The Death of Prophet Muhammed (pbuh)
Contributed by Prof. Dr. Nazeer Ahmed, PhD
Summary: Islam burst upon the global scene in the ‘7th
century and transformed a nomadic people into prime movers of a world
civilization. Prophet Muhammed (p) was the architect of that
transformation. His death in 632 presented the Islamic community with
its first major challenge. The Muslims met this challenge by
establishing the institution of the Caliphate and affirming the
continuity of historical Islam. The nascent Islamic state, with its
capital at Madina, successfully defended itself from the predatory reach
of the Byzantine and Sassanid Empires. But that very success sowed the
seeds of dissension in the community. The captured wealth of Persia
brought greed and nepotism and resulted in the assassination of the
third Caliph Uthman bin Affan (r). The fourth Caliph Ali ibn Abu Talib
(r) tried to stem the tide of corruption and return to the pristine
purity of faith but he was swept away by the whirlwinds created by the
assassination of Uthman (r). With the death of Ali (r), the curtain fell
on the age of faith in Islamic history.
Civilizations are tested with crises
just as individuals are tried with adversity. It is these critical
moments that bring out the character of a civilization, just as
individual tests bring out the character of an individual. Great
civilizations measure up to their challenges and grow more resilient
with each crisis, turning adversity into opportunity. It is much the
same way with individuals. Critical moments in history test the mettle
of humans. Great men and women bend history to their will, whereas
weaker ones are swallowed up in the convulsions of time.
It is a basic premise of this article
that the primary dialectic of the world of Islam is internal. Its
triumphs and tribulations are tied inextricably with how this universal
community of believers has held onto the transcendental values taught by
the Prophet. It is the cohesiveness or internal divisiveness of this
global community that has determined its tryst with destiny. When the
followers of Islam held onto the Divine injunctions of the Qur’an and
the legacy of the Prophet, they triumphed. When they lost sight of that
legacy, they fell into disarray and were marginalized by history.
The death of Prophet Muhammed (p) was
the first historical crisis faced by the Islamic community. The process
by which the community met this crisis has determined its strengths and
its weaknesses in the subsequent centuries. The shape of the historical
edifice of Islam was cast in that hour. The death of the Prophet brought
forth the towering personalities of Abu Bakr as Siddiq (r), Omar ibn al
Khattab (r), Uthman bin Affan (r) and Ali ibn Abu Talib (r) into the
historical process. What these Companions did and did not do has
influenced the course of Islamic history in the subsequent 1,400 years.
The Prophet was the fountainhead of
Muslim life. No other person in history occupied a position in relation
to his people, as did Prophet Muhammed (p) with respect to his. He was
the focus for all social, spiritual, political, economic, military and
judicial activities. He was the founder and architect of the nascent
community. He was the Prophet and the Messenger of God. When he passed
away, he left a vacuum that was impossible to fill. His legacy was
tested immediately upon his death. At stake was the continuity of the
historical process. The Prophet had welded together a community of
believers transcending their allegiance to tribe, race or nationality.
The glue that had cemented this process was the Qur’an and the Sunnah of
the Prophet. Now the Prophet was gone and it seemed that the divisive
forces that Islam had overcome would resurface and tear apart the
newborn community.
The first reaction to the death of the
Prophet was shock, disbelief and denial. So great was the love of the
Companions for the Prophet that they could not part with their love. So
central was he to the life of the community that they could not imagine a
life without his presence. When Omar ibn al Khattab (r) heard that the
Prophet had passed away, he was so distraught that he drew his sword and
declared: “Some hypocrites are pretending that the Prophet of God-may
God’s peace and blessing be upon him—has died. By God I swear that he
did not die; that he has gone to join his Lord, just as other Prophets
went before. Moses was absent from his people for forty nights and
returned to them after they had declared him dead. By God, the Prophet
of God will return just as Moses returned. Any man who dares to
perpetrate a false rumor such as Muhammed’s death shall have his arms
and legs cut off by this hand.” People listened to Omar (r), too
stupefied to believe that the man who had transformed Arabia from the
backwaters of history to the forefront of the historical process was
dead. The situation was grave indeed.
