Migration
to Abyssinia
The Abyssinia migration comprises a very important focal point in the Prophet’s politics of apostleship during the Mecca period. This migration was only made to escape the torture of the Mecca’s..In particular, the first migrants were members of prominent Quraish families and people who would perform important functions in Islamic history in later years. However much it is known that Abyssinia immigrants returned when they learned that the Meccans had accepted Islam, It might have been thought that when conditions changed in Mecca, the base in Abyssinia could be abandoned and activities could be continued in Mecca. In addition, the Prophet’s intention to make a new evaluation of the situation could have been a part of this return to Mecca. The emigrants to Abyssinia stayed there until it became apparent that Medina could be a base and a center for immigration. Some of them came to Medina in the first years of the migration, and some remained in Abyssinia until year 7 of the Hijrah (migration) or, in other words, until the Jewish problem in Medina was resolved and the Hudaybiyah peace was signed. Again, this was not a place of escape from Abyssinian oppression and it shows that the Prophet wanted to keep some of the Companions there until the situation in Mecca was stabilized. In this case we can say that Abyssinia was first tried as a base and then kept as a precautionary center after the Hijrah to use if needed.
The Abyssinia migration comprises a very important focal point in the Prophet’s politics of apostleship during the Mecca period. This migration was only made to escape the torture of the Mecca’s..In particular, the first migrants were members of prominent Quraish families and people who would perform important functions in Islamic history in later years. However much it is known that Abyssinia immigrants returned when they learned that the Meccans had accepted Islam, It might have been thought that when conditions changed in Mecca, the base in Abyssinia could be abandoned and activities could be continued in Mecca. In addition, the Prophet’s intention to make a new evaluation of the situation could have been a part of this return to Mecca. The emigrants to Abyssinia stayed there until it became apparent that Medina could be a base and a center for immigration. Some of them came to Medina in the first years of the migration, and some remained in Abyssinia until year 7 of the Hijrah (migration) or, in other words, until the Jewish problem in Medina was resolved and the Hudaybiyah peace was signed. Again, this was not a place of escape from Abyssinian oppression and it shows that the Prophet wanted to keep some of the Companions there until the situation in Mecca was stabilized. In this case we can say that Abyssinia was first tried as a base and then kept as a precautionary center after the Hijrah to use if needed.
Aqaba Oaths of Allegiance
In Medina Arabs lived
together with Jews. The two Arabic tribes of the city, the Avs and the Hazrach,
constantly fought with one another. In order to prevent these two tribes from
joining forces against them, the Jews constantly fanned the animosity between
them and gained great profits from the trade they made as a consequence. The
Jews constantly told the Arabs that a prophet was going to come to them who
would destroy the pagans. Under the influence of the Jews, the Medina Arabs
were also waiting for a prophet. Going to Mecca to get support from the Quraish
against the Hazrech, Iyas Muaz met with the Prophet and became a Muslim. He was
the first Muslim from Medina. Those from Medina knew about the call to Islam
from the first days of the mission. In addition, the Prophet’s grandfather
Hashim had married a woman from the Nejjar clan of Medina named Selma bint Amr.
She gave birth to Abdulmuttalib. For this reason, the Prophet had relatives in
Medina. He also had some friends and acquaintances in Medina from the time he was
busy with caravan trade. In other words, the people of Medina knew Prophet
Muhammad well. In the Buas battles between the Avs and Hazrach tribes they gave
each other heavy losses. They finally found the hostility between them to be
meaningless. Both sides had begun to think of uniting under a leader they could
follow. This search for a leader played a facilitating role to an important
degree in the future foundation of the Medina Government with the Prophet as
head of state.
While these conditions
continued in Medina, a group from the Hazrech tribe going to Mecca for the
pilgrimage heard the Prophet’s call to Islam. As he did every year at the
pilgrimage, Prophet Muhammad invited all the tribes from the vicinity to Islam.
When those from Medina listened to the Prophet, they said, “This is the prophet
the Jews have foretold. Let’s submit to him before they do.” These people were
six in number. When they returned to Medina, they explained Islam to the
people.
The next year twelve
Muslims from Medina secretly met with the Prophet at a place called Aqaba near
Mecca. The Prophet received an oath from them in regard to not practicing
polytheism, committing fornication, killing their children, making slander and
rebelling against legally approved issues in Islam. He indicated that if they
conformed to these, they would enter heaven. Mus’ab b. Umayr’i was sent after
them to spread Islam in Medina. Islam received so much interest in Medina that
in a short time there at least one person in every household became Muslim,
with the exception of a few houses.
