The Miraculous Quran (part 3): From Savages to Saints
Description: The Quran’s Effect on the Generation of the Prophet and Afterwards.
By Jamaal al-Din Zarabozo (© 2007 IslamReligion.com)
Published on 09 Apr 2007 - Last modified on 01 Apr 2008
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Category: Articles > Evidence Islam is Truth > The Authenticity
and Preservation of the Holy Quran
Category: Articles > The Holy Quran > The Authenticity and
Preservation of the Holy Quran
The next aspect that caught me eye—and this again was something that
non-Muslims were mentioning in their works—was the effect that the Quran
had on the generation of the Prophet. May the mercy and blessings of
God be upon him, and afterwards.
It is clear that the Arabs at the time of the Prophet were wont to
drink, make merry and engage in tribal battles. They were known to
sometimes kill their female babies. However, one finds that in a short
span of close to twenty years a movement that started with just one man
was able, due to the grace of God and the miraculous effect of the
Quran, to change almost all of the Arabs and non-Arabs in the Arabian
peninsula and bind them together into a brotherhood of faith and mercy
which was so strong that if any one part of this brotherhood was in
anguish, the whole brotherhood would be affected negatively. At that
time, one could find two people who were from previously antagonistic
tribes sharing their wealth and willing to give up their lives for each
other. Indeed, one was willing to split half of his wealth and divorce
one of his wives for the sake of his new brother who was from a
“foreign” tribe.
Perhaps one of the best descriptions of the change that took place among
the Muslims can be seen in the famous statement of the Companion Jafar
ibn Abu Talib who was asked by the Negus of Abyssinia about the mission
of the Messenger. He told him,
O king, we were an ignorant people, worshipping idols, eating carrion
and indulging in sexual pleasures. We ridiculed our neighbors, a brother
oppressed his brother, and the strong devoured the weak. At this time a
man rose among us, who had already been known to be truthful, noble and
honest. This man called us to Islam. And he taught us to give up
worshipping stones, to speak the truth, to refrain from bloodshed, and
not to defraud the orphans of their property. He taught us to provide
comfort to our neighbors and not to bring a slander against chaste
women. He enjoined upon us to offer prayers, observe fasts and give
alms. We followed him, gave up polytheism and idolatry and refrained
from all evil deeds. It is for this new way that our people have become
hostile to us and compel us to return to our old misguided life.[1]
That generation, in turn, took the message to the rest of the world.
They were clearly a people who were taken from darkness into light and
to the straight path of God. When asked by the Emperor of Persia what
brought the Muslims to their lands, two different Companions answered in
similar terms: “God has sent us to take whoever wishes from the
servitude of mankind to the servitude of God and from the tightness of
this world to its expanse and from the injustice of the ways of life [in
this world] to the justice of Islam.”[2]
During the lifetime of the Prophet, may the mercy and blessings of God
be upon him, one can see how these people were turned into a pious
generation, fearing God and hoping for God’s reward. Even when they, as
humans, slipped and committed sins, they eagerly repented and turned to
God for His forgiveness. They would much rather face a severe penalty in
this life, such as death, than face God with their sins on their hands.
This can be seen in the cases of Maaiz ibn Maalik al-Aslami and the
woman called al-Ghaamidiyah. Both of them came to the Prophet to admit
that they had committed adultery and each asked the Prophet for the
worldly retribution to erase their sins. In the case of al-Ghaamidiyah,
the Prophet asked her to go back after her confession and to return to
the Prophet after she had given birth. She came back with her child in
her arms and asked the Prophet to purify her from her sins. The Prophet
then asked her to return after she had weaned the child. Then she
returned after some time and told the Prophet that the child was no
longer in need of her breastfeeding. She once again asked for her
expiation from her sin. Then, finally, the Prophet implemented the legal
retribution as an expiation for her sin of adultery. The Prophet then
praised her act of repentance.[3]
The effect of this change in the Companions continued long after the
death of the Prophet. Note the following accounts of the Companions as
they sought to spread the message of Islam to the rest of the world:
The sterling character and qualities of the Muslim soldiers were once
praised by a Roman officer in these words: “At night you will find them
prayerful; during the day you will find them fasting. They keep their
promises, order good deeds, suppress evil and maintain complete equality
among themselves.”
