The Forgiveness of Muhammad Shown to Non-Muslims (Part 1 of 2)
The Prophet Muhammad, may God praise him, was described as a “Mercy for
all the Worlds”, as God said in the Quran:
“We have sent you as a mercy for all the worlds.”
The recipients of this quality were not limited to just the Muslim
nation, but it also extended to non-Muslims, some of who spent all their
effort trying to harm the Prophet and his mission. This mercy and forgiveness
is clearly demonstrated in the fact that the Prophet, may God praise him,
never took revenge on anyone for personal reasons and always forgave even his
staunch enemies. Aisha said that the Prophet never took revenge on his own
behalf on anyone. She also said that he never returned evil for evil, but he
would forgive and pardon. This will, God willing, become clear after a deep
analysis of the following accounts of his life.
In the earlier portion of his mission, the Prophet traveled to the city
of Taif, a city located in the mountains nearby to Mecca, in order to invite
them to accept Islam. The leaders of Taif, however, were rude and
discourteous in their treatment of the Prophet. Not being content with their
insolent attitude towards him, they even stirred up some gangs of the town to
harass him. This riff-raff followed
the Prophet shouting at and abusing him, and throwing stones at him, until he
was compelled to take refuge in an orchard. Thus the Prophet had to endure
even more obstacles in Taif than he had had to face in Mecca. These ruffians,
stationed either side of the path, threw stones at him until his feet were injured
and smeared with blood. These oppressions so grievously dejected the Prophet
and plunged him into in such a state of depression that a prayer, citing his
helplessness and pitiable condition and seeking the aid of God, spontaneously
came from his lips:
“O God, to You I complain of my weakness, lack of resources and humiliation
before these people. You are the Most Merciful, the Lord of the weak and my
Master. To whom will You consign me? To one estranged, bearing ill will, or
an enemy given power over me? If You
do not assign me any worth, I care not, for Your favor is abundant upon me. I
seek refuge in the light of Your countenance by which all darkness is
dispelled and every affair of this world and the next is set right, lest Thy
anger should descend upon me or Your displeasure light upon me. I need only
Your pleasure and satisfaction for only You enable me to do good and evade
the evil. There is no power and no might but You.”
The Lord then sent the angel of mountains, seeking the permission of
the Prophet to join together the two hills and crush the city of Taif,
between which it was located. Out of his great tolerance and mercy, the
Messenger of God replied,
“No! For, I hope that God will
bring forth from their loins people who will worship God alone, associating
nothing with Him.” (Saheeh Muslim)
His mercy and compassion was so great that on more than one occasion,
God, Himself, reprimanded him for it. One of the greatest opponents of Islam
and a personal enemy, was Abdullah bin Ubayy, the leader of the hypocrites of
Medina. Outwardly proclaiming Islam, he surreptitiously inflicted great harm
to the Muslims and the mission of the Prophet. Knowing his state of affairs,
the Prophet Muhammad still offered the funeral prayer for him and prayed to
God for his forgiveness. The Quran mentions this incident in these words:
“And never (O Muhammad) pray for one of them who dies, nor stand by his
grave. Lo! They disbelieve in God and His Messenger, and they died while they
were evil doers.”
Abdullah bin Ubayy worked all his life against Muhammad and Islam and
left no stone unturned so as to bring him into disrepute and try to defeat
his mission. He withdrew his three hundered supporters in the battle of Uhud
and thus almost broke the backbone of the Muslims at one stroke. He engaged
in intrigues and acts of hostility against the Prophet of Islam and the
Muslims. It was he who tried to bring
shame to the Prophet by inciting his allies to falsely accuse the Prophet’s
wife, Aisha, of adultery in order to discredit him and his message.
The
Forgiveness of Muhammad Shown to Non-Muslims (Part 2 of 2)
The mercy of the Prophet even extended to those who brutally killed and
then mutilated the body of his uncle Hamzah, one of the most beloved of
people to the Prophet. Hamzah was one of the earliest to accept Islam and,
through his power and position in the Quraishite hierarchy, diverted much
harm from the Muslims. An Abyssinian
slave of the wife of Abu Sufyan, Hind, sought out and killed Hamzah in the
battle of Uhud. The night before the victory of Mecca, Abu Sufyan accepted
Islam, fearing the vengeance of the Prophet, may God praise him. The latter
forgave him and sought no retribution for his years of enmity.
