Life of Prophet Muhammed (pbuh)
(part 20)
by Jahir Hasan
Uhud-Defeat Comes From Disobedience


When the survivors of the defeated Quraysh at Badr to Mecca gathered to speak 
with Abu Sufyan. They said, 'Muhammad has best men, so help us to fight him so 
that we may avenge those we have lost.' In order to do this it was agreed that 
everyone who had had a share in the caravan should put his profits towards the 
cost of a new army, which would be three times as big as the one at Badr. 
  
Among those who joined the new army was an Abyssinian slave called Wahshi; who 
was known for his accuracy with the spear. His master, Jubayr ibn al-Mutim, 
said to him, 'Go with the army and if you kill Hamzah, the uncle of Muhammad, 
in revenge for my uncle's death, I will set you free'. 
When Hind, Abu Sufyan wife, heard about this she sent a Wahshi to say that she 
would clothe him in gold and silk if he would carry out his master's wish, for 
she, too, wanted Hamzah dead because he had both her father and brother. 
  
While the Meccans made their plans, the Prophet's uncle, Abbas, one the few 
Muslims still living in Mecca, sent a letter of warning to the Prophet (pbuh) 
in Medina. He told him that Quraysh were setting out with a huge arm for Uhud, 
a place just outside Medina. On receiving this timely warning the Prophet 
(pbuh) gathered his companions around him to discuss what they should do. He 
thought it would be better to wait for the enemy inside city rather than go out 
to meet them, because it would be easier to defend Medinah from inside the city 
walls. 
  
But the young Muslims were go out and face Quraysh. They said, '0 Prophet of 
Allah, lead us out against our enemies, or else they will think we are too 
cowardly and too weak to fight them.' 
  
One of the rulers of Medina, Abd Allah ibn Ubayy, however, agreed with the 
Prophet (pbuh) and advised him to remain in the city, saying, 'Whenever we have 
gone out to fight an enemy we have met with disaster, but none has ever come in 
against us without being defeated.' 
  
But when the Prophet (pbuh) saw that the majority were in favor of going out to 
meet Quraysh, he decided to do so, and after the Friday prayer he put on his 
armor. 
  
The Muslims then set out with one thousand men in the direction of Mount Uhud 
which overlooks Medina. The enemy was camped on the plain below the mountain 
where they were laying waste the crops of the Muslims. Abd Allah ibn Ubayy was 
angry that the Prophet (pbuh) had not followed his advice and after going part 
of the way, turned back for Medina, taking one third of the entire army with 
him. This left the Prophet (pbuh) with only seven hundred men to meet the 
enormous Meccan army, which numbered three thousand. 
  
The remainder of the Mus1ims went on until they reached the mountain of Uhud. 
There the Prophet (pbuh) ordered them to stand in ranks in front of the 
mountain, so that they would be protected from behind. He then positioned fifty 
archers on top of the mountain, giving them the following order: 'Keep the 
Meccan cavalry away from us with your arrows and don't let them come against us 
from the rear, whether the battle goes in our favor or against us. Whatever 
happens keep to your places so that we cannot be attacked from your direction, 
even if you see us being slain or booty being taken.' 
  
When the Muslims were in position, the Prophet (pbuh) held up his sword and 
said, 'Who will use this sword with its right ?' This was a great honor and 
many men rose to claim it, but the Prophet (pbuh) decided to give it to Abu 
Dujanah, a fearless warrior. 
  
Then the battle commenced. The Muslims were well organized and had the 
advantage, because although Quraysh had more than four times as many men, they 
were tired from their journey and thus not ready to fight. As a result, the 
Muslims were able to make a surprise attack, led by Abu Dujanah, who was 
wearing a brilliant red turban. As the fighting increased the Quraysh women, 
led by Hind, began to beat their drums to urge their men on. They called out 
poems to encourage their men to be brave. 'If you advance, we hug you, spread 
soft rugs beneath you; if you retreat, we leave you. Leave and no more love 
you.' 
Abu Dujanah said: 'I saw someone urging the enemy on, shouting wildly, and I 
made for him, but when I lifted my sword against him he screamed and I saw that 
it was a woman; I respected the Apostle's sword too much to use it on a woman.' 
That woman was Hind. 
  
As usual, Hamzah, the Prophet's uncle, fought with great courage, but while 
leading the Muslims in a fierce attack, which nearly defeated the Meccans, he 
was suddenly and cruelly struck down by the slave Wahshi. Later, Wahshi told 
how it happened: 'I was watching Hamzah while he was killing men with his 
sword. I... aimed my spear until I was sure it would the mark and hurled it at 
him. He came on towards me but collapsed and fell. I left him there until he 
died, then I came and took back my spear. Then I went back to the camp because 
I did not want to kill anyone but him. My only aim in killing him was to gain 
my freedom.' 
  
The Quraysh warriors were soon scattered and forced to retreat. It looked as 
though they had been defeated! Seeing this, forty of the fifty Muslims archers 
on top of the mountain ran down from their position to collect booty, for the 
Quraysh army had left many of their belongings behind. The archers rushed to 
take what they could, forgetting the Prophet's orders. 
  
