity and derision. At length Ali, starting up with
youthful zeal, offered himself to the services of the
Prophet though modestly acknowledging his youth and
physical weakness. Mohammed threw up his arms around the
generous youth, and pressed him to his bosom.
"Behold my brother, my vizir, my vicegerent,"
exclaimed he, "let all listen to his words, and obey
him."
(The Life of Mohammed)
Sir Richard Burton
After a long course of meditation,
fired with anger by the absurd fanaticism of the Jews,
the superstitions of the Syrian and Arab Christians, and
the horrid idolatries of his unbelieving countrymen, an
enthusiast too - and what great soul has not been an
enthusiast? - he (Mohammed) determined to reform those
abuses which rendered revelation contemptible to the
learned and prejudicial to the vulgar. He introduced
himself as one inspired to a body of his relations and
fellow-clansmen. The step was a failure, except that it
won for him a proselyte worth a thousand sabres in the
person of Ali, son of Abu Talib.
(The Jew the Gypsy and El Islam, San Francisco, 1898)
Ali had offered his services to
Muhammed, the Messenger of Allah, and the latter had
accepted them. To the elders of the tribe, Ali's conduct
might have appeared rash and brazen but he soon proved
that he had the grit to accomplish far more than others
had the courage even to dream. The Messenger of Allah, on
his part, accepted the offer not only with expressions of
gratitude and joy but also declared that Ali was, from
that moment, his vicegerent and his wazir. Muhammed's
declaration was forthright and unequivocal. It is foolish
to quibble, as some people do, that Ali's vicegerency of
Muhammed, was confined to the tribe of Bani Hashim
because it was an assembly of Bani Hashim. But Muhammed
himself did not restrict Ali's vicegerency to Bani
Hashim. Ali was his vicegerent for all Muslims and for
all time.
The banquet at which Muhammed, the Messenger of Allah,
declared Ali to be his successor, is famous in history as
"the Banquet of Dhul-'Asheera." This name comes
from Quran Majid itself (Chapter 26; verse 214).
Strangely, Sir William Muir has
called this historic event "apocryphal." But
what is apocryphal or so improbable about it? Could
anything be more logical for the Messenger of Allah than
to begin his work of propagating Islam at his own home,
and with the members of his own family and clan,
especially, after he was expressly commanded by Allah to
warn his "nearest kinsmen?"
The feast of Dhul-'Asheera at which Muhammed, the Apostle
of Allah, designated Ali ibn Abi Talib, as his successor,
is a historical event, and its authenticity has been
affirmed, among others, by the following Arab historians:
1. Tabari, Historv. Volume II, p. 217 2. Kamil ibn
Atheer, Historv, Vol. II, p. 22 3. Abul Fida, Historv,
Vol. I, p. 116
Writing about Ali at this time, Sir
William Muir says:
"His (Mohammed's) cousin, Ali, now 13 or 14 years of
age, already gave tokens of the wisdom and judgment which
distinguished him in after life. Though possessed of
indomitable courage, he lacked the stirring energy which
would have rendered him an effective propagator of Islam.
He grew up from a child in the faith of Mohammed, and his
earliest associations strengthened the convictions of
maturer years."
(Life of Mohammed, London, 1877)
We have many reservations about Sir
William Muir's statement that Ali "lacked the
stirring energy that would have made him an effective
propagator of Islam." Ali did not lack energy or
anything else. In all the crises of Islam, Muhammed
Mustafa, the Messenger of Allah, selected him to carry
out the most dangerous missions, and he invariably
accomplished them.
As a missionary also, Ali was peerless. There was no one
among all the companions of the Prophet who was a more
effective propagator of Islam than he. He promulgated the
first 40 verses of the Sura Bera'a (=Immunity), the 9th
chapter of Quran Majid, to the pagans in Makka, as the
first missionary of Islam, and as one representing the
Messenger of Allah himsel£ And it was Ali who brought
all the tribes of Yemen into the fold of Islam.
Muhammed, the Messenger of Allah, had brought up Ali as
his own child, and if the latter had lacked anything, he
would have known it. He declared Ali to be his wazir, his
successor and his vicegerent at a time when no one could
have foreseen the future of Islam. This only points up
the unbounded confidence that the Prophet of Islam had in
this stripling of 14 years!
Ali symbolized the hopes and aspirations of Islam. In the
great revolution which Muhammed, the Apostle of God, had
launched at the feast of Dhul-'Asheera, he had mobilized
the dynamism and the idealism; and the fervor and the
vigor of youth; Ali personified them all.
Two things had happened at the Feast. One was that the
Prophet had brought Islam out in the open; it was no
longer an "under-ground" movement; it had
"surfaced." At the Feast of his kinsfolk,
Muhammed had "crossed the Rubicon" and now
there could be no turning back. Time had come for him to
carry the message of Islam beyond his own clan - first to
the Quraysh of Makka, then to all the Arabs, and finally,
to the rest of the world. The other was that he had found
Ali who was the embodiment of courage, devotion and
resolution, and was worth far more than a "thousand
sabres."
It is reported that some days after the
second banquet of Dhul-'Asheera, Muhammed Mustafa climbed
up the hill of Safa near the Kaaba, and called out:
"O sons of Fehr; O sons of Loi;
O sons of Adi; and all the rest of Quraysh! Come hither,
and listen to me. I have something very important to tell
you."
Many of those Makkans who heard his voice, came to listen
to him. Addressing them, he said: "Will you believe
me if I told you that the army of an enemy was hidden
behind yonder hills, and was watching you to attack you
as soon as it found you sleeping or off-guard?" They
said they would believe him because they had never heard
him telling a lie.
"If that's so," said Muhammed, "then
listen to this with attention. The Lord of heavens and
earth has commanded me to warn you of the dreadful time
that is coming. But if you pay heed, you can save
yourselves from perdition..." He had gone only as
far as this when Abu Lahab, who was present among the
listeners, interrupted him a second time by saying:
"Death to you. Did you waste our time to tell us
only this? We do not want to listcn to you. Do not call
us again."
Thenceforth, Abu Lahab made it a practice to shadow the
Prophet wherever the latter went. If he started to read
Quran or to say something else, he (Abu Lahab)
interrupted him or started heckling him. Abu Lahab's
hatred of Muhammed and hostility to Islam were shared by
his wife, Umm Jameel. Both of them were cursed by Allah,
for their perversity, in Chapter 111 of His Book.