Early Life
"No one has been a
better companion to me than Abu Bakr," said the holy Prophet in his
last sermon.
A great reward indeed! Abu Bakr had earned it. All his life he stood
by the side of the Prophet. He did not care for his life. He did not
care for his riches. He did not care for what others said about him.
His only ambition was to serve the Prophet more than anyone else. The
cost did not matter. The ambition was fulfilled. And Abu Bakr got his
reward in full. The Messenger of Allah was well pleased with him. He
gave him the first place among the Companions. Abu Bakr was to be the
first man to fill the place of the Prophet. He was also to lie in
eternal rest by the prophet's side.
Abu Bakr was two years
younger than the Prophet. His parents named him Abdul Kaaba, which
means the servant of the Kaaba. When he became a Muslim, the Prophet
changed his pagan name to Abdullah. Howevr, in early youth he had
adopted the surname of Abu Bakr. He had come to be known by this name
among people. Even to this day, the world generally knows him as Abu
Bakr.
The name of Abu Bakr's
father was Uthman, but he was known as Abu Qahafa. Salma was Abu
Bakr's mother. She was also known as Umm-ul-Khair. Abu Bakr belonged
to a branch of the Quraish.
From early years, Abu
Bakr was known for good and upright nature. He was honest and
truthful. He came of a noble family. These things won him respect
among the people. His goodness also won him the friendship of young
Muhammad (Peace be Upon him). The two became fast friends in early
boyhood. The friendship was to prove lifelong and history-making.
When he grew up, Abu
Bakr became a rich merchang. But he used to be very kind-hearted. When
he saw someone in trouble, his heart melted. He did his best to help
him. If his money could remove suffering, he did not care home much he
had to spend. Once he gave away thirty-five dirhams out of his total
fortune of forty thousand. He was so honest in his dealings that
people kept their money with him. Above all, Abu Bakr had a sincere
heart and a firm will. Nothing could stop him from doing what he
thought was the right thing to do.
These great qualities
were soon to serve the noblest cause known to the world. Abu Bakr was
to become the strongest supporter of the Redeemer of mankind. He was
to become the first among the Companions. He was to make Arabia and
thereby the world safe for Islam after the Prophet has passed away.
Service to the Prophet
First among Men
Abu Bakr was always
very close to the holy Prophet. He knew him better than any other man.
He knew how honest and upright his friend had always been. So he was
the first among men to believe in the Prophet's mission. He was the
first adult male to accept Islam. After the first revalation, the holy
Prophet told him what had happened at Mount Hira. He told him that
Allah had made him His Messenger. Abu Bakr did not stop to think. He
at once became a Muslim. Once the holy Prphet himself remarked, "I
called people to Islam. Everybody thought over it, at least for a
while. But this was not the case with Abu Bakr. The moment I put Islam
before him, he accepted it without any hesitation."
Abu Bakr did more than
that. As soon as he became a Muslim, he began to preach Islam to
others. He had many friends. The friends knew that Abu Bakr was
sincere and truthful. They knew he would never support a wrong cause.
He called them to Islam and they became Muslims. Among them were men
like Uthman, Zubair, Talha, Abdur Rahman bin Auf and Saad bin Waqqas.
These men later became the pillars of Islam.
The holy Prophet called
at Abu Bakr's house every day. The two sad down and thought out ways
of spreading Islam. Together they went to people and places and
delivered the message of Allah. Wherever the holy Prophet went, Abu
Bakr went with him.
Risks His Life
The messge of Islam
made the people of Mecca very angry. The idols were their gods. The
holy Prophet openly mocked at these gods. He declared they could do
neither any good nore harm. Among the chiefs of Mecca was one Abu Jahl.
He became the greatest enemy of the holy Prophet. He was always on the
lookout to hurt him or even kill him, if he could. Abu Bakr kept an
eye on this man, lest he should do a grave harm to Islam.
One day the holy
Prophet was saying his prayers in the Kaaba. He was totally lost in
the thoughts of Allah. Abu Jahl and some other chiefs of Mecca were
sitting in the courtyard of the Kaaba. "I must finish with Muhammad
today," said Abu Jahl. So saying, he took a long piece of cloth. He
put it around the holy Prophet's neck. Then he twisted it hard. He was
going to strangle the Messenger of Allah to death. The other chiefs
looked on and laughed.
Abu Bakr happened to
see this from a distance. He at once ran to the help of the Prophet.
He pushed Abu Jahl aside and took off the cloth from around the holy
Prophet's neck. Thereupon Abu Jahl and other enemies of Islam came
down upon Abu Bakr. They beat him very much. Indeed, the beating was
so severe that Abu Bakr fell down senseless. He was carried home. He
could not regain his senses till after several hours. And when he did
come to himself, the first question he asked was, "Is the Prophet
un-hurt?" Abu Bakr did not care for his own suffering. He was glad
that he was able to save the Prophet's life. Abu Bakr knew full well
that if any harm came to the Prophet, the only hope of mankind would
be gone. This made him risk everything he held dear, for the safety of
the Prophet and for the spread of his message.
Migration to Abyssinia
When Muslims found life difficult at Mecca, they
thought of going to some other land. With the permission of the holy
Prophet, a part of them went to Abyssinia. here they lived in peace.
So many more Muslims followed them.
Being the first man to go over to Islam, Abu
Bakr had brought upon himself the special anger and hatred of the
Meccan chiefs. Soon he felt hard pressed and asked permission of the
Holy Prophet to go to Abyssinia. The permission was granted and Abu
Bakr set off on his journey.