Another testified thus: “They are horsemen by day and ascetics by night.
They pay for what they eat in territories under their occupation. They
are first to salute when they arrive at a place and are valiant fighters
who just wipe out the enemy.”
A third said: “During the night it seems that they do not belong to this
world and have no other business than to pray, and during the day, when
one sees them mounted on their horses, one feels that they have been
doing nothing else all their lives. They are great archers and great
lancers, yet they are so devoutly religious and remember God so much and
so often that one can hardly hear talk about anything else in their
company.”[4]
The benefits of the civilization developed upon the teachings of the
Quran went well beyond the Muslim lands. Many are familiar with the
Muslims’ influence on Europe and how Islamic influences eventually led
to the Renaissance. The author of A History of the Intellectual
Development of Europe, John Draper wrote, “Four years after the death of
Justinian, A.D. 569, was born at Mecca, in Arabia, the man who, of all
men, has exercised the greatest influence upon the human race.”[5] This
work was quite an eye opener for me at the time of my conversion to
Islam. Draper, writing in the 19th century, was very disappointed and
seemingly angered that Muslims continually failed to receive their
proper accolades for all that they contributed to European society and
civilization. For instance, he writes "To these Saracens we are indebted
for many of our personal comforts. Religiously cleanly, it was not
possible for them to clothe, according to the fashion of the natives of
Europe, in a garment unchanged till it dropped to pieces of itself, a
loathsome mass of vermin, stench and rags... They taught us the use of
the oft-changed and oft-washed under-garment of linen and cotton, which
still passes among ladies under its old Arabic name...”[6]
Many scholars have recognized the importance of Islam and the Quran’s
teachings for the betterment of humanity. The famous intellect George
Bernard Shaw once stated,
“I have always held the religion of Muhammad in high estimation because
of its wonderful vitality… I have prophecied about the faith of Muhammad
that it would be acceptable tomorrow as it is beginning to be
acceptable to the Europe of today. Mediaeval ecclesiastics, either
through ignorance or bigotry, painted Muhammadanism in the darkest
colours. They were, in fact, trained to hate both the man Muhammad and
his religion. To them Muhammad was anti-Christ. I have studied him, the
wonderful man, and in my opinion far from being an anti-Christ he must
be called the saviour of Humanity.[7]
Footnotes:
[1]The translation of this statement was taken from Allama Shibli
Numani, Sirat-un-Nabi (Lahore, Pakistan: Kazi Publications, 1979), p.
211. The incident was recorded by ibn Ishaq in al-Maghazi and Ahmad. And
its chain is sahih according to al-Albaani. See al-Albaani's footnotes
to Muhammad al-Ghazaali, Fiqh al-Seera (Qatar: Idaarah Ihyaa al-Turaath
al-Islaami, n.d.), p. 126.
[2]Ismaaeel ibn Katheer, Al-Bidaayah wa al-Nihaayah (Beirut: Dar
al-Kutub al-Ilmiyya, n.d.), vol. 7, pp. 39-40.
[3]The story of both Maaiz and al-Ghaamidiyyah are recorded by Muslim.
[4]Quoted from Abul Hasan Ali Nadwi, Islam and the World (International
Islamic Federation of Student Organizations, 1983), p. 81. Also see ibn
Katheer, al-Bidaayah, vol. 7, p. 53.
[5] Quoted in Islam—The First and Final Religion, p. 39. Of course, more
recently, Michael H. Hart’s The 100: A Ranking of the Most Influential
Persons in History put the Prophet Muhammad r number one among all the
world’s influential leaders.
[6] Draper’s work is not available to me at the current time. Therefore,
this quote was taken from Aslam Munjee, The Crusades: Then and Now
(Arlington, VA: First Amendment Publishers, 2004), p. 3.
[7] “A Collection of Writings of Some of the Eminent Scholars,”
published by the Woking Muslim Mission, 1935 edition, p. 77. Quoted in
Islam: The First & Final Religion (Karachi, Pakistan: Begum Aisha
Bawany Waqf, 1978), p. 57. In reality, many non-Muslim, Western thinkers
have had words of great praise for the religion of Islam, the Prophet
Muhammad (peace and blessings of God be upon him) or the Quran. The work
just cited compiles numerous such quotes and is interesting reading.
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