|
Islam began
when man's career on earth began---more precisely at the time of man's
creation and his descent. Allah created Adam and Eve and enjoined them
to worship Him and live a life of obedience to the Divine Will.
Allah is the Creator and Sustainer of the
Universe and of human beings. Man must turn to Him for sustenance and
guidance. The very word Islam means obedience to God. In this respect,
Islam is man's natural religion---the only natural course is for man to
look towards Him for guidance.
The day Adam and Eve were sent down to live on
earth, Allah told them that they were His servants and He was their
Master and Creator. He told them and mankind that the best course was
for them to follow His guidance, to obey His orders and to refrain from
what He had forbidden. God said to them that He would be pleased if they
obeyed Him and in turn He would reward them. If, however, they did not
heed His commands, He would be displeased and would punish them. This
was the simple beginning of Islam.
Adam and Eve invited their children to follow
the Islamic way of life. They and their children and their later
generations followed the teachings of Islam as propounded by Prophet
Adam (peace be upon him) for quite a long period of time. It was only
later on that certain people began disobeying Allah. Some of them began
worshipping other gods of their own making, some of them regarded
themselves as gods, while a few others even declared their freedom to do
as they pleased--defying God's orders. This is how kufr (disbelief) came
into being. Its essence lies in refusal to worship God--pursuing the
path of defiance to the Creator.
When kufr (disbelief) began to increase and
multiply it affected the life of society in a number of ways.
Exploitation, oppression, viciousness and immorality emerged in
different forms. Life became intolerable. Allah then appointed some
righteous people to preach the Message of Truth among the wrongdoers,
invite them to the Right Path and convert them to God-fearing
people--worshipping and obeying God Alone. In short, they were asked to
perform a mission--to make people righteous and true Muslims. These
noble people entrusted with this great mission were called Prophets or
Messengers of Allah. Allah sent these Prophets to different nations and
countries. All of them were honest, truthful, and people of noble
character. All of them preached the same religion--Islam. To mention a
few names--Noah, Abraham, Moses and Jesus. All of them were the Prophets
of God and thousands of them were, over the centuries, sent into the
world to guide mankind.
In the history of the last few thousand years,
one can see the recurrent arrival of Prophets whenever kufr(disbelief)
increased and assumed menacing proportions. The prophets tried to stop
the tide of disbelief and invited people towards Islam. Some people
adopted the Islamic way of life, but others rejected it. The people who
followed the Prophets became Muslims and, after learning higher ethical
and moral disciplines from them, began to preach and spread nobility and
goodness. Having forgotten the teachings of Islam, later generations of
Muslims themselves gradually sank into disbelief. Whenever such a
situation arose, God sent a Prophet or Messenger to revive Islam. This
continual arrival of Messengers of God continued for thousands of years.
In the course of those long years, Islam was revived by those Prophets,
who restated the Message forgotten by their people. At long last God
sent the Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) who revived Islam in such
an outstanding fashion that it still exists today and will continue to
exist (God willing), till eternity.
The Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) was
born in 571 C.E. in the now famous city of Arabia called Makkah. Islam
had no following in Arabia at that time nor did it have any following
anywhere else in the world. Although the traces of teachings of the
earlier Prophets could be found among a few pious people who tried to
worship one and only one God and live a life of obedience to Him, the
true religion of God was lost in a maze of paganism and pantheism. The
pure worship of God, unadulterated by shirk (worship of false gods), was
nowhere to be found. Moral values had lost their grip and people were
indulging in all sorts of lax behavior and wickedness. Such was the
situation in Arabia as also in the whole world at the close of the sixth
century when God decided to send the Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon
him) as His last Messenger. He spent forty years of his life as a
patient observer in the city of Makkah. Everyone respected him for his
noble qualities of head and heart. But they were not aware that this man
was destined to become the world's greatest leader.