On the way he met the
chief of Qara, Ibn-ud-Daghna. "What place are you bound for, Abu Bakr?"
he asked.
"The people of Mecca
have cast me out," replied Abu Bakr. "I am going to Abyssinia. There I
will be able to worship the Lord the way I want to."
"A man like you should
not be cast out," said Ibn-ud-Daghna. "You help the poor. You are kind
to those in trouble. You are so nice to your guests. I will take you
back to Mecca on my own responsibility."
So Abu Bakr ws back at
Mecca. Ibn-ud-Daghna declared to the people that Abu Bakr was under
his protection, so no one was to harm him. The Meccans said that they
would let Abu Bakr alone, only if he did not preach his faith
publicly.
Abu Bakr could not act
on this condition very long. Soon he was preaching Islam as openly as
ever. The Meccans complained to Ibn-ud-Daghna. He requested Abu Bakr
not to make his position difficult. To this Abu Bakr replied, "I do
not need your protection. Allah is enough for me."
The Title of "Siddiq"
I n the tenth yer of his mission, the holy
Prophet had the Miraj of Ascension. One night the angel Gabriel came
with the word that Allah the Almighty wanted the holy Prophet to come
all the way up to the highest heaven. The holy Prophet undertook the
journey.
In the morning, after
the ascension had taken place, the holy Prophet talked to people about
the Miraj. This drew the jeers of his enemies.
"Look!" the howled out,
"what nonsense he talks! Surely, now his followers too will laugh at
him. Who is going to believe in such a midsummer night dream?"
The talk was going on
when Abu Bakr came up. "Do you know, Abu Bakr, what news your friend
has for you in the morning?" said one of the mean. "He says he was on
the highest heaven last night, having a talk with Allah, the Almighty.
Would you believe it?"
"I would believe
anything that the Messenger of Allah says," replied Abu Bakr
When the holy Prophet learnt of this, he at
once said, "Abu Bakr is the `Siddiq'." `Siddiq' is a person so sincere
of heart that doubts never mar his love. Abu Bakr earned this title
because of his faith was too strong to be shaken by anything.
Migration to Medina
W hen the Meccans were intent on putting out,
once and for all, the light of Islam, Allah commanded the holy Prophet
to move to Medina. In the burning heat of the midday sun, there was a
knock at Abu Bakr's door. He ran to the door and found the Messenger
of Allah standing outside. "I must leave for Medina tonight," said he.
"Will I also have the
honor of going with you?" asked Abu Bakr eagerly.
"Of course," came the
reply. "Set about getting things ready."
Abu Bakr was beside
himself with joy. "I have been looking forward to this day for
months," he exlaimed. "I have specifically kept two camels to carry us
to Medina."
It was Abu Bakr who
made all the arrangements for the historic journey. for three days he
and the Prophet lay hidden in the Thaur cave. Abu Bakr's slave tended
the flocks of goats near the cave all day and supplied them fresh milk
for food. His son, Abdullah, brought news about what the Meccans were
doing.
The Meccans were
searching for the holy Prophet like mad hounds. Once they came right
to the mouth of the cave. Abu Bakr grew pale with fright. He feared,
not for himself, but for the Prophet. However, the holy Prophet
remained perfectly calm. "Do not fear," he said to Abu Bakr,
"certainly Allah is with us."
Of all the companions,
Abu Bakr had the honor of being with the Prophet during the most
critical days of his life. Abu Bakr knew full well what this honor
meant. And he did full justice to the trust put in him.
Participation in Battles
A bu Bakr took part in all the battles that the
holy Prohpet had to fight. All his life, he fought bravely under the
banner of the Prophet. At Ohud and Hunain, some of the men showed
weakness. They forgot to do their duty. But Abu Bakr's faith never
wavered. He always stood like a rock by the side of the Prophet.
At Badr, one of Abu Bakr's sons, who had not
yet embraced Islam, was fighting on the side of the Meccan.
Afterwards, when he became a Muslim, he one day said, "Father! at Badr
you were twice under my sword. But my love for you held back my hand."
"Son!" remarked Abu
Bakr, "if I had got that chance only once, you must have been no
more."
When peace talks at Hudaibiya were going on,
Abu Bakr sat by the side of the Prophet. During conversation, the
spokesman of the Quraish ever now and then gave a jerk to the beard of
the Prophet, after the Arab fashion. This was too much for Abu Bakr.
He took out his sword and looked angrily at the man. "If that hand
touches the beard of the Prophet again," he warned, "it will not be
allowed to go back."
This amazed the Meccan
agents. "What a change in Abu Bakr!" they whispered to one another.
"He was known for soft-heartedness. How strong and firm he is now
become! He is no longer the self-same Abu Bakr."
Tabuk was the last
expedition of the holy Prophet. He was keen to make it a great
success. He asked people to help the expedition with whatever they
could. This time Abu Bakr beat all past records. He took all his money
and household articles and heaped them at the Prophet's feet.
"Have you left back
anything for your wife and children?" asked the holy Prophet.
"Allah and His Apostle
are enough for them," replied Abu Bakr calmly. Those standing around
were stunned. It was impossible to outdo Abu Bakr in the field of
service to Islam.
The holy Prophet felt much pleased at this
answer. He made Abu Bakr the standard-bearer of the expedition.