The resilience of Islam showed itself in
the person of Abu Bakr (r). After confirming that the Prophet had
indeed passed away, he entered the mosque where Omar (r) was speaking to
the people and recited the following passage from the Qur’an: “Muhammed
is but a Prophet before whom many prophets have come and gone. Should
he die or be killed, will you give up your faith? Know that whoever
gives up his faith will cause no harm to God, but God will surely reward
those who are grateful to Him” (Qur’an, 3:144). It was as if the people
had heard this passage for the first time; it struck them like a bolt
of lighting. Omar (r) related later that when he heard it, his legs
shook as he realized that the Messenger of God had indeed departed from
this world. The mortality of the Prophet was established, while the
transcendence of God was reaffirmed. The civilization of Islam was to be
God-centered, not man-centered. Islam was to have its anchor in God and
His Word. The Prophet, as the man who had brought the Divine Word and
fulfilled his historical mission, had departed, but the light that had
shone through him was to show the way to succeeding generations. Islam
retained its transcendent character. It was to survive the physical
absence of the Prophet and was to hurl itself as a dynamic force into
the historical process.
The situation was fluid, uncertain and
fraught with grave risks. The body of the Messenger who had led one of
the greatest spiritual revolutions known to humankind was in the corner
of a small room. Here was the man who had transformed a tribal society
into a community of believers and made them masters of their own
destiny. Wave after wave of men moved past the body, sobbing, shaking
their heads, unsure of the future. They were now without the anchor that
had supported them, without the leader who had sustained them, without
the teacher who had taught them, without the statesman who had led them,
without the Prophet who had brought the message of Divine
transcendence.
The process of succession and its legacy
for future generations were at stake. Islam had set for itself a
mission to create a global community enjoining was is right, forbidding
what is evil and believing in God. How was this mission to be fulfilled
in the matrix of history without the physical presence of the Prophet?
How was the edifice of a God-conscious community to be erected without
the architect who had conceived it? Did the Prophet leave behind
specific instructions on the issue of succession? If he did not, what
was the wisdom behind that decision?
Immediately upon the death of the
Prophet, competing positions emerged regarding the issue of succession.
The first position was that of the Ansar, the residents of Madina who
had provided protection and relief to the Muhajirs from Mecca. They felt
that as the hosts who had stood by the Prophet at the hour of need,
they deserved the leadership of the community. At the minimum, they
argued that leadership should be shared. They proposed a committee of
two, composed of one person from the Muhajirs and one from the Ansar, to
lead the community. The second position was that of the supporters of
Abu Bakr as Siddiq (r). They based their position on the fact that the
Prophet, when he had become too ill before his death to lead the
congregational prayers, had nominated Abu Bakr (r) as the Imam. Abu Bakr
(r) was the first man to accept Islam and was also one of the closest
of his Companions. The authentic ahadith confirm the highest affection
and esteem that the Prophet had for Abu Bakr (r). The third position was
that of the supporters of Ali ibn Abu Talib (r). Ali (r) was a cousin
of the Prophet and was married to Fatimat uz Zahra (r), beloved daughter
of the Prophet. He was the first youth to embrace Islam and the Prophet
had referred to him as his heir and his brother. The Islamic community
reconciled the first two positions in the first hours following the
death of the Prophet but differences of opinion remained on the third
issue. These differences led, in later years, to the Shi’a-Sunni schism,
which runs like a great earthquake fault through Islamic history. Its
recurrent divisive and destructive power shows itself at critical
moments such as the massacre at Karbala (680), the Battle of Chaldiran
(1517) and the Iran-Iraq war (1979-1987).
There was wisdom in the decision of the
Prophet to leave the issue of succession to the collective judgment of
the community. A universal religion must have validity for all peoples
and at all times. It must have relevance to the people of the 21st
century as it did to those who lived at the time of the Prophet. It
must have meaning to the most sophisticated person as well as to the
bushman in the jungle. The wisdom of the Prophet lies in the fact that
whereas the principles of Islam are spelled out in their complete form
in the Qur’an and are exemplified in the Sunnah of the Prophet, their
implementation at specific times and in specific locations is left to
the historical process. In other words, Islam is an existential
religion. Its realization and fulfillment is a process that is eternal
and incumbent upon each generation of believers. The position that the
Prophet left specific instructions on the issue of political succession
does not correlate with the existential aspects of Islam. However, not
all Muslims share this view. Partisan positions on the issue of
succession are taken based only on those ahadith, which support that
position. But history is a merciless judge. With the passage of time,
the differences on the issue of succession were solidified, leading to
recurrent dissension, rebellion, repression and civil war.