During the early years of his life, the Prophet
Muhammad (peace be upon him) felt very much grieved to see the gross
immorality of the world of his time. There was exploitation of man by
man. There was injustice and tyranny. He was grieved and anxious, but
was somewhat silent as he, too, was unable to devise a remedy for the
ailing humanity of the day. At long last, God chose him as His
Messenger. When he attained the age of forty, God entrusted him with the
Mission of spreading Islam, the true religion of God, the religion of
peace and justice, by means of the Revelations which we now know as the
Quran.
Having been appointed as the Messenger of God,
the Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) started to communicate God's
Message to his people in Makkah. He began by inviting them to worship
none but God--their sole Creator and Master. People in general opposed
him and tried to prevent him from spreading Islam. He, however,
continued his work with unflinching determination and dedication. As a
result, many honest people gathered round him. They became his staunch
supporters. The teachings of the Messenger of God spread slowly but
surely outside his native Makkah to Arabia at large. Those who had a
reputation for honesty and moral excellence began to accept the Faith,
while opposition to them came from many ignorant people and vicious
quarters. This continued for thirteen years. There was a gradual
breaking of new ground. Islam was gaining a following all over Arabia.
This is one side of the story. On the other hand, the defenders of the
old order, people with vested interests and steeped in ignorant customs
were hardening their opposition to Islam. Whenever new converts to Islam
were presented, they were abused, humiliated, beaten, tortured, expelled
and even put to death. Nevertheless, they remained firm and steadfast.
At last the Makkah elders devised a plot to assassinate the Messenger of
God in order to nip the Islamic movement in the bud. When affairs
reached that pitiful state, God ordered His Messenger to leave Makkah
and migrate to Madinah.
Having learned that the Prophet was planning to
migrate from Makkah, its leaders expedited their plans to murder him on
his journey outward. However, their disgraceful conspiracy could not
succeed. The Prophet arrived at Madinah safe and sound. This is the most
famous migration (hijrah) in the history of Islam. The Muslim calendar
begins from that day, the years being numbered "After Hijrah"
(A.H.).
Madinah, a city some 450 kilometers from Makkah,
was growing as a centre for Islam. A number of people had already been
converted to the new faith. Islamic teachings were winning new
supporters every day. Leaders of the two major tribes of Madinah had
accepted Islam and were ready to sacrifice their lives and property for
the cause of Islam. At this point, the Prophet started planning to move
to Madinah.
As soon as the Prophet settled in Madinah, the
new Muslims started to flock into the city from the four corners of
Arabia. This further strengthened the new centre. Islam was no longer a
persecuted religion; it was able to obtain a firm foothold and was
provided with the historic opportunity to establish an Islamic State and
society. This constitutes the most important development of the post-Hijrah
period. The leaders of Makkah, the defenders of the old order, did not
miss the significance of this change. They realised that a new model was
being set up, which would be a challenge to the way they were running
their society. This caused great anxiety amongst them. They decided to
crush this rising force while it was still in its infancy. For they
believed that it would be easy to crush the Muslims while they were few
and far between and lacked a centralized power. Now things were
changing. Muslims were concentrating at one place and organizing a new
society with its own government. The prospects of annihilating such a
state, once it was firmly entrenched, looked remote to them. The
unbelievers feared that if the Muslims were allowed to gain momentum
they would become a great power. Consequently they hurried to band
themselves together with a view to eradicating the embryonic Islamic
government at Madinah. The Makkah leaders lost no time in issuing a
clarion call to their kith and kin and to all supporters of the old
order in neighboring towns and all over Arabia to rally round them to
form a force which could crush the Muslims. They formed a band of
cavalry which invaded Madinah and its environs time and again with all
their military might. They, however, could not defeat the Prophet and
his loyal supporters. In spite of all efforts on the part of the
unbelievers, Islam continued to spread in Arabia. The good, honest folk
continued to forsake kufr (disbelief) and come into the fold of Islam.
Eventually, Islam gained a crowning success when
the Prophet entered victoriously into Makkah--once the stronghold of
kufr. This all happened within eight years of the establishment of the
Islamic State of Madinah. No sooner had Makkah submitted to the Islamic
forces than the remaining hostile groups of unbelievers of Arabia began
to surrender. Within the next year, the whole of Arabia accepted Islam
and the Muslims established a powerful government over an area
consisting of some twelve hundred thousand square miles.
