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
 
Life of Prophet Muhammed (pbuh)
(part 21)
by Jahir Hasan
 
The Battle Of The Trench



When the Prophet (Pbuh) first arrived in Medinah, the Jews who were living 
there had welcomed him. The Prophet (Pbuh) had returned their greeting, as he 
wished to be on good terms with them. An agreement was also reached between the 
Muslims and the Jews, which gave the Jews the freedom to practice their 
religion and which also set out their rights and their duties. Among these 
duties was that in the case of war with Quraysh, the Jews would fight on the 
side of the Muslims. 
  
Despite this agreement, however, some of the Jewish tribes, who resented the 
Prophet's presence in Medinah, soon began to cause trouble amongst the Muslims. 
They tried to set the Muslim Emigrants from Mecca and the Ansar against each 
other. The troublemakers were given many warnings but they continued to be a 
nuisance. 
  
In the end, the Muslims had no choice but to drive them from Medinah. A new 
agreement was offered those Jews who remained but the trouble did not end 
there. 
  
One of the Jewish tribes, the Bani Nadir plotted to murder the Prophet (Pbuh) 
but their plan was discovered and they, too, were exiled from the city. Knowing 
that they could not defeat the Muslims themselves, some of the leaders of the 
exiled Jews secretly went to Mecca to enlist the help of Quraysh. Knowing what 
the Meccans would like to hear, they pretended to believe in the same things. 
They said that they thought that the old Arab tradition was better than the 
teachings of the Prophet Muhammad (Pbuh) and that they believed that the 
Quraysh religion of worshipping many idols was better than the Prophet's with 
only one God. 
  
Then the Jews told them that if all the Arab tribes attacked Medinah, the Jews 
inside the city would help to defeat the Prophet (Pbuh) and Islam once and for 
all. 
  
The leaders of Quraysh were pleased to hear all this and seizing on what seemed 
to them a very good opportunity, agreed to the plan and began to gather 
together a formidable army. 
  
In the meantime in Medinah, only one Jewish tribe, the Bani Quraydhah, refused 
to betray the Muslims. 
  
Eventually the Muslims learned of the preparations being made for war in Mecca 
and of the plotting of the Jews within Medinah itself. The betrayal of the 
Muslims by the Jews did not surprise the Prophet (Pbuh), who said of them:'The 
hearts of the Jews have become closed to the truth. They have forgotten what 
Moses taught them long ago that there is only one God.' 
  
In the Name of Allah, the Beneficent, the Merciful 
“The likeness of those who are entrusted with the Law of Moses, yet apply it 
not, is as the likeness of the ass carrying books. Evil is the likeness of the 
people who deny the revelations of Allah. 
And Allah guideth not wrongdoing folk”. 
(Quraan lxii.5) 
 
The Muslims wondered how they could defend Medinah. They heard that Abu Sufyan 
was coming to attack them with an enormous army which included many other Arab 
tribes, as well as Quraysh. What were they to do with only a single week to 
prepare? 
  
The Prophet (Pbuh) and his men knew that it would be impossible for them to 
fight off all these tribes! The only thing they could do was to stay inside the 
city and try to defend it as best they could. 
  
Now among the people of Medinah was a Persian named Salman, who had to live in 
the city some time before the Prophet's arrival there. As a convert to 
Christianity he had traveled to Medinah after Christian sages had told him that 
a Prophet would be born in Arabia. On arriving in he was, however, sold into 
slavery by the merchants with whom he had traveled. Later he became a Muslim, 
gained his freedom and became a member of the Prophet's household. 
  
When the people gathered to discuss a plan of action against the approaching 
enemy, Salman was present and it was he who suggested that they should dig a 
trench around the city. The Prophet (Pbuh) thought this a good idea, so the 
Muslims set to work, although it was in the middle of winter. They worked day 
and night, digging the trench as quickly as possible. 
  
The Prophet (Pbuh) himself carried rocks and when the men were tired he gave 
them the will to carry on. Someone later recalled how beautiful he looked, 
dressed in a red cloak with dust upon his chest and his dark hair nearly 
reaching his shoulders. 
  
There was little food at this time and the men were often hungry as they 
worked. On one occasion, however, a little girl gave some dates to the Prophet 
(Pbuh), which he spread out on a cloth. The men were then called to eat and the 
dates kept increasing in number until everyone had been fed. Even after 
everyone had eaten their fill, the dates continued to increase so that there 
were more than the cloth could hold. 
  
Similarly, there is the story of the lamb, that has come down to us from one 
who was there: 'We worked with the Apostle at the trench. I had a half-grown 
lamb and I thought it would be a good thing to cook it for Allah's Messenger. I 
told my wife to grind barley and make some bread for us. I killed the lamb and 
we roasted it for the Prophet (Pbuh). When night fell and he was about to leave 
the trench, I told him we had prepared bread and meat and invited him to our 
home. I wanted him to come on his own, but when I said this he sent someone to 
call all the men to come along. Everyone arrived and the food was served. He 
blessed it and invoked the Name of Allah over it. Then he ate and so did all of 
the others. As soon as one lot were satisfied, another group came until all the 
diggers had eaten enough, but still there was food to spare. 
  