Abu Bakr's closeness to
the Prophet and his boundless devotion to Islam won him universal
respect. Not only was he the first man to accept Islam, he was also
the foremost among Muslims to uphold the cause of Islam.
Agent to the Prophet
Mecca fell in the eight year of Hijra. Kaaba
was, for the first time, in the hands of Muslims. It had to be cleaned
of the traces of idol-worship and the silly practices of pagan days.
Hitherto pagan Arabs had done absurd things at the time of Hajj. They
went around the House of Allah naked. They did many other foolish and
unclean things. All this had to be stopped.
The first Hajj under
Islam fell in the ninth year of Hijra. The holy Prophet was too busy
at Medina to lead the Hajj himself. So he sent Abu Bakr as his agent.
He was to lead the Hajj in place of the Prophet. Ali was also sent
with Abu Bakr. Abu Bakr read the Khutba (Sermon) of Hajj. Then Ali
stood up and read out to the people the commandments of Allah
concerning the idolworshippers. From that year on, they were forbidden
to enter the Kaaba.
Ever since he came to
Medina, the holy Prophet himself led prayers in the Prophet's Mosque.
It was an unusually high office which the Messenger of Allah himself
filled. During his last illness, the holy Prophet could no longer lead
prayers. He grew too weak to go to the mosque. He had to appoint
someone to act in his place. This honor also fell to the lot of Abu
Bakr. Aisha, who was Abu Bakr's daughter and a wife of the holy
Prophet, thought that the burden was too much for her tender-hearted
father. She pleaded with the holy Prophet to excuse here father from
this duty. But the holy Prophet did not change his mind.
Thus in the lifetime of
the holy Prophet Abu Bakr came to fill the highest office under Islam.
One day Abu Bakr was away on some business and Omar led the prayer in
his absence. "This is not Abu Bakr's voice," remarked the ailing
Messenger of Allah. "No one but he should lead prayers. He is the
fittest person for this high office."
On the last day of his life, the condition of
the holy Prophet became suddenly better for a while. It was early
morning. Abu Bakr was leading the prayer in the mosque. The holy
Prophet lifted the curtain of his door and fixed his gaze on the
worshippers. They were busy in prayer under Abu Bakr's leadership. A
smile lite up on the pale face of the holy Prophet. He let go of the
curtain, as his weak hand could no longer hold it. But he was happy at
the thought that he had chosen the best man to fill his place.
Abu Bakr Elected Caliph
A Critical Moment
The holy Prophet
occupied a unique place among his people. He was everything to them.
From warring ignorant pagans, he had made them a nation of peaceful,
God-fearing people. They were "dead" as the Quran puts it and the holy
Prophet had "raised them to life." So they rightly came to look upon
him as the giver of life. Life without him seemed to be an empty
thing.
The news of the
Prophet's death came as a stunning shock to everyone. How could it be?
He had been ill for some days, they all knew. But death was
unbelievable. That simply could not be. A huge crows gathered in the
mosque. No one knew what to do. There was utter confusion. Omar was so
overcome with emotion that he drew his sword and declared, "If anyone
says that the Messenger of Allah is dead. I will cut off his head!"
Things were in this
state when Abu Bakr entered the mosque. Finding the holy Prophet
better that morning, he had gone a few miles outside of Medina,
earlier in the day, but had come back on hearing the sad news. He took
his stand in a corner of the courtyard and called out to the people.
All eyes were turned towards him. Then he began his famous address:
"O people! If anyone
among you worshipped Muhammad, let him know that Muhammad is dead. But
those who worship Allah, let him know that He lives and will never
die. Let all of us recall the words of the Qur'an. It says, `Muhammad
is only a Messenger of Allah There have been Messengers before him.
What then, will you turn back from Islam, if he dies or is killed?"
These words of Abu Bakr
worked magic. In no time the confusion was gone. The words of the
Qur'an swept of all doubts from people's minds. They got ready to face
facts.
Election of Abu Bakr
The first problem
before the people was the election of a new leader. There had to be a
head of the State of things could not work. The need was too urgent to
allow delay. Delay might have meant disorder and the undoing of all
that the Messenger of Allah had done. The prophet of Allah had died
but the head of the state had to live on.
The two big groups
among Muslims were the Muhajirin (refugees from Mecca ) and the Ansar
(helpers or the people of Medina). The Ansar gathered together at
Thaqifa Bani Saida, their meeting place, near the house of Saad bin
Abada. The talk naturally centered around the election of a Caliph.
Saad, the Ansar leader, stood up and said that the Caliph must be from
among them. Many voices seconded him. One man, however, stood up and
said, "But how about the Muhajirin? They have perhaps a better claim."
"Then let there be two caliphs," suggested someone, "one from among
the Ansar and the other from among the Muhajirin."
Someone told Abu Bakr
what was going on at this gathering. He saw the need to act quickly or
confusion might set in again. So taking with him a part of Muhajirin
he went to Thaqif Bani Saida. He addressed the gathering and said,
"Both the Muhajirin and the Ansar have done great services to Islam.
But the former were the first to accept Islam. They were always very
close to the Messenger of Allah. So, O Ansar, let the Caliph be from
among them."
To this a man from the
Khazraj tribe replied, "If you don't want a Caliph from among us, let
there be two Caliphs, one an Ansari and the other a Muhajif."
"That won't work," said
Abu Obaida bin Jarrah. "O Ansar, you are the people who made Islam
strong now, don't do anything that may undo your work."