Arabia had the most singular government of the
time, based as it was on the principle of the sovereignty of God and the
vicegerency (Khilafah) of man. The law of the land was Islamic. The
administration of the state lay in the hands of the honest and pious
people. The country had no trace of violence, oppression, injustice or
immorality. Peace, justice, truth and honesty reigned supreme
everywhere. Many of the people of the country had come to possess the
highest moral attributes because they were honest in worshipping God and
obeying Him.
The Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) changed
the character of Arabian life in a short period of only twenty-three
years. He instilled in the people a spirit that helped to serve the
cause of Islam. They set out with the great mission of spreading Islam
throughout the whole world. The Prophet passed away at the age of
sixty-three, after completing the greatest mission of all time.
The Companions of the Prophet took up the
mission of the Prophet after his death. They traveled to distant lands
to spread the Islamic teachings. They succeeded wherever they went.
Obstacles that stood in their way in spreading Islam were all
surmounted. Islam became so strong in such a short while that no one
dared try to stop its growth. The Muslims were spread out from India to
Spain. They changed the face of the globe. The entire population of the
countries they visited were so much impressed by their good example and
noble behavior that they began to enter quickly into the fold of Islam.
Wherever the Muslims went, they took their highest moral attributes with
them--so much so that immorality and injustice dissolved in their
presence. They transformed Godless people into God-conscious people and
gave them the Light of Knowledge and strength of character. They changed
their way of life so that virtue and goodness could prevail. The entire
social climate was reformed and remoulded. The hands of the oppressors
were held and a reign of justice and fair play established. This was the
greatest achievement in the history of mankind.
The Companions of the Prophet rendered yet
another great service to mankind. This consisted in memorising the Quran
and preserving it in its original form as it was revealed to the
Prophet. They wrote down the Quran word for word and did not miss even a
mark in its Arabic orthography. Today, we are most fortunate in having
the Quran exactly as it was revealed to the Prophet, written and read in
the same language and in the same diction as it was written and read in
the time of the Prophet--about 1,400 years ago.
Another important aspect of their work was to
preserve and communicate to posterity the most detailed account of the
Prophet's life, speeches, instructions, commands, morals and behaviour.
These accounts by the Prophet's Companions are grouped together under
the all-embracing title of the Sunnah of Hadith (Traditions of the
Prophet). This is the greatest record ever preserved about the life and
activities of a man and is a great blessing to every generation. For
even after a lapse of 1,400 years after the Prophet's death, people can
still see and hear his teachings as the Companions of the Prophet saw
and heard them during his lifetime. Now anybody can approach hadith
literature and find out the Islamic point of view on any subject. He can
learn how to become obedient to God and what type of man is liked by
God.
The Quran and the Hadith are things of greatest
importance to a Muslim. With their preservation and security (God has
promised to secure and preserve them), Islam is protected for all time
to come. In the days before the Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him),
Islam was forgotten again and again after being revived, owing to lack
of the necessary care regarding the preservation and security of the
earlier Revealed Books and the details of the lives of their Prophets.
This was the reason why, after every Prophet, generations following
forgot the real teachings and drifted towards a life devoid of good
morals and norms of behavior. But Islam, as revived by the Prophet
Muhammad, is bound to last for ever because the Book of God and the
traditions of the Prophet are both secure and preserved in their
original purity.
The Islamic way of life can be revived and
reconstructed again and again with the help of the Quran and the
traditions if ever, God forbid, the freshness of its true spirit wanes.
The world no longer requires any new Prophet to revive Islam to its
pristine glory. It is enough to have among us the learned people who
know the Quran and the traditions of the Prophet and who are able to
apply their teachings to their own lives and stimulate others to adopt
and apply them in their lives as well. This is how the stream of Islam
will continue to flow, refreshing the eternal thirst of mankind.
|