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The Return To Mecca Muhammad And The (стр. 2 из 2)

daughters, Fatimah was married to ?Ali (later fourth caliph, or leader

of the Islamic community) and Umm Kulthum to ?Uthman (third caliph). He

himself was already married to ?A`ishah, daughter of Abu Bakr (first

caliph), and was now espoused also to Hafsah, daughter of ?Umar (second

caliph), whose previous husband was one of the Muslims killed at Badr.

In the same year, Muhammad led larger Muslim forces on razzias against

hostile nomadic tribes and had some success. Presumably, he realized

that the Meccans were bound to try to avenge their defeat. Indeed, Abu

Sufyan was energetically mobilizing Meccan power. On March 21, 625, he

entered the oasis of Medina with 3,000 men. One of the features of

Medina was a large number of small forts that were impregnable to Arab

weapons and tactics. Muhammad would have preferred the Muslims to

retire to these; but those whose cereal crops were being laid waste

persuaded him to go out to fight. By a night march with 1,000 men, he

reached the hill of Uhud on the further side of the Meccan camp. On the

morning of March 23, the Meccan infantry attacked and was repulsed with

considerable loss. As the Muslims pursued, the Meccan cavalry launched

a flank attack after the archers guarding the Muslim left had abandoned

their position. The Muslims were thrown into confusion. Some made for

a fort and were cut down, but Muhammad and the bulk of his force managed

to gain the lower slopes of Uhud, where they were safe from the

cavalry. The Meccans, because of their losses, were unable to press

home their advantages and without delay set out for home, while Muhammad

the next day made a show of pursuing. The battle produced neither a

clear victor nor loser. In Badr and Uhud together, the Meccans had

killed about as many men as they had lost; but they had boasted that

they would make the Muslims pay several times over, and they had not

shown the degree of superiority appropriate to their leading position in

Arabia. Muhammad, though he had lost above 70 men, realized that this

was a military reverse, not a defeat, but the confidence of the Muslims

and perhaps his own had been struck a serious blow. If the victory of

Badr was a sign of God?s support, did Uhud indicate that he had

abandoned the Muslims? Muhammad?s faith soon overcame any momentary

doubts, and he was gradually able to restore the confidence of his

followers.

For two years after Uhud, both sides prepared for a decisive

encounter. In the razzias Muhammad led or sanctioned, he seems to have

aimed at extending his own alliances and at preventing others from

joining the Meccans. In at least two cases, a small party of Muslims

was tricked or ambushed, and most of their lives were lost. In April

627, Abu Sufyan led a great confederacy of 10,000 men against Medina.

On this occasion Muhammad had ordered the crops to be harvested and a

trench to be dug to defend the main part of the oasis from the Meccan

cavalry. For a fortnight the confederates besieged the Muslims.

Attempts to cross the trench failed, and fodder for the horses was

scarce, while Muhammad?s agents among the attackers fomented potential

dissensions. Then, after a night of wind and rain the great army melted

away. The Meccans had exerted their utmost might and had failed to

dislodge Muhammad, whose position was now greatly strengthened.

For more than two years now there had been opposition to Muhammad in

Medina, chiefly from ?Abd Allah ibn Ubayy and other so-called hypocrites

who had abandoned Muhammad at Uhud and who together had fostered

disaffection. Shortly before the siege Muhammad had a showdown with

?Abd Allah ibn Ubayy, who had joined in spreading slanders about

Muhammad?s wife ?A`ishah. This confrontation revealed that ?Abd Allah

had little support in Medina, and he became reconciled to Muhammad.

After the siege of Medina, Muhammad attacked the Jewish clan of

Qurayzah, which had probably been intriguing against him. When they

surrendered, the men were all executed and the women and children sold

as slaves.

Muhammad?s farsightedness as a statesman is manifest in the policies he

next adopted. He might have continued to crush the Meccans, and he

indeed put economic pressure on them; but his main aim was to gain their

willing adherence to Islam. He had already realized that, insofar as

the Arabs became Muslims, it would be necessary to direct outward the

energies expended on razzias against one another. There could be no

question of Muslims raiding Muslims. It is noteworthy that his largest

razzias, apart from the expeditions against the Meccans, were along the

route to Syria followed by the Arab armies after his death. He

doubtless realized that the administrative skill of the Meccan merchants

would be required for any expansion of his embryonic state.

In a dream, Muhammad saw himself performing the annual pilgrimage to

Mecca, and in March 628 he set out to do so, driving sacrificial

animals. He was disappointed because no more than 1,600 men would

accompany him. The Meccans were determined to prevent the Muslims from

entering their town, so Muhammad halted at al-Hudaybiyah, on the edge of

the sacred territory of Mecca. After some critical days, the Meccans

made a treaty with Muhammad. Hostilities were to cease, and the Muslims

were to be allowed to make the pilgrimage to Mecca in 629. The orderly

withdrawal showed how completely Muhammad controlled his followers.

Partly to reward this orderly conduct, Muhammad two months later led the

same force against the Jewish oasis of Khaybar, north of Medina. After

a siege, it submitted, but the Jews were allowed to remain on condition

of sending half of the date harvest to Medina. Throughout 628 and 629,

Muhammad?s power was growing. The success led more men to become

Muslims, for the religious attraction of Islam was apparently

supplemented by material motives.

Meanwhile, Mecca was in decline. Several leading men had emigrated to

Medina and become Muslims. New leaders had taken over from Abu Sufyan

but had accomplished little, although the treaty with Muhammad had

removed his pressure on their caravans. Shortly after the treaty,

Muhammad had married Umm Habibah, a daughter of Abu Sufyan, and a widow

whose Muslim husband had died in Ethiopia. This led to an understanding

with Abu Sufyan, who began to work for the peaceful surrender of Mecca.

It was probably when he was in Mecca for the pilgrimage in March 629

that Muhammad became reconciled with another uncle, al-?Abbas, and

married his uncle?s sister-in-law Maymunah.

An attack by Meccan allies in about November 629 upon allies of

Muhammad led to the Muhammad?s denunciation of the treaty of

al-Hudaybiyah. After secret preparations he marched on Mecca in January

630 with 10,000 men. Abu Sufyan and other leading Meccans went out to

meet him and formally submitted, so Muhammad promised a general

amnesty. When he entered Mecca there was virtually no resistance. Two

Muslims and 28 of the enemy were killed. A number of people were

specifically excluded from the amnesty, but some were later pardoned.

Thus Muhammad, who had left Mecca as a persecuted prophet, not merely

entered it again in triumph but also gained the allegiance of most of

the Meccans. Though he did not insist on their becoming Muslims, many

soon did so.

Muhammad spent 15 to 20 days in Mecca settling various matters of

administration. Idols were destroyed in the Ka?bah and in some small

shrines in the neighborhood. To relieve the poorest among his

followers, he demanded loans from some of the wealthy Meccans. When he

marched east to meet a new threat, 2,000 Meccans went with him.