Hearing this, another man said, "O Ansar, if
we did anything for Islam, we did it to please Allah and His Apostle.
We did not thereby oblige anybody. This should not be made a plea to
win office. Listen, the holy Prophet belonged to the Quraish tribe.
The Quraish have a greater right to fill his place. By Allah, I do not
think it right to quarrel with them over this matter. Fear Allah, and
do not oppose them."
This speach of a man
from among them silenced the Ansar. They agreed to have a Muhajif as
the Caliph. So Abu Bakr said, "Friends, I think either Omar or
AbuObaida should be the Caliph. Chose one of these two gentleman."
Hearing this both Omar and Abu Obaida jumped
to their feet, and exlaimed, "O Siddiq, how can that be? How can
anyone else fill this office as long as you are among us? You are the
top man among the Muhajirin. You were the companion of the holy
Prophet in the Thaur Cave. You led prayers in his place, during his
last illness. Prayer is the foremost thing in Islam. With all these
qualifications, you are the fittest person to be the successor of the
holy Prophet. Hold out your hand that we many pledge loyatly to you."
But Abu Bakr did not
stretch out his hand. Omar saw that delay might lead to the reopening
of the whole question. That could easily create difficulties. So he
himself took Abu Bakr's hand and pledged loyalty to him. Others
followed his example. Men from all sides rushed to pledge loyalty to
the successor of the Prophet. Abu Bakr became Caliph by the general
consent of the people.
The First Address
On the following day, Abu Bakr went to the
Prophet's mosque Here people took the general oath of loyalty. When
this was over, Abu Bakr mounted the pulpit as the Caliph of Islam.
Then he spoke to the gathering as follows:
"O people, I have been
elected your leader, although I am not better than anyone from among
you. If I do any good, give me your support. If I go wrong, set me
right. Listen, truth is honesty and untruth is dishonesty. The weak
among you are powerful in my eyes, as long as I do not get them their
due, Allah willing. The powerful among you are weak in my eyes, as
long as I do not take away from them what is due to others, Allah
willing."
"Listen, if people give
up striving for the cause of Allah, Allah sends down disgrace on them.
If a people become evil doers, Allah sends down calamities on them."
"Listen, you must obey
me as long as I obey Allah and His Messenger. If I disobey Allah and
His Messenger, you are free to disobey me."
Such was the Magna
Carta granted by the first Caliph of Islam to his people, on the first
day of his rule, without their asking. Abu Bakr showed by his example
that in Islam government means government of the people, by the people
and for the people.
Ali's Delay
F or six months Ali and some of his relatives
did not pledge loyalty to Abu Bakr. That was because of a difference
of opinion with the Caliph. The holy Prophet had some land at Medina
and Khaibar. His daughter, Fatima, and his uncle, Abbas, laid claim to
this land. But Abu Bakr set aside the claim, in the light of what the
holy Prophet himself had said. "We Prophets cannot be inherited," was
his saying; "whatever we leave behind is public property."
Fatima new nothing of this saying of her
father. She thought she was perfectly right in her claim. This created
a little bitterness in her mind, and the mind of her husband, Ali. The
hypocrites were quick to add to the misunderstanding.
But Abu Bakr and Ali
were equally unselfish. During Fatima's illness, Abu Bakr himself went
to see her and cleared away the misunderstanding. After her death, Ali
went to Abu Bakr and said, "O Siddiq, we admit your superiority. We do
not envy the position Allah has given you. But as relatives of the
holy Prophet, we thought Caliphate to be our right. You had taken away
this right of ours."
These words brought
tears in Abu Bakr's eyes and he said, "By Allah, the relatives of the
Prophet are dearer to me than my own relatives."
The assurance satisfied
Ali. He went to the mosque and publicly took the pledge of loyalty.
Usama's Expedition
Some weeks before his death, the holy Prophet
has nominated Usama to lead an expedition against Syria. He was to
avenge the death of his father, Zaid, the freed slave of the holy
Prophet. Zaid was killed by the Syrians in the battle of Muta. The
preparations of the expedition were under way when the holy Prophet
fell seriously ill and passed away. That help up Usama's expedition
for some weeks. As soon as Abu Bakr became Caliph, the first thing he
thought of was the sending out of the expedition.
The death of the holy
Prophet led some people to think that Islam was going to end with him.
Many tribes had entered the fold of Islam only a short time before.
They were by no means firm in the new faith. Many of them, now, showed
signs of bolting out of the fold of Islam. Abu Bakr was facing a
difficult situation.
But Abu Bakr had to
carry out the commands of the Prophet at all costs. He was determined
to send out the expedition planned by the Messenger of Allah. Some of
the companions said that he had better drop the idea for the time
being. Trouble was brewing all around, they said. It was unwise to
send troups out when they were urgently needed at home. But Abu Bakr
would not listen to them. "How can I fold up the flag," he asked,
"which the holy Prohet himself unfurled? It is simply unthinkable."
Then someone suggested
that Usama was too raw - he was below twenty - to lead the expedition.
It was wiser to put a more experienced man in command. The suggestion
made Abu Bakr angry. "What right have I," he demanded, "to dismiss a
man appointed by the Messenger of Allah?"
So the expedition left
under Usama, about three weeks after the passing away of the holy
Prophet. Abu Bakr accompanied Usama some distance out of Medina. The
youthful commander was riding a horse, while the Caliph walked by his
side. Usama said, "O successor of the holy Prophet, you also get on a
horse and allow men to get down."