Called the First Aqaba
Oath, the above oath has the character of an agreement on Islam’s creed and
basic principles with the Muslims of Medina, which was determined to be a
center for Islam. With this oath, the Prophet registered the new religion’s
ideology. In other words, this oath had the character of a declaration putting
forth the principles of the state that was being planned. The seeds of the
foundation of faith of an individual Islamic state were planted in the hearts
of these twelve people. The activities at this new center bore fruit in a short
period of time: in the pilgrimage season a year later the Prophet received an
oath from seventy-three new Muslims from Medina. These seventy-three people
meeting secretly with the Prophet without the knowledge of the pagans in the
Medina convoy shows that the convoy was composed of those who could keep
secrets, and the selection of twelve prominent representatives during the
oath-making shows that representational oath was taken from those in Medina.
Mus’ab b. Umayr’s being at their head makes one think that the convoy did not
come to Mecca simply for the pilgrimage, but for an organized meeting. With
this second agreement with local Muslims from the new Islamic base, a promise
is taken from them that they will protect Islam and Muslims against every kind
of danger. It indicates that they will have great responsibility for the
Islamic state that is to be established, and it reminds them that they have
taken great risks upon themselves with this agreement.
Even though the Aqaba
oaths do not have the nature of an agreement made by a state that has gained an
individual and official status with another state, matters like the terms used
in the oaths and representatives giving allegiance on behalf of groups they
represent show that the oath carries a character of an agreement and alliance.
At that time in the Arabian Peninsula as a requirement of social status, tribes
comprised individual political units and an agreement could only be made among
tribes. Therefore, this oath was not just an Islamic initiation ceremony.
It is interesting in
respect to the role the Aqaba oaths played in the institutionalization of Islam
that immediately after this event, Surat al-Hajj, verse 39 of the Quran was
revealed giving permission to Muslims for war. With this verse, the message was
given to Muslims to complete their other organization that would enable them to
immediately take the pagans to account. As a matter of fact, the Prophet had
commanded the Muslims in Mecca to immigrate to Medina as soon as the jihad
verses were revealed. It can be said that preparations for the Muslims’ first
jihad, the Battle of Badr, began with this oath.
The importance of the
migration in regard to tactic and strategy is a subject that needs to be taken
up on its own. This much can be said: the Islamic community, which had been
bound under the rule of the Quraish, who dominated the religious, cultural and
economic aspects of the Arabian Peninsula, found a solid base to stand on and
obtained their freedom. We can understand the strategic importance of the
migration from the extremely strong reaction the Meccan pagans gave.
Medina Constitution
After the Hijrah, the
biggest problem the Prophet faced was establishing unity in the cosmopolitan
Medina society. It was necessary to put out of the way any potential danger
from within Medina while struggling with the Quraish. In order to open up
flanks, the center should not be problematical. Consolidating unity among
Muslims by making the Ansar (residents of Medina) and Muhajirun (immigrants to
Medina) brothers to one another, the Prophet documented brotherhood with a
written text. It would only be possible to unite with Jews and non-Muslim Arabs
on common interests of people from Medina. As a result of negotiations, a text
emerged that put forth the rights and responsibilities of each group. This text
is referred to under the heading in classical sirah of “agreements made in Medina.” Compilers of the last period accept this as the “first constitution in world and Islamic
history.”
Uniting all the groups
in Medina under his rule at their own will, the Prophet recorded one more of
important and successful turning points of politics. The statement at the top
of the document, “The Quraish and Yathrib (Medina) believers and those in
allegiance to them constitute a community separate from other people,” is very
striking. When passages are classified under topics, this document includes
around fifty articles. It sets rules for many matters that are included in
modern constitutions like state integrity; structure; organs; who is
responsible for the administration, the judiciary, and legislation; belief and
religious freedom; the sovereignty of law; the concept of country; relations
between individuals and administration; and rights and responsibilities.
The rules of the
Constitution that revolved around common interests of the citizens of Medina
can be summarized as follows: Except for religious wars, an attack made on one
of the parties will be mutually defended; economic responsibilities like paying
ransom and compensation will be met mutually; the ties of one party will be
binding on the others; most importantly, no party can cooperate with the
Quraish for any reason. Thus, during the struggle against the Quraish and in
the midst of the activities to spread Islam, treachery and dissention from the
non-Muslims in Medina were prevented; the roads to friendship between the
Quraish and parties in Medina were closed; and an opportunity was born for
non-Muslims in Medina, who were allies with Muslims in the new Islamic state
and who lived intimately with them, to get to know Islam first-hand and through
living examples.