Urged by the community leaders to
prevent an open rift, Abu Bakr (r), along with Omar ibn al Khattab (r),
proceeded to the courtyard of Banu Saida where the Ansar were holding a
congregation to elect their leader. One of the Ansar put his position
thus: “We are the Ansar—the helpers of God and the army of Islam. You,
the Muhajirun are only a brigade in the Army. Nonetheless some amongst
you have gone to the extreme of seeking to deprive us of our natural
leadership and to deny us our rights.” Abu Bakr (r) spoke to the Ansar:
“O men of Ansar! We, the Muhajirun were the first to accept Islam. We
enjoy the noblest lineage and descent. We are the most reputable and the
best esteemed as well as the most numerous in Arabia. Furthermore, we
are the closest blood relatives of the Prophet. The Qur’an itself has
given us preference. For it is God—may He be exalted in praise—Who said,
“First and foremost were al Muhajirun, then al Ansar and then those who
have followed these two groups in virtue and righteousness.” Then
taking the hands of Omar (r) and Abu Ubaida, who were seated on either
side of him, Abu Bakr (r) said, “Either one of these two men is
acceptable to us as leader of the Muslim community. Choose whomever you
please”. At this time Omar (r) raised the hand of Abu Bakr (r) and said,
“ O Abu Bakr! Did not the Prophet command you to lead the Muslims in
prayer? You, therefore, are his successor. In electing you, we are
electing the best of all whom the Prophet of God loved and trusted”. The
Ansar and the Muhajirun then stepped forward and took the oath of
allegiance (baiyah) to Abu Bakr (r).
Thus it was that the nascent Islamic
community resolved the issue of succession and embarked on constructing
the edifice of their history. The process did not quite satisfy Ali ibn
Abu Talib (r), Talha ibn Ubaidallah and Zubair ibn al Awwam. Ali (r),
representing the family of the Prophet, was busy with the funeral
preparations. Talha and Zubair were not in the preliminary
consultations. Initially, Ali (r) withheld his oath of allegiance. But
when Abu Sufyan approached him to declare himself the Caliph, Ali (r)
saw the dangers of division in the community and accepted the Caliphate
of Abu Bakr (r). According to Ibn Khaldun, Ali ibn Abu Talib (r) took
his baiyah forty days after the death of the Prophet. According to Ibn
Kathir, this happened only after the death of Fatima (r), six months
after the Prophet’s death. Talha ibn Ubaidallah and Zubair ibn al Awwam
gave their baiyah soon thereafter.
The Shi’a chroniclers do not accept the
majority version, maintaining instead that the Caliphate was rightfully
Ali’s (r) by deputation from the Prophet. However, there is consensus
among all chroniclers that any differences regarding the issue of
succession were quiescent during the time of Abu Bakr (r) and Omar (r)
and did not surface in the open until the Caliphate of Uthman (r). It
was much later, as positions hardened during the Umayyad (665-750) and
Abbasid (750-1258) dynasties, that both sides advanced doctrinal
arguments to support partisan opinions on the Caliphate and Wilayat /
Imamate. Thus it was that Shi’a-Sunni differences were based not on
religion or faith but had their origin in the politics of succession and
history.
Some Sufis attach yet another dimension
to the issue of succession. The Sufis represent the spiritual and
esoteric dimension of Islam. Their enormous impact profoundly influenced
the course of Islamic history. In their vision, the spirituality of
humankind revolves around a Qutub in every age. The word Qutub means
pivot, pole, chief and leader. When there is a Prophet on earth, he is
the Qutub. He cleanses the consciousness of humanity so that it becomes
worthy of receiving Divine Illumination. Moses was the Qutub for the
spirituality of humankind when he was alive, as were David, Solomon,
Joseph and Jesus in their times. As long as Muhammed was alive, he was
the spiritual pole for humankind. Upon his death, the mantle of
spirituality passed on to Fatima (r), daughter of the Prophet. After
Fatima (r), the mantle passed on to Ali ibn Abu Talib (r). Most Sufi
orders claim their spirituality from Ali (r) and by virtue of
continuity, through Fatima (r) and ultimately from Prophet Muhammed (p).