"By Allah," replied Abu
Bakr, "I will agree to neither of the two things. What harm is there
is there if a little dust falls on my feet, while I go some steps in
the way of Allah? For every step one takes in Allah's way, one gets
the reward of seven hundred good deeds."
Omar was also one of
the men under Usama's command. But Abu Bakr needed him, at Medina, for
purposed of advice. So he made a request to Usama, to allow Omar to
remain in Medina. The request was granted.
Before the Caliph bade
farewell to Usama, he gave him much useful advice. Some of it was:
"Look! Be not dishonest. Do not deceive
anyone. Do not hide the booty you get. Do not mutilate anyone. Do not
kill the aged, the children and the women. Do not set fire to
date-palms. Do not cut down fruit trees. Do not slaughter a goat, or a
cow, or a camel, except for purposes of food. You will come across
people who have give up the world and are sitting in monasteries.
Leave them alone."
Usama's expedition
proved very successful. He raided the frontier districts of Syria and
was back in Medina after forty days.
The expedition had
another good result. It proved an eye-opener to those who thought
Islam was dying out. They had a clear proof that Islam was still able
to challenge one of the greatest powers of the world. This overawed
the wavering tribes. Some of the tribes which had left Islam actually,
rentered its fold.
The Imposters
A bu Bakr soon found the country in the grip of
a civil war. The outlying provinces, like Nejd, were the first to
create trouble. They had accepted Islam when it seemed to be the only
safest way to follow. They knew nothing of the true spirit of Islam.
For centuries they had known no outside authority. They were wont to
be as free as the winds that sweep across the desert. Islam put them
under discipline. They had to live by the moral laws of Islam. The
drinking and gambling of the "days of ignorance" were no more. The
wild spirit of the desert rebelled against this moral control. It saw
its oppurtunity in the death of the holy Prophet. Now was the time to
throw off the yoke of Islam.
The one thing which was
especially irk-some to the chiefs of these tribes was the poor-rate.
The government at Medina took away from them, each year, two and a
half per cent of their total wealth. True, this money was spent on the
poor of their own tribe. But all the same, it was a burden on their
pockets. If only Medina would stop collecting the poor-rate, they
could continue to be Muslims. Many chiefs made this decision known to
the Caliph.
A more serious trouble
also raised its head at the same time. People who had spent no time
with the holy Prophet, nor studied him closely, thought of him as a
mere ruler. The more clever among such people began to dream of a
similar career. "All we have to do," they thought to themselves, "is
to claim to be prophets and get a following." Thus they hoped to rise
to power and fame. Many a cunning man fell prey to this ambition.
Presently, a host of imposters appeared in different parts of Arabia.
They all claimed to be apostles of Allah.
Firm Action
The situation was serious. Utmost care was
needed to handle it. Abu Bakr called a meeting of the Advisory Counsel
and sought its advice. Many of the members were for slow action. "It
is not wise," they said, "to start fighting on all fronts at one and
the same time. Ignore those, for the time being, who refuse to pay the
poor-rate. We can settle with them when imposters have been dealt
with."
Abu Bakr would not
listen to such counsel. "By Allah," he declared, "even if a single kid
is due from a man, he must give it. If he refuses. I will wage war
against him. If others do not support me, I will fight alone. No one
has the power to change a commandment of Allah."
However, the situation
was extremely difficult. Among the non-payers of the poor-rate were
the neighbouring tribes of Abs and Zabyan, Asad and Toy. They thought
of squeezing a concession from the Caliph before Usma's army was back
in Medina. They sent a deputation to the Caliph, offering to stay
withing the fold of Islam if they were exempted from paying the
poor-rate.
True to his mettle, Abu
Bakr firmly turned down the proposal. At the same time, he set about
strengthening the defences of Medina, for he expected a treacherous
attack from the rebel tribes.
On the third night the
treacherous blow came. But Abu Bakr was ready for it. He hit back so
hard that the enemy fled back headlong.
In a few days Usama was
back in Medina. The Caliph decided to march in person against the
treacherous tribes. People begged him not to risk his life but Abu
Bakr would not listen. Leaving Usama in Medina as his deputy, the
Caliph led an army against Abs and Zabyan and utterly defeated these
tribes. Their pastures were taken over for army use.
This firm action on the
part of the Caliph convinced many a waverer that it was impossible to
accept part of Islam and reject part of it. That saved the integrity
of Islam as a way of life. Abu Bakr's invincible faith helped Islam
keep its foundation in tact.
War on Imposters
It was now time to strike at the imposters.
Usama's army had rested and was ready to go into action again. Abu
Bakr marched the army about twelve miles along the road to Nejd. Here
he divided it into eleven battalions. Each battalion was put under the
command of an experienced commander. The commanders were then told to
march against different imposters.
Before these armies
left, a general warning was given to the imposters and their
followers. They were assured of pardon if they came back to Islam. The
Caliph gave the following instructions to his commanders:
"I request the soldiers
of Islam to fear Allah, under all conditions. They should do their
best to obey the commandments of Allah. They should fight against
those who have left Islam and have fallen in the trap of the devil.
But before taking out swords, they must declare the message of Islam.
If the apostates accept it, they must at once hold back their hands.
