Early Life in Makkah
It was in the
year 570, after Jesus, that Muhammad
was born in Makkah, in what is now Saudi Arabia. Arabia, by all
accounts, is the cradle of the human race. All the oldest human remains so far found come
from the area of its location.
Hemmed in by red,
black and brown volcanic hills about 80 kilometers to the east of the Red Sea, stands the
city of Makkah. It was then a small merchant town on the ancient incense route
through which passed the great trade caravans between south and north.
However, Makkah
was, and remains, important for an altogether different reason. For here lies the
Kabah, the first House ever set up for mankind to worship their only God. More
than 1,000 years before the Prophet Solomon built the temple in Jerusalem, his ancestor,
the Prophet Abraham, aided by his elder son the Prophet Ishmael, raised its walls on very
ancient foundations.
Close by the
Kabah lies the well called Zam Zam. Its origin, too, goes back to the Prophet
Abraham's time. It was this well which sprang up miraculously to save the life of the
infant Ishmael.
In the words of
the Bible:
And God heard the
voice of the boy; and the angel of God called to Hagar out of heaven, and said to her:
'What ails you, Hagar? Fear not, for God has heard the voice of the boy where he is.
Arise, lift up the boy, and hold him in your hand; for I will make him a great nation. And
God opened her eyes, and she saw a well of water; and she went, and filled the bottle with
water, and gave the boy a drink. And God was with the boy; and he grew and dwelt in the
wilderness, and became an archer. (Genesis 21: 17-20)
Or, as the
Psalmist sings:
As they pass
through the dry Valley of Baca, it becomes a place of springs; the early rain fills it
with pools. (Psalms 84: 6)
Makkah never had,
nor does it have now any worldly inducement to offer for settlement. It is a barren,
desolate place, where even grass does not grow! There were springs and wells of abundant
water nearby in Taif and a short distance away in Madinah. But it was the first House of
God, architecturally an unremarkable cube, but spiritually and civilizationally the most
remarkable fountain and spring of life - which made it supremely important, a place of
attraction for people from all over the world. Forever, therefore, Makkah has been a great
centre of pilgrimage.
By the time
Muhammad
was born,
the Kabahs latest guardians, the tribe of Quraysh, had more than 300 idols
installed in and around the Kabah to be worshipped as lords, gods and intercessors
besides the One God. Muhammad
was a direct descendant of the Prophet Abraham through the Prophet Ishmael.
He belonged to the financially poor but politically strong and noble clan of Banu Hashim
from the tribe of Quraysh. As guardians of the Kabah, the House of God and the
centre of pilgrimage for all Arabia, the Quraysh ranked higher in dignity and power than
any other tribe. Hashim held the high office of levying taxes and providing the pilgrims
with food and water.
Muhammad
was born an orphan. His
father, Abdullah, died before he was born. His mother, Aminah, too, passed away when he
was only six years old. Doubly an orphan, his grandfather, Abd al-Muttalib, took him into
his care. Only two years later, however, the orphaned boy was bereaved of his grandfather
as well, leaving him in the care of his uncle, Abu Talib.
After his birth,
the infant child was sent to the desert to be suckled and weaned and to spend part of his
childhood among one of the Bedouin tribes, Bani Sad ibn Bakr, who live in the
southeast of Makkah. This was the usual custom of all the great families in Makkah.
As Muhammad
grew up, to earn his
livelihood he pastured sheep and goats, as have done most prophets. His uncle and
guardian, Abu Talib, also took him along with him on his travels with the trade caravans
to greater Syria. He, thus, gained experience in trading. Because of his great honesty and
diligence and the business acumen he showed in trading, he was soon being sought after to
take charge of other people's merchandise, i.e. for those who could not travel themselves,
and to trade on their behalf.
At the age of 25,
Muhammad
married a
lady named Khadijah. A widow, Khadijah was 15 years older than Muhammad
. She was a rich merchant of Makkah,
and Muhammad
had
managed some of her trade affairs. It was she who proposed marriage. Khadijah remained his
wife and closest friend and companion all her life till her death 25 years later. She bore
him six children, of whom four daughters survived.
Until he was 40,
Muhammad
led a very
uneventful life, showing no signs of the Prophet in the making that he was suddenly to be.
What set him apart from his compatriots was his absolute truthfulness, trustworthiness and
integrity, his sense of justice and compassion for the poor, oppressed and downtrodden, as
well as his total refusal to worship any idol or do anything immoral. He was popularly
acclaimed for these qualities. Al-Amin, the Trustworthy, the Honest, al-Sadiq, the
Truthful, were the titles on everybody's lips for Muhammad
, which itself means the Praised One.
At a very young
age, Muhammad
enthusiastically joined a pact of chivalry for the establishment of justice and the
protection of the weak and the oppressed made by certain chiefs of the Quraysh. He took
part in the Oath when they all vowed 'that henceforth they would stand together as one man
on the side of the oppressed against the oppressor until justice was done, whether the
oppressed were a man of the Quraysh or one who had come from abroad.
In later years,
at Madinah, Muhammad
used to say: 'I was present in the house of Abd Allah ibn Jud'an at so excellent a pact
that I would not exchange my part in it for a herd of red camels, and if now in Islam, I
were summoned to a similar pact, I would gladly respond.
A testimony to
Muhammad's character was given by his wife Khadijah as she comforted him at the time when
the first Revelation came to him. He said later: I fear for my life. She
replied: By no means! I swear by God that God will never lose you. You join ties of
relationship, you speak the truth, you bear people's burdens, you earn for the poor, you
entertain guests, and you help against the vicissitudes which affect people's
rights.
Muhammads
wisdom was also
acknowledged by all. Once, while repairing the Kabah, various clans of the Quraysh
disputed violently as to who should have the honour of placing the Black Stone in its
place. As they were about to unsheathe their swords and go to war, they made the Prophet
their arbitrator and he brought them peace. He placed the Black Stone on his cloak and
asked all the clan chiefs to hold its edges and raise it, and then he placed the Black
Stone in its appointed spot with his own hands.
The Prophet Muhammad (pbuh): Today
Early Life in Makkah
The Prophet (pbuh) at Makkah
The Prophet (pbuh) at Madinah
Attack by the Makkans
Society Building
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