As long as Fatima (r) was alive, the Sufis maintain, Ali (r) could not
have given his baiyah to Abu Bakr (r). It was only after Fatima (r)
passed away, six months after the Prophet’s death, that Ali (r) finally
gave his allegiance to Abu Bakr (r). According to this view, the mantle
of spirituality continued to reside in Ali ibn Abu Talib (r) to whom
important juridical issues were referred by the Caliphs Abu Bakr (r),
Omar (r) and Uthman (r) and even by the faction headed by Muawiya.
In selecting Abu Bakr (r), the
Companions established several precedents. They demonstrated that the
Muslims were a living community capable of articulating their own
destiny through a collective consultative process in the absence of the
Prophet. They established that the Caliph, as the temporal ruler of the
Islamic community, had to be a man of piety, trust, knowledge, strength,
justice, integrity and righteousness. The community was like a newborn
child taking its first breath after being cut off from the umbilical
cord connecting it to its spiritual parent.
Upon accession to the Caliphate, Abu
Bakr (r) was faced with several crises. The immediate issue was the
dispatch of the army to the north to face the Byzantines. The Muslims
had faced a stalemate with the Byzantines at the Battle of Tabuk and had
lost their leader Zaid bin Haris. A follow up defensive expedition had
been initiated by the Prophet to safeguard the northern approaches to
Madina. Abu Bakr (r) reaffirmed the decision of the Prophet and
dispatched an expedition under Usama bin Zaid. The expedition was
successful and it demonstrated the strength and cohesiveness of the
Muslims even in the absence of the Prophet.
The second challenge was the refusal of
certain Arab tribes to pay the Zakat. Pre-Islamic Arabia was tribal.
Many of these tribes had reluctantly accepted Islam towards the last
days of the Prophet. When he passed away, they saw an opportunity to
stop paying the mandatory Zakat, which they misunderstood as another
form of taxation.
Zakat is not only a moral obligation in
Islam; it is also a legal obligation. It is an act of purity. It is
regarded as one of the five pillars of Islam and is an article of faith.
In Islam, the economic well being of the community is as important as
that of the individual. No man’s belief is complete unless he wishes for
his brother what he wishes for himself. Islam discourages hoarding and
encourages sharing and investment. Zakat works to circulate money and
operates against hoarding. Wherever the Qur’an emphasizes the
establishment of prayer, it also emphasizes the payment of Zakat.
Foregoing Zakat would have destroyed the moral foundation of the Islamic
state and would have reduced Islam to a litany of personal beliefs and
observances. Abu Bakr (r) conducted a vigorous police action against the
non-payers of Zakat. He personally went on several expeditions and
brought the rebellious tribes under the authority of the state.
The third crisis faced by Abu Bakr (r)
was that of false prophets. Seeing the success and prosperity of the
Muslims, many false prophets (and prophetesses) sprang up all over
Arabia. Religion was and remains to this day, good business. Many a
pretender saw in the success of Islam an opportunity to establish his
own religion and get rich in the process. Abu Bakr (r) declared war on
the false prophets. He sent eleven expeditions against as many
pretenders. Of these the best known was the expedition of Khalid bin
Walid against Musailimah al Kazzab, which culminated in the Battle of
Yamama. Similar expeditions were sent towards Yemen, Amman and Hazeefa.
All of these expeditions were successful.
It was in the campaign against
Musailimah al Kazzab that a large number of the Companions of the
Prophet perished. Many of them were hufaz (those who had memorized the
Qur’an). The Qur’an was revealed to the Prophet as the spoken Word,
which was then memorized by hundreds of companions. The martyrdom of so
many hufaz at the Battle of Yamama was a matter of great concern to the
Companions. Upon the advice of Omar, Abu Bakr (r) ordered the writing
down of the Qur’an to preserve it, as it was revealed to the Prophet,
for all generations to come. The first written copy of the Qur’an is
known by the title Mashaf e Siddiqi.