But if the message is rejected, they must attack and fight till these
people give up disbelief. When the apostates re-enter the fold of
Islam, the commander of the Muslim army must explain to them their
rights and duties under Islam. They should be given their rights and
should be made to do their duties. The commander should keep his men
from hasty action and mischief. He should avoid a headlong plunge into
enemy settlements. He should rather enter them after making sure of
all precautions, lest Muslims suffer a loss. Whether he is on the
march of in the camp, the commander should be kind and considerate
towards his men. He should look to their comfort and should be gentle
in speech."
The Caliph explained
these instructions to the commanders. Then they led their battalions
against the several imposters.
Abu Bakr then came back
to Medina. He had already forced the waverers among Muslims to pay
Zakat (the poor-rate). Now he launched an all-out attack on imposters
and their followers.
Musailma the Liar
Musailma was the most cunning of all imposters.
He belonged to Yamama. When he learnt of the serious illness of the
holy Prophet, he wrote him a letter, saying, "Allah has made me your
partner in prophethood. Let us divide the earth between ourselves." To
this the holy Prophet replied, "To Musailma the Liar! Surely the earth
belongs to Allah. He grants possession of it to those of His servants
whom He likes."
The death of the holy
Prophet gave Musailma the oppurtunity. He collected a large army. This
army had first to deal with an impostress - Sajah by name. She ws a
Christian. After the death of the holy Prophet, she laid claim to
prophethood, "why should all prophets be men?" she said. "In me Allah
has now sent a woman prophet." She raised a big army and was marching
towards Medina. On the way she came across Musailma's forces. The
shrewd imposter at once saw that Sajah was a serious rival. He also
felt that he could not defeat her on the battlefield. So he started a
love affair, Sajah easily fell into the trap. The two were married.
Now Musailma had a huge army, 4,000 strong, under his command.
The battalion under
Ikrama bin Abu Jahl was to attack Musailma. The battalion under
Shurjil was to reinforce it. Ikrama had orders to wait for the
reinforcement. But, hoping to get the whole credit for himself, Ikrama
did not wait for Shurjil. He attacked Musailma and was badly beaten.
The news made Abu Bakr sad. He at once wrote to Khalid bin Walid to
deal with Musailma. The combined battalions of Khalid and Shurjil now
fell upon the imposter. Musailma fought desperatley. Once his men
reached the very tent of Khalid. But Khalid kept his nerve. He rallied
his men and himself led a final attack. Confounded by the suddenness
of the attack, Musailma's men took to flight. The imposter and a few
of his companions hid themselves in a fortified garden but the Muslim
warriors threw open the gates. The infamous imposter and his friends
were all put to the sword. Among those who killed Musailma was Wahshi,
the negro slave who had killed Hamza, the uncle of the holy Prophet at
Ohud. He had done this to win his freedom. Hind, the wife of Abu
Sufyan, had promised to buy him his freedom if he slew Hamza. After
the fall of Mecca, Wahshi became a Muslim. The Holy Prophet forgave
him but said, "Please Wahshi, keep out of my sight. You remind me of
my dear uncle."
Wahshi had always felt
sorry for his sin. He wanted to wash it out. The battle against
Musailma gave him his chance. His javelin was in search of the
imposter. With great skill he sank the poisoned end of his javelin
into the imposter. The wretch gave a yell and fell to the ground. The
next moment his head was cut off. "Thank Allah!" exclaimed Wahshi, "I
have been able to make some amends for my sin."
Musailma belonged to
the tribe of Banu Hanifa. Orders were received from the Caliph that
all mean of the tribe who had taken up arms against Islam should be
put to death. But Khalid had already promised to spare their lives. So
his wod was honored and the whol tribe re-imbraced Islam.
The Era of Conquest Begins
The kings of Iran had done all they could to
crush Islam. In fact, the infamous Khusro Parvez had ordered the
arrest of the holy Prophet. But a few days after, he was killed by his
own son, Sharuya. Since that day, Iran had known no peace. Abu Bakr
had to take account of the ever-present danger on the eastern
frontiers.
In the first month of
the year 12 A.H., Khalid bin Walid was sent with an army to challenge
the might of Iran. Another army under Qaqaa bin Amr was to reinforce
him. Khalid was to attack Kamla, the southern outpost of the Iranian
empire.
A second army, under
Ayaz bin Ghanam, was to strike at the norther boundary of Iraq.
According to the Islamic practice, Khalid
addressed the following letter to Hurmuz, the Iranian Commander:
"Accept Islam and you will be safe. If not, agree to pay the jizya or
you will have to repent. I am bringing against you a people who love
death as you love life."
The proud Iranian
Commander paid no heed to the warning. He was slain in the battle that
followed. The Iranian army was utterly routed. After this a number of
well-known Iranian generals came to fight Khalid. Bahman and Jahan
were two of them. But they all met defeat. The Iranian losses were
heavy.
Hira, on the Iranian
border, ws the stronghold of the Christian Arabs. They had so far
fought on the Iranian side. Khalid conquered Hira. Soon after, the
other frontier chiefs also submitted to Khalid.
After Hira, Khalid conquered Anbar and
Ain-ut-Tamr, two important outposts of the Iranian empire. He now
received a letter from Ayaz, calling him to his help in North Iraq.
Ayaz was hard pressed at Dumat-ul-Jundal. Khalid rushed to his help
and sent the following message to Ayaz:
"Wait for a while.
Camels carrying fierce lions are shortly reaching. Wave after wave of
troops are on their way."