Khalid Ibn al-Walid, Commander of the Quraysh cavalry, saw what' happening and 
quickly turned his men around and ordered them to attack the Muslims from 
behind. The Muslims were taken completely by surprise. The Quraysh then began 
attacking from both sides at once. Many Muslims were killed and instead of 
winning they began to lose the battle. 
  
To add to the confusion, it was rumored that the Prophet (pbuh) had been 
killed. When the Muslims heard this they were at a loss to know what to do. 
Then a man named Anas called out, 'Brothers! If Muhammad (pbuh) has been killed 
what will your lives be worth without him? Don't think about living or dying. 
Fight for Allah. Get up and die the way Muhammad (pbuh) died!’ and on hearing 
these words the Muslims took courage. 
  
There had been several cavalry attacks on the position held by the Prophet 
(pbuh) and his companions and the Prophet's cheek had been badly gashed. As the 
Meccans closed in again he called out, 'Who will sell his life for us?' At 
this, five Ansar got up and fought until they were killed, one by one. 
  
Their places were soon taken, however, by a number of Muslims who drove off the 
attackers. Amongst the defending Muslims was Abu Dujanah who put his arms 
around the Prophet (pbuh) and made himself into a human shield. Throughout the 
remainder of the battle he held on to the Prophet (pbuh), but as the fighting 
drew to a close he suddenly let go. Abu Dujanah was dead, killed by the many 
arrows in his back that had been aimed at the Prophet (pbuh). 
  
With the defeat of the Muslims, Quraysh were at last avenged. As they left the 
field of battle Abu Sufyan called out to his men, 'You have done well; victory 
in war goes by turns-today in exchange for Badr!' When he heard this, the 
Prophet (pbuh) told Umar to answer him, saying, 'Allah is Most High and Most 
Glorious. We are not equal. Our dead are in Paradise and your dead are in 
Hell!' 
  
The Muslim soldiers then followed the departing Quraysh part of the way to make 
sure they were not going to attack Medinah. 
  
After the enemy had left, the Prophet (pbuh) made his way around the 
Battle-field to see the extent of the Muslim losses. Many of the most faithful 
Muslims had been killed. Among the dead, the Prophet (pbuh) found the body of 
his closest friend and uncle, Hamzah, who had been killed by the slave, Wahshi. 
  
At the sight of this, the Prophet (pbuh) said, 'There will never be a moment as 
sad for me as this.' Hamzah's sister, Safiyya, came to pray and ask forgiveness 
for her brother, saying 'We belong to Allah and to Allah we are returning.' 
After the Prophet (pbuh) had prayed over the many dead, he said, 'I tell you 
that no one has been wounded in Allah's cause but Allah will remember him and 
on the Day of Resurrection will raise him from the dead. Look for the one who 
has learned most of the Quraan and put him in front of his companions in the 
grave.' 
  
They were buried where they had fallen as martyrs. 
Of them Allah says: 
 
In the Name of Allah, the Beneficent, the Merciful 
“Do not think that those, who were killed for Allah's sake are dead. Nay, they 
are alive. With their Lord they have provision. Jubilant (are they) because of 
that which Allah hath bestowed upon them of His bounty, rejoicing for the sake 
of those that have not yet joined them because they have nothing to fear or 
grieve over”.
(Quraan iii.169-170) 
 
It is said that the Prophet (pbuh) swore that no Muslim who had died for his 
beliefs would want to come back to life for a single hour, even if he could own 
the whole world, unless he could return and fight for Allah and be killed a 
second time. The Muslims realised that their defeat had been caused by their 
disobedience to the Prophet (pbuh). 
  
The Quraan tells us that the Muslims had been tested by Allah at Uhud and had 
failed but that Allah forgave them their weakness. 
  
In the Name of Allah, the Beneficent, the Merciful 
“Some of you there are that desire this world, and some of you there are that 
desire the next world. Then He turned you from them, that He might try you; and 
He has forgiven you; and Allah is bounteous to the believers”. 
(Quraan iii.145) 
  
People living nowadays should learn from the lessons learned by the early 
Muslims at Uhud. Disobedience to the Prophet (pbuh) and love for the things of 
this world caused their defeat. The same can happen to us as well. Even if we 
have no battle like Uhud to fight, we can still die for Allah's sake by 
fighting what is bad in ourselves. When the Prophet (pbuh) came back from a 
battle he said to his men,'We have returned from the lesser war to the greater 
war.' He meant by this that the struggle that goes on within every human being 
to become a better person is the more difficult battle. 
    
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In the name of Allah, the Most-Merciful, the All-Compassionate
 
"May the Peace and Blessings of Allah be Upon You"
 Praise be to Allaah, we seek His help and His forgiveness. We seek refuge with 
Allaah from the evil of our own souls and from our bad deeds. Whomsoever Allaah 
guides will never be led astray, and whomsoever Allaah leaves astray, no one 
can guide. I bear witness that there is no god but Allaah, and I bear witness 
that Muhammad is His slave and Messenger.
 
  
Bismillah Walhamdulillah Was Salaatu Was Salaam 'ala Rasulillah
As-Salaam Alaikum Wa-Rahmatullahi Wa-Barakatuhu


      

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