In the geopolitics of West Asia, neither
the Byzantines nor the Persians could tolerate an independent, united
and strong Arabia. Both powers had coveted the Arabian Peninsula for
centuries. The Romans had occupied Syria and Jordan while the Persians
had subjugated Iraq, Yemen and Hejaz. To the geopolitical element was
now added the religious element. Prophet Muhammed (p), in fulfillment of
his mission as the Messenger of God, had sent greetings to the rulers
of the two powers inviting them to accept Islam. Heraclius, the
Byzantine chief, had sent a polite reply but had ordered his troops into
action on the northern borders of Arabia. Khosroe, the Persian emperor,
had torn up the Prophet’s letter and had ordered his forces in Yemen to
march on Madina and arrest the Prophet. It was to forestall the
ambitions of the Byzantines and the Persians that the Prophet had
initiated defensive actions to the north and the east. The campaigns
undertaken by Abu Bakr (r) against the Byzantines and the Persians were
thus a continuation of those that had been started by the Prophet
himself.
Political developments in West Asia soon
worked in favor of the emerging Islamic state. Persia was in turmoil.
There was murder and mayhem in the imperial court. Sheroya, the eldest
son of Khosroe Pervez murdered his father and all of his own brothers
and usurped the throne. Eight months later, Sheroya died in mysterious
circumstances and his infant son was made the monarch. The infant son
was also killed and a number of courtiers claimed the throne, only to be
murdered one after the other. Finally, the only surviving youngster in
the Persian dynasty, Yazdgar, was made the emperor and a woman of the
royal household was appointed his regent.
The weakness of Persia created military
opportunities for its neighbors. Heraclius, the new Byzantine emperor,
waged a series of campaigns (625-635) and won back some of the
territories his predecessor had lost to the Persians. The explosive
growth of the Islamic state since the Hijra (622) brought its borders to
the River Euphrates, which marked the southwestern boundary of the
Persian Empire. The Arab tribes near the Persian border, centered on the
town of al Hirah, were restive. They had for a long period enjoyed an
autonomous status under the protection of the Persian court. But
Khosroe, the Persian monarch, had revoked that autonomy and had turned
the areas into imperial colonies. Resentment had built up over increased
taxes. Some of these tribes had accepted Islam during the life of the
Prophet but had become apostates when he passed away. Abu Bakr (r) was
aware of these developments. So, when Al Muthannah ibn Harithah, chief
of the Banu Shaiban clan in eastern Arabia, approached him with a
proposal to rally the Arab tribes against Persia, the Caliph agreed.
Remembering their shifting loyalties, Abu Bakr (r) advised Al Muthannah
to recruit only those tribes that had previously not become apostates.
Meanwhile, Khalid bin Walid had
completed his operations against the apostate Arabs in eastern Arabia.
Abu Bakr (r) ordered him to join up with Al Muthannah. The two together
advanced on southern Iraq. An invitation was sent to Humuz, Persian
governor of the province, inviting him to accept Islam and join in its
global mission. If he refused, he was given the alternatives of
accepting the protection of the Muslim state or war. Governor Humuz
rejected all of these alternatives and hostilities began. The Arab
armies first subdued Khadima (633) near modern Kuwait. From there, they
moved on the port city of Ubullah (modern Basrah) near the mouth of the
Shatt al Arab. Turning northwards along the western shores of the River
Euphrates, Khalid’s forces rapidly overcame Persian resistance at Al
Hirah and Al Anbar. The Arab tribes of the area welcomed their fellow
Arabs as liberators from Persian imperial rule. Khalid’s rapid advance
had left his northern flank open. This area, called Domatul Jandal by
the Arabs, was located near the confluence of Syria and Iraq and was
inhabited by Christian Arabs who openly sided with the Byzantines. After
subduing Domatul Jandal, Khalid and his troops returned to Mecca and
performed the Hajj. When Khalild returned to the battlefield, Abu Bakr
(r) ordered him to the Syrian front where a decisive showdown was
looming with the Byzantine Empire.
The emergence of a unified Arab state
under Islam was no more acceptable to the Byzantines than it was to the
Persians. The Byzantines had probed Muslim defenses at the time of the
Prophet in preparation for a possible invasion of Arabia. It was to
contain this threat that the Prophet had conducted the campaign of
Tabuk. Continued Byzantine pressure had prompted the Prophet to send an
expedition under Zaid bin Haris. As we have already pointed out, the
engagement had proved indecisive and Zaid bin Haris was killed in the
campaign. The Prophet had organized a second campaign under Usama bin
Zaid, but he had passed away before the campaign got under way.