Alliance Agreements
Establishing security
and unity in Medina and getting acceptance of his sovereignty, Prophet Muhammad
began political relations with tribes outside of Medina. He made agreements
with surrounding tribes via detachments of troops or delegations he sent to
them.
In the second year of
the migration he made agreements with the following tribes between Medina and
Mecca: Banu Damra, a three days distance from Medina, and their branch, Banu Gifar; several weeks later with the Banu Juhaynaliving
in Buvat; and four months later the Banu Mudlich living in Zulushayra.
At the end of the same year an agreement was made with the Ashlam Tribe. Similar expressions are used in all these agreements: they
guarantee that the parties will not attack each other, and that they will
remain neutral or when one of the parties is attacked, they will help each
other.
With these agreements,
the Prophet made agreement with these tribes before the Quraish did, prevented
opportunistic attacks from their neighbors, and secured his surroundings while
struggling with the Quraish. Beyond all these, with the agreements, the caravan
route of the Quraish was put under control and blockade since the above named
tribes were all located on the caravan route.
Shortly after the
migration, the tribes on the roads going north to the coast from Mecca had
become Muslim or allies of Muslims.
This economic war the
Prophet waged against the Quraish was supported with another tactic. He sent
five-hundred pieces of gold to Mecca, which was suffering from famine because
they could not send caravans, and had it distributed to the poor, aimed at
gaining the sympathy of the people.
The Prophet announcing
the Huzaa Tribe as an ally of the Muslims as a result of the Hudaybiyah peace
was another part of his policy to put the Quraish under blockade. This tribe
was close to Mecca. There is a letter of friendship of the Prophet’s showing
the cooperation between them. He would get secret information from members of
this tribe regarding the Quraish.
Hudaybiyah Peace
While, on the one
hand, exhausting his strength for struggle by putting the Quraish under
blockade, on the other hand, the Prophet was seeking an opportunity to sign a
peace with them. By means of this peace he would be able to realize some plans
easily. As a matter of fact, the Jews were about to be a big danger for Medina.
The Haybar Jews were trying to ally with the Fadak Jews by giving them Haybar’s
dates. Without resolving the Jewish matter, Muslims could be hit from behind by
the Jews while at war with the Quraish or, while at war with the Jews, they
could be hit from behind by the Quraish. As a matter of fact, the treachery of
the Banu Qurayza Jews in the Battle of the Ditch had caused the Muslims some
major difficulty. In addition, in case of a peace to be made with the Quraish,
power could be gained in regions like Bahrain, Amman and Yemen, which were
under the control of Iran who had been defeated by the Byzantines. It would be
easier to spread Islam in an environment of peace.
In the 6th year of the
Hijrah the Prophet headed off with 1400 Companions for the purpose of visiting
the Kaaba. It can be thought that, by taking advantage of amnesty during this
month when war was forbidden, there was an aim to make a dialogue with the
Quraish with this trip. The Prophet had announced that he would make an
agreement with the Quraish regardless of the conditions, and he informed the
Quraish of this decision. Actually, the Quraish who had become greatly weakened
economically were in favor of this peace. After long negotiations the agreement
was signed.
Although at first
glance some rules of the agreement may appear to be against the Muslims,
actually it was a great conquest. The farsightedness of the Prophet’s
insistence upon signing this agreement in spite of all the resistance from the
Companions was understood later. As a matter of fact, while returning to Medina
after signing this agreement, Surat Al-Fath was revealed and Allah announced
that this peace was a clear victory.
Zuhri explains clearly
why the Hudaybiyah peace was a conquest: “There could be no greater conquest than this in Islam.
Previously people (pagans and believers) would fight when they came face to
face. When peace was signed, war was left aside and people were sure of each
other. When they met face to face, they talked and debated. Some became Muslim
when Islam was explained to them. Within two years after this peace, the number
of new Muslims was greater than the previous number of Muslims.”
With this agreement,
the Quraish accepted the Islamic state as a party and officially recognized it.
More than that, they showed their weakness by signing the peace and they
indicated that they were abandoning struggle. For this reason, the authority
among the Arabs was completely shaken and Muslims began to assume the
authority. This event elevated Muslims in the eyes of all Arabs. After this
they began to enter Islam in large groups. Also during this period of peace,
the Prophet, sending letters of invitation to all rulers and administrators he
could reach with the means of that time, conveyed Islam’s message to very
distant places. The Jewish presence in Medina was eradicated at this time. Also
the abrogation of this peace by the Quraish gave a legitimate necessity for the
Meccan conquest. Islam’s sovereignty was completed in Arabia with this conquest.
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