One of the enemy
generals, Akidar, knew from his own experience how impossible it was
to halt Khalid's attack. He advised the other generals to stop
fighting against the Muslims. When the advice went unheeded, he
quietly left. His friends saw the truth of his remarks when they met
humiliating engagement took place at Faraz. A huge force made of
Iranians and Arabs crosed the Euphrates. On the 15th
of Dhul-Qaad, 12 A.H., Khalid routed this host at Faraz. From here he
went back to Hira.
Allah's Sword
Khalid bin Walid was born a general. At Ohud, he
fought on the side of the Quraish. It was he who turned the tide of
that battle. Muslim victory was clearly in sight. Quraish leaders were
on the run. Suddenly Khalid saw the pass at the back of the Muslim
army undefended. At the head of a strong party, he dashed through the
pass and took the army of Islam by surprise.
After the peace of
Hudaibiya Khalid embraced Islam. His military talent soon began to
outshine others. The Holy Prophet at once saw his worth and gave him
the title of "Saif Allah" or "Allah's Sword." But it was not till
Islam overleaped the boundaries of Arabia that the world saw Khalid's
unequalled military talent.
Abu Bakr was quick to
see Khalid's ability. So he put him in charge of the Iraqi campaign.
Khalid's exploits in this campaign have few equals in history. In
about eleven months, he over-ran the whole of Iraq and brought it
under the banner of Islam. He had no more than ten thousand men. With
this small force he defeated hosts twenty times as big. These hosts
had superior arms and equipment. But Khalid knew how to win with
smaller numbers and inferior arms.
In Iraq Khalid fought
fifteen battles in all. He won complete victory in all of them. He
never allowed the standard of Islam to leave the battlefield until the
enemy was completely beaten. Towards the later part of the campaign,
Khalid became the dread of the enemy. The mere fact that Khalid
commanded an army made the enemy tremble.
War with Byzantian
The need for military operations against
Byzantium began to be felt in the life-time of the Holy Prophet. So
Abu Bakr was bound to do something about this danger. In the year 13
A.H., he prepared a big army and divided it into four battalions. Each
battalion was put under a separate commander. Each of them was to
strike at a different point on the Syrian border. Abu Obaida bin
Jarrah was to march on Hims, Amr bin al-Aas on Palestine, Yazid bin
Abi Sufyan on Damascus and Shurjil bin Hasna on Jordan.
These battalions were
to strike at the enemy at once and the same time. The aim was to keep
the enemy from hitting with full force on anyone of the battalions.
Before these armies
left, Abu Bakr gave the following instructions to their commanders:
- Always fear Allah. He knows what is in
men's hearts.
- Be kind to the men under you and treat
them well.
- Directions given should be brief. If too
long, they are likely to be forgotten.
- Improve your conduct first; others will
improve when they see your example>
- Honor the representatives of the enemy.
- Keep your own arrangement a secret.
- Be always truthful so you can get good
advice.
- At night when you are free, sit among your
men. This will keep you in touch with them.
- Make good arrangements for the watch and
ward of the army.
- Keep away from untruthful men. Be intimate
with truthful and faithful companions.
- Be sincere to all whom you have dealings.
- Beward of cowardice and dishonesty.
- You will come across people who have given
up the world and are spending their days in place of worship. Leave
such people alone.
The news of the Muslim
invasion upset Emperor Heracleus. He was in Jerusalem at that time. He
sought the advice of his nobles. He himself was in favor of coming to
terms with the Muslims. "It is better to give up half of Syria," he
said, "than lose the whole of it." To this the nobles did not agree.
So four huge armies
were sent by the emperor to fight the Muslims. His own brother was
leading one of the armies. Each army was several times more numerous
than the Muslim army it had to fight. This made the Muslim commanders
give thought to the matter. They met together for mutual counsel. One
of them pinpointed the folly of fighting separately. "We will be
crushed under the sheer weight of numbers," he said, "if we fight
separately." The other generals saw the point. They agreed upon a plan
to merge the four battalions into a single army. Thus, they thought,
the Muslim army would stop looking too small in its own eyes. They
informed the Caliph of their decision. He approved of it and sent the
following written message:
"Muslims can never be
defeated because of small numbers. But if their own sins overwhelm
them, they will meet defeat. So let you all keep away from sins of all
kinds."
The Battle of Yarmuk
Heraclius learnt that the four Muslim armies had
merged into one. He also ordered a smiliar move. The four Byzantine
armies combined to fomr a gigantic mass of men. They dug up trenches
in the valley of Yarmuk. By the Caliph's orders the Muslim forces,
too, took up position on the opposite side. For weeks the two armies
lay facing each other. Neither of the two sides dared to touch on the
fighting.
The Byzantine forces
had every advantage on their side. In addition to numbers, they had
the river in front and the mountains at their back. So the Muslim
commanders requested the Caliph for reinforcements. HE at once wrote
to Khalid to rush to Syria.
Khalid handed over the
charge of affairs in Iraq to Muthanna bin Haritha. He then hastened to
Syria at the head of ten thousand men. Despite all his haste, Khalid
conquered many forts and cities on the way. At last he reached Yarmuk.
Almost at the same time, the Byzantine army received a reinforcement.
The brought their total strength to two hundred and forty thousand.
The Muslim army numbered just thirty-six thousand.
Khalid Reorganizes the Army
Khalid at once saw that he must properly
organize the army, in order to win. It meant a single command, in
place of the four commands. So he called the other commanders and
said, "We are fighting for the sake of the faith. We must all forget
ourselves. We cannot afford to be split under many commanders. That
would be a help to the enemy. Let there be just one commander, by
turns if you please. If you agree to that let me be the commander for
the first day of the battle."