After Hind had killed Hamzah she mutilated his body by cutting his
chest and tearing his liver and heart into pieces. When she quietly came to the Prophet and
accepted Islam, he recognized her but did not say anything. She was so impressed by his magnanimity and
stature that she said, “O Messenger of God, no tent was more deserted in my
eyes than yours; but today no tent is more lovely in my eyes than yours.”
Ikrama, son of Abu Jahl, was a great enemy of the Prophet and Islam. He
ran away after the victory of Mecca and went to Yemen. After his wife
embraced Islam, she brought him to the Prophet Muhammad under her protection.
He was so pleased to see him that he greeted him with the words:
“O emigrant rider, welcome.”
Safwan bin Umaya, one of the chiefs of Mecca, was also a great enemy of
Muhammad and Islam. He promised a reward to Umair ibn Wahab if he managed to
kill Muhammad. When Mecca was
conquered, Safwan ran away to Jeddah in the
hope of finding a berth that would take him to Yemen by sea. Umair ibn Wahab came to Muhammad and said,
“O Messenger of God! Safwan ibn
Umayya, a chief of his tribe, has run
away from fear of what you might do to him and threatens to cast himself into
the sea.” The Prophet sent him a
guarantee of protection and, when he returned, he requested Muhammad
to give him two months to come to a decision.. He was given four months,
after which he became a Muslim by his own will.
Habir ibn al-Aswad was another vicious enemy of Muhammad and Islam. He
inflicted a serious injury to Zainab, daughter of the Noble Prophet when she
decided to migrate to Medina. She was pregnant when she started her
migration, and the polytheists of Mecca tried to stop her from leaving. This
particular man, Habbar bin al-Aswad, physically assaulted her and
intentionally caused her to fall down from her camel. Her fall had caused her to miscarry her
baby, and she herself, was badly hurt. He had committed many other crimes
against Muslims as well. He wanted flee to Persia but, when he decided to
come to Muhammad instead, the Prophet magnanimously forgave him.
The tribe of Quraish the were archenemies of Islam and, for a period of
thirteen years while he was still in Mecca, they would rebuke the Prophet,
taunt and mock him, beat him and abuse him, both physically and
mentally. They placed the afterbirth
of a camel on his back while he prayed, and they boycotted him and his tribe
until the social sanctions became unbearable.
They plotted and attempted to kill him on more than one occasion, and
when the Prophet escaped to Medina, they rallied the majority of the Arab
tribes and waged many wars against him. Yet, when he entered Mecca victorious
with an army of 10,000, he did not take revenge on anyone. The Prophet said
to the Quraish:
“O people of Quraish! What do
you think I will do to you?
Hoping for a good response, they said: “You will do good. You are a
noble brother, son of a noble brother.”
The Prophet then said:
“Then I say to you what Joseph said to his brothers: ‘There is no blame
upon you.’ Go! For you all free!.”
Rarely in the annals of history can we read such an instance of
forgiveness. Even his deadliest enemy Abu Sufyan, who led so many battles
against Islam, was forgiven, as was any person who stayed in his house and
did not come to fight him.
The Prophet, may God praise him, was all for forgiveness and no amount
of crime or aggression against him was too great to be forgiven by him. He
was the complete example of forgiveness and kindness, as mentioned in the
following verse of the Quran:
“Keep to forgiveness (O Muhammad), and enjoin kindness, and turn away
from the ignorant.” (Quran 7:199)
He always repelled evil with the good of forgiveness and kind behavior
for, in his view, an antidote was better than poison. He believed and
practiced the precept that love could foil hatred, and aggression could be
won over by forgiveness. He overcame
the ignorance of the people with the knowledge of Islam, and the folly and
evil of the people with his kind and forgiving treatment. With his forgiveness, he freed people from
the bondage of sin and crime, and also made them great friends of Islam. He
was an epitome of the verse of the Quran:
“Good and evil are not alike. Repel evil with what is better. Then he,
between whom and you there was hatred, will become as though he was a bosom
friend.” (Quran 41:34)
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