Muhammad’s
Biography (Part 10 of 12): The Treaty of Hudaibiyyah
Description: The hidden victory of a non-aggression treaty between the
Muslims and the Meccans.
Punishment of Bani Quraidhah
Nothing is worse, in Arab eyes, than the betrayal of trust and the
breaking of a solemn pledge. It was time now to deal with Bani Quraidhah. On
the day of the return from the trench the Prophet ordered war on the
treacherous Bani Quraidhah, who,
conscious of their guilt, had already taken to their towers of refuge. After
a siege of nearly a month they had to surrender unconditionally. They only begged that they might be judged
by a member of the Arab tribe of which they were adherents. They chose the head
of the clan with which they had long been in alliance, Sa’d ibn Mu’ādh of
Aws, who was dying from wounds received at Uhud and had to be propped up to
give judgment. Without hesitation, he
condemned the men of the tribe to death.
Hudaibiyyah
In the same year the Prophet had a vision in which he found himself
entering Mecca unopposed, therefore he determined to attempt the
pilgrimage. Besides a number of
Muslims from Medina, he called upon the friendly Arabs to accompany him,
whose numbers had increased since the miraculous discomfiture of the clans at
the Battle of the Ditch, but most of them did not respond. Attired as
pilgrims, and taking with them the customary offerings, a company of fourteen
hundred men journeyed to Mecca. As they drew near the valley they were met by
a friend from the city, who warned the Prophet that the Quraish had had sworn
to prevent his entering the sanctuary; their cavalry was on the road before
him. On that, the Prophet ordered a detour through mountain gorges, so the Muslims
were tired out when they came down at last into the valley of Mecca and
encamped at a spot called Hudaybiyyah; from thence he tried to open
negotiations with the Quraish, to explain that he came only as a pilgrim. The
first messenger he sent towards the city was maltreated and his camel
hamstrung. He returned without
delivering his message. The Quraish,
on their side, sent an envoy who was threatening in tone, and very arrogant.
Another of their envoys was too familiar in the way he spoke to the Prophet,
and had to be reminded sternly of the respect due to him. It was he who consequently said, on his
return to the city of Mecca: “I have seen Caesar and Chosroes in their pomp,
but never have I seen a man honored as Muhammad is honored by his comrades.”
The Prophet sought to send some messenger who would impose
respect. Uthman was finally chosen
because of his kinship with the powerful Umayyad family. While the Muslims
were awaiting his return the news came that he had been murdered. It was then that the Prophet, sitting under
a tree in Hudaybiyyah, took an oath from all his comrades that they would
stand or fall together. After a while,
however, it became known that Uthman had not been murdered. Then a troop that
came out from the city to molest the Muslims in their camp was captured
before they could do any hurt and brought before the Prophet, who forgave
them on their promise to renounce hostility.
Truce of Hudaibiyyah
Eventually proper envoys came from the Quraish. After some negotiation,
the truce of Hudaybiyyah was signed. It stipulated that for ten years there
were to be no hostilities between the parties. The Prophet was to return to
Medina without visiting the Kaaba, but he would be able to perform the
pilgrimage with his comrades in the following year.The Quraish promised they
would evacuate Mecca to allow him to do so. Deserters from the Quraish to the Muslims during the period of the
truce were to be returned; not so deserters from the Muslims to the Quraish. Any
tribe or clan who wished to share in the treaty as allies of the Prophet
might do so, and any tribe or clan who wished to share in the treaty as allies
of the Quraish might do so. There was dismay among the Muslims at these
terms. They asked one another: “Where is the victory that we were promised?”
It was during the return journey from Hudaybiyyah that the surah entitled
“Victory” was revealed. This truce proved, in fact, to be the greatest
victory that the Muslims had till then achieved. War had been a barrier between them and the
idolaters, but now both parties met and talked together, and the new religion
spread more rapidly. In the two years which elapsed between the signing of
the truce and the fall of Mecca the number of converts was greater than the
total number of all previous converts. The Prophet traveled to Hudaybiyyah with
1400 men. Two years later, when the Meccans broke the truce, he marched
against them with an army of 10,000.
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