On March 24, 627 A.D, Abu Sufyan arrived with more than ten thousand men. The 
Muslims numbered only three thousand. Quraysh and their allies surrounded 
Medinah but between the two armies was the long, wide trench. 
  
The Prophet (pbuh) and his men stayed behind this trench for nearly a month 
defending the city against their more powerful enemy. Many times warriors tried 
to cross the trench and enter the city, but each time they were pushed back by 
the Muslims. The Muslims were afraid that if any did manage to cross over, the 
Jews inside Medinah would join forces with them and the Muslims would be 
beaten. 
  
The Jewish tribe of Bani Quraydhah, who had stood by the, agreement with the 
Muslims, were pressed by a Jewish emissary from the enemy without, to break 
their promise. Eventually they agreed to do so and when the news of this 
reached the Prophet (pbuh) and his companions they were greatly troubled. 
  
Saad ibn Muadh, the leader of the tribe of Aws, was sent by the Prophet (pbuh) 
with two other men to find out if this were true. When they arrived in the part 
of Medinah where the Jews lived, they found were even worse than they had 
previously thought. 
  
Saad ibn Muadh, whose tribe was closely allied with the Bani Quraydhah, tried 
to persuade their leader not to break the treaty with the Muslims, but he 
refused to listen. This meant that the Muslims could not relax their guard for 
one moment, for they were now threatened not only by the enemy beyond the 
trench, but by the Bani Qurayzah, within the walls of the city. 
  
Things became more difficult for the Muslims day by day. It was extremely cold 
and food began to run out. To make matters worse, the Bani Qurayzah began 
openly and actively to join forces with the other Jews and cut off all supplies 
to the Muslims, including food. The enemies of Islam then planned how to 
capture Medinah. 
  
The situation looked desperate and the Prophet (pbuh) prayed to Allah to Allah 
to help the Muslims defeat their enemies. That very night a sandstorm blew up 
which buried the tents of Quraysh. The storm continued for three days and three 
nights making it impossible for the enemy to light a fire to cook a meal or 
warm themselves by. 
  
On one of these dark nights the Prophet (pbuh) asked one of his men, Hudhayfah 
Ibn al-Yaman, to go on a dangerous mission. The Prophet (pbuh) told him to make 
his way across the trench to the enemy camp where he should find out what they 
were doing. With much difficulty Hudhayfah crossed the trench and made his way 
to a circle of Quraysh warriors talking in the darkness. He sat near them, but 
as there was no fire, no one noticed him. He then heard Abu Sufyan's voice: 
'Let us go home!' he said. 'We have had enough. The horses and camels are 
dying, the tents keep blowing away, most of the equipment has been lost, and we 
can not cook our food. There is no reason to stay!' 
  
Shortly after hearing this Hudhayfah made his way quickly and quietly back 
across the trench and the next morning the Muslims rejoiced to find that what 
he had overheard had come true-Quraysh and their allies had gone away! The 
siege of Medinah had ended in a great victory for Islam. 
  
But this was not to be the end of the difficulties, for the Archangel Gabriel 
the Prophet (pbuh) and told him that he should punish the Bani Qurayzah for 
betraying him and the Muslims. 
  
On hearing this, the Prophet (pbuh) ordered the Muslims to march against the 
Bani Qurayzah as they hid in their fortress. The Muslims besieged them for 
twenty-five days until they finally gave in. On surrendering, they asked the 
Prophet (pbuh) to let someone judge their case, and he agreed. He also allowed 
them to choose who would give the ruling. 
  
The man chosen to judge the Bani Qurayzah was Saad ibn Muadh, leader of the 
Aws, a tribe which had always protected the Qurayzah in the past. Saad ibn 
Mu'adh who had himself been wounded in the battle, decided that the Jews should 
be tried by their own Holy Law, according to which anyone who broke a treaty 
would be put to death. 
  
As a result all the men of the Bani Qurayzah were executed and the women and 
children made captive. If the Jews had succeeded in their pact, Islam would 
have been destroyed. Instead from that day on, Medinah became a city where only 
Muslims lived. 
  
Very soon after peace had been restored to Medinah, Saad ibn Muadh died of his 
wounds. It was said that the Archangel Gabriel came in the middle of that night 
and said to the Prophet (pbuh) '0 Muhammad, who is this dead man? When he 
arrived, the doors of heaven opened.' The Prophet (pbuh) got up as soon as he 
heard this, but found that Saad was already dead. 
 
Although he had been a heavy man, the men who carried his body to the grave 
found it quite light. They were told that the angels were helping them. When he 
was buried, the Prophet (pbuh) said three times 'Subhan Allah!' (Glory be to 
Allah!), and 'Allahu Akbar!' (Allah is Most Great!). When asked why he did 
this, he replied, 'The grave was tight for this good man, until Allah eased it 
for him.' This is one of the rewards that Allah gives to martyrs and good 
Muslims. 
    
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