Abu Bakr (r) reaffirmed the decision of
the Prophet to send an army to the northern borders. The instructions
given by Abu Bakr (r) to Usama bin Zaid, commander of the Muslim forces,
are noteworthy for their ethical content:
- Do not kill children, women and old men.
- Do not harm the disabled and do not disfigure the bodies of those killed in battle.
- Do not destroy standing crops and do not cut down trees bearing fruit.
- Do not be dishonest and misappropriate war booty.
- Do not kill animals except as is necessary for food.
These injunctions have served, for kings
and soldiers alike, as a canonical basis for a Muslim code of ethics
during the last 1,400 years.
The campaigns under Usama bin Zaid were
also inconclusive. The threat of an invasion from the north grew each
day as the Byzantines made preparations for war. Abu Bakr (r) decided to
preempt the enemy and ordered an invasion of Syria. An army of 27,000
was assembled and organized into three corps under the overall command
of Abu Ubaidah bin Jarrah. Abu Ubaidah was personally responsible for
the central army corps directed at Syria. Supporting him was a corps
headed by Amr bin al As directed at Palestine and one headed by
Shurahbil ibn Hasanah directed at Jordan. Initial skirmishes took place
at Wadi Arabah and Ghazzah. The three armies then proceeded towards
Damascus. The main Byzantine forces under Theodorus, brother of the
Byzantine Emperor Heraclius, blocked the further advance of the Muslim
armies in the narrow gorge between Mount Hermon and Mount Hawran.
It was here that Khalid bin Walid won
one of his most memorable victories. Marching rapidly westward from
Iraq, Khalid overcame minor resistance along the way. Arriving at the
battlefield, he moved in an enveloping arc bypassing the Byzantine army
as well as the Muslim divisions and attacked the enemy positions from
the rear while the main divisions under Abu Ubaidah made a frontal
attack. Taken by surprise, the Byzantine columns dispersed. The Muslim
armies pursued the Byzantines and inflicted heavy casualties on the
retreating foe. Damascus fell in 635. In a few months, the cities of
Balbak and Hama were also in Muslim hands.
Heraclius was not willing to concede the
strategic province of Syria so easily. He was one of the most respected
generals of his age and had defeated the Persians in numerous battles.
He raised a new army of 200,000 and marched south along the coast,
hoping to reach Beersheba and cut off the supply routes for the Muslim
armies. When he heard of this move from his intelligence arm, Khalid
made another wide arc and joining forces with Amr bin al As, reached
Beersheba and having collected additional troops from the garrison
there, marched northwards to meet Heraclius. The two armies met at
Ajnadain where the Byzantines suffered another defeat.
Heraclius was now in a perilous military
position. His escape routes both to the north and the south were cut
off. He ordered his troops to regroup at the banks of the Yarmuk River
near the town of Dir’a. Demonstrating his mastery of rapid enveloping
movements, Khalid bin Walid bypassed the enemy lines and attacked from
the north while the Byzantines faced off the divisions of Abu Ubaidah to
the south. As if providence had a say in the matter, a violent
sandstorm blinded the Byzantine troops, while the Arabs, used to the
desert, took it in stride. Byzantine resistance collapsed.
The Battle of Yarmuk, fought in 636, was
one of the decisive battles in history. It marked the end of Byzantine
rule in West Asia and paved the way for further Muslim conquests in
Egypt and North Africa. Abu Bakr (r) died a few days after the Battle of
Yarmuk. He was 63 years old and his Caliphate lasted two years and
three months.
Abu Bakr (r) provided the bridge between
Prophet Muhammed (p) and historical Islam. Without his leadership,
Zakat would have disappeared as an institution and the nature of
religion itself would have been altered. The legal basis of the state
would have been seriously undermined and the community would have fallen
apart. Abu Bakr (r) continued the traditions of the Prophet, avoided
innovations, overcame internal dissentions, established the rule of law,
suppressed false prophets and successfully defended the nascent state
against the Byzantine and Persian Empires. He demonstrated that the
Muslims were a living, dynamic community. Under his leadership, Islam
embarked on the process of history bereft of its Prophet but animated by
the message of the Qur’an and his Sunnah.
Submitted, along with a large collection of previous papers by Dr. Ahmed on March 1, 1993.
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