RIGHTEOUS-RIGHT

Help one another in righteousness and pity; but do not help one another in sin and rancor (Q.5:2). The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing. (Edmond Burke). Oh! What a tangled web we weave, When first we practice to deceive! (Walter Scott, Marmion VI). If you are not part of the solution …. Then you are part of the problem. War leaves no victors, only victims. … Mankind must remember that peace is not God's gift to his creatures; it is our gift to each other.– Elie Wiesel, Nobel Peace Prize Acceptance Speech, 1986.

Wednesday, November 11, 2015

Raid On al-Ka’bah


Edited: Hasan Israr
Email:  ihasanfaq@yahoo.com
Date:   10th  Nov. 2015.

Abdul Muttalib (Prophet’s Grandfather) did witness two important events in his lifetime—digging of the Zamzam spring and the Elephant raid on al-Ka’bah.   
He had received a revelation in his dream to dig the Zamzam spring in a particular place. We have seen and read this episode in our previous story. He had found few swords, armors and two deer made of gold.  Later, the gate of al-Ka’bah was stamped from those gold findings.
The second event was the event of Abraha As-Sabah Al-Habashi, the Abyssinian (Ethiopian) viceroy in Yemen.  He had seen that the Arabs made their pilgrimage to Ka’bah so he built a large church in San’a in order to attract the Arab pilgrims to it to the exclusion of Makkah. This he intended to divert the trade and commerce benefits from Makkah to Yemen. The King of Ethiopia agreed to his proposal. The church was built and he named it Al-Qullais. There was no church of its like at that time.
A man from the Kinanah tribe of Makkah visited the church and understood Abraha’s motive. He entered the church under the cover of night smearing excrement on its front wall.  When Abraha learned of this, he became enraged and led a great army of sixty thousand warriors to demolish al-Ka’bah.  His army included thirteen elephants.  He chose the biggest elephant, named Mahmud for himself.  He continued marching and none amongst the Arab tribes that faced them but was killed and defeated till the army reaches a place called al-Magmas.  There took place negotiations between Abraha and the chief of Makkah, Abdul Muttalib.  It was concluded that Abraha would restore the camels of Abdul Muttalib which he had taken away, and then Abraha would decide himself as regards al-Ka’bah.  Abdul Muttalib ordered the men of Makkah to evacuate the city and go to the top of the mountains along with their wives and children in case some harm should come to them from the invading army.
When Abraha reached the Muhassir Valley between Muzdalifah and Mina, the elephant named Mahmud which Abraha was riding on, knelt down and refused to go forward.  Whenever they directed to the north, south or east, the elephant moved quickly, but when directed towards al-Kabah in the west, it knelt down.  Meanwhile, huge number of birds clouded over them throwing stones of clay upon them like scattered chaff, as described in the Qur’an in Chapter al-Fil (Sura 105).  These birds were very much like swallows and sparrows, each carrying three stones: one in its peak and two in its claws.  The stones hit Abraha’s men, and cut their limbs and killed them.  A large number of soldiers were killed in this way and the others fled in panic, and many died in their way back.  Abraha himself had an infection that required his fingertips to be cut off.  When he reached San’a he was in a miserable state and died soon after.
The Quraishites of Makkah had fled for their lives to the hillocks and mountaintops when they heard of Abraha’s coming for attack. When the enemy was routed, they returned home safely.
The Elephant incident took place in the month of al-Muharram, fifty-five days before the birth of the Prophet Muhammad (PBUH), which corresponded to early March 571 C.E. 
By contrast, Jerusalem had suffered the atrocities of enemies, once by Bakht Nassar (Nebuchadnezzar) in 587 B.C. and the Romans attacks in 70 C.E. Al-Kabah never came under the hold of any foreign power, although the influences of Persian and Roman Empires were scattered throughout Arabia in the population of Christians, Jews and polytheists in and outside of Makkah.

Sources:  Ibn Hisham’s  Seerat Rasool Allah; Tarikh at-Tabari; Tabaqat Ibn         Sa’ad; Notes from English               Translation of The Noble Qur’an by Dr.Muhammad Taqiud Din Al-Hilali and Dr. Muhammad                       Muhsin Khan of Islamic University, al-Madinah Munawwarah.


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