Muhammad’s
Biography (Part 8 of 12): The Campaign of Badr
Description: One of the most decisive battles in human history changed
the political balance of the Arabian Peninsula.
The Campaign of Badr
On one expedition, the Quraishite caravan on route to Syria had escaped
the Muslims. The Muslims were in wait for its return. Some scouts of the
Muslims saw the caravan, led by Abu Sufyan himself, pass by them, and
hurriedly informed the Prophet of it and its size. If this caravan were
intercepted, it would have an economic impact of great measure, one which
would shake the entire society of the Meccans. The Muslim scouts reported
that the caravan would be halting at the wells of Badr, and the Muslims now
prepared themselves to intercept it.
News of these preparations reached Abu Sufyan on his southward journey,
and he sent an urgent message to Mecca that an army should be dispatched to
deal with the Muslims. Grasping the
catastrophic consequences if the caravan were intercepted, they immediately
rounded as much power as possible and departed to encounter the Muslims. On
way to Badr, the army received news that Abu Sufyan managed to escape the
Muslims by driving the caravan to an alternative route along the seashore. The
Meccan army, numbering about a thousand men, persisted to Badr in order to
teach a lesson to the Muslims, dissuading them from attacking any caravans in
the future.
When the Muslims came to know of the advance of the Meccan army, they knew
that a daring step must be taken in the matter. If the Muslims did not
encounter them at Badr, the Meccans would continue undermine the cause of
Islam with all their ability, possibly even proceeding to Medina desecrating
lives property and wealth there. The
Prophet, may the blessing and mercy of God be upon him, held and advisory
meeting to determine the course of action.
The Prophet did not want to lead the Muslims, especially the Helpers
who were the far majority of the army and were not even bound by the Pledge
of Aqaba to fight beyond their territories, into something they did not agree
to.
A man from the Helpers, Sa’d ibn Mu’aadh stood reaffirmed their
devotion to the Prophet and the cause of Islam. From his words were the
following:
“O Prophet God! We believe in you and we bear witness to what you have
vouchsafed to us, and we declare in unequivocal terms that what you have
brought is the Truth. We give you our firm pledge of obedience and
sacrifice. We obey you most willingly
in whatever you command us, and by God Who has sent you with the Truth, if
you were to ask us to plunge into the sea, we will do that most readily, and
not a man of us will stay behind. We do not grudge the idea of encounter with
the enemy. We are experienced in war and we are trustworthy in combat. We
hope that God will show you through our hands those deeds of valor which will
please your eyes. Kindly lead us to
the battlefield in the Name of God.
After this show of extreme support and love for the Prophet and Islam
by both the Emigrants and the Helpers, the Muslims, numbering a little over
300, made their way as best they could to Badr. They had only seventy camels and three
horses between them, so the men rode by turns. They went forward to what is
known in history as al- Yawm al-Furqan, the Day of Discrimination;
discrimination between light and darkness, good and evil, right and wrong.
Preceding the Day of the battle, the Prophet spent the whole night in
prayer and supplication. The battle
was fought on 17 Ramadan in the second year of the Hijra; 624 C.E. It was
customary for the Arabs to start the battles with individual duels. The Muslims gained an advantage in the
duels, and some notaries of the Quraish had been killed. The Quraish enraged, the fell upon the
Muslims in order to exterminate them once and for all. The Muslims kept a strategic defensive
position, which in turn produced heavy losses for the Meccans. The Prophet
was beseeching His Lord with all his might by this time, extending his hands
so high that his cloak fell off his shoulders. At that point, he received a
revelation promising of the help of God:
“…I will help you with a thousand of the angels one behind another in
succession.” (Quran 8:9)
Upon hearing the good news, the
Prophet ordered the Muslims took an offensive. The great army of Quraish was overwhelmed
by the zeal, valor and faith of the Muslims, and after facing heavy losses, they
could do nothing but flee. The Muslims were left alone on the field with a
few doomed Meccans, amongst them the arch-enemy of Islam, Abu Jahl. The
Quraish were defeated and Abu Jahl was killed. The promise of God came true:
“Their multitude will be defeated, and they will turn their backs (in
flee).” (Quran 54:45)
In this, one of the most
decisive battles in human history, the total casualties were between only
between seventy and eighty.
Mecca reeled under the shock, where Abu Sufyan was left as the dominant
figure in the city, and he knew better than anyone that the matter could not
be allowed to rest there. Success
breeds success, and the bedouin tribes, never slow to assess the balance of
power, were increasingly inclined towards alliance with the Muslims, and
Islam gained many new converts in Medina.
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