All liked the plan.
Khalid took the chief command. He divided the army into several
sections. Each section was put under a commander. It was further
subdivided into many troops, each with a leader. Abu Sufyan was
appointed the fiery herald. He went about the army, speaking words of
courage to men.
As the two armies stood
facing each other, a Muslim soldier remarked. "How numerous the enemy
is!" Khalid overheard the remark. "It is not the numbers that matter,"
he exlaimed, "it is rather the final outcome of the battle."
At long last the battle
began. Khalid took some troops with him. He made a wild charge and was
soon in the heart of enemy forces. He succeeded in driving a wedge
between the enemy cavalry and infantry. The two were cut off from each
other.
Fighting unto Death
Ikrama bin Abu Jahl was fighting at Yarmuk. Soon
after the battle began, the Muslim troops began to real under the
weight of numbers. Ikrama saw this. "Heretofore I fought all battles
against the Apostle of Allah," he shouted out. "This is the first time
I am fighting for the cause of Allah. In no casse will I turn my back
on the battlefield. Now who are going to fight unto death with me?"
Saying this, Ikrama
held out his hand to receive the pledge of others. His son, Amr, was
the first go give the pledge. He was followed by four hundred more.
Like wild cats, these men pounced upon the enemy hordes. They dealt
such telling blows that the sea of man cleared before them. Their
desperate attack caused confusion among enemy ranks.
Rout of the Enemy
Soon the enemy cavalry found itself walled
between Khalid's troops and the main Muslim army. Confusion spread and
they fled. The Muslim army made was for them to flee.
Now Khalid fell on the
enemy infrantry. THe shield of the cavalry being no more, the infantry
was take by surprise. In utter confusion it fell back. But the
mountain blocked the way. In despair men ran back to the river. Here a
watery death awaited them. Most of the men had tied themselves with
iron chains to rule out the possibility of flight. The chains proved
traps of death. When a few of the men fell into the river, they also
dragged their companions into the watery grave. According to one
estimate, one hundred and twenty thousand of them were drowned in the
river. The Byzantine rout was complete. The Muslims loss was three
thousand killed.
Women's Courage
Muslim women played a notable role in this
battle. They formed a battalion which stood at the back of the army.
They supplied water to the men. They also dressed their wounds. They
shouted words of courage when the army showed signs of weakness. These
words put a new heart into retreating men. They dashed forth like
lightning and sowed death among enemy lines.
The Byzantine army at
first forced the Muslims to fall back. Muslim women stood on a bridge.
Khalid came to them and said, "O daughters of Islam, if anyone turns
his back on the battlefield, kill him at once."
The women did what
Khalid bade them to do. They stood at their post of duty. They had
stones at their post of duty. They had stones in their hands and their
eyes were fixed on the battlefield. If anyone fled for life, he was
met by a shower of stones. Back he ran into the thick of battle and
fought to the last.
Many Muslim soldiers
had brought their families with them. The women stayed in tents at the
back of the troops. Their words of courage for the brave and their
taunts for the weak of heart, made a real difference in the tempo of
fighting and in the outcome of the battle. Victory of Yarmuk was in no
small measure due to the courage of Muslim women.
Omar's Nomination
Welfare of Muslims had always been the first
care of Abu Bakr. He would allow nothing that made Islam weak. The
thing he feared most was division among Muslims. He remembered what
had happened after the death of the Holy Prophet. He wanted to make
sure that no differences should divide Muslims after he was no more.
Unity was the secret strength. Unity must be had at any price.
As his sickness grew,
Abu Bakr gave more and more thought to the matter. Who should be the
Caliph after him? Should he himself name the best man? Or should he
leave the matter to the people? In the latter case, quarrels might
arise. These would certainly shake the very foundations of Islam. IT
was too great a risk. Abu Bakr was not willing to take that risk.
After careful thought,
he chose to nominate Omar. He put his proposal before the leading
Companions. Most of them liked the proposal. But someone said, "Omar
is no doubt the best man, but he is rather too strict."
To this Abu Bakr
replied, "As soon as the burden of Caliphate falls on his shoulders,
he will become more mild."
When all Companions
agreed, Abu Bakr called Othman. He dictated to him Omar's nomination.
It was read out to the people. It said:
"This is the will of
Abu Bakr, the Caliph of the Holy Prophet. He is making the will when
he is about to leave for the next world. This is the time when even a
non-believer begins to believe and even a sinner begins to trust in
Allah. I appoint Omar bin Khattab as your ruler. In appointing him, I
have kept your welfare fully in mind. I hope he will be truthful and
just. But if he leaves his path and becomes unjust, I know nothing
about the unseen, I have only the well-being of Muslims at heart.
Everybody is responsible for what he does."
The will was read out
to the people. After this Abu Bakr went to the top of his house,
supported by two men. Addressing the people he said:
"My brethren in-faith,
I have not appointed any of my own brothers and relatives as your
Caliph. I have appointed a man who is the fittest person among you. Do
you approve of him?"
"Of course we do," went
up a shout from hundreds of men.
Next he called Omar to
his bedside and spoke to him thus:
"Omar! I have nominated
you my successor. My parting advice is that you fear Allah and work
for the well-being of the Muslims. Remember, Omar, the duties you own
to Allah are to be discharged at the proper time. Some of these are to
be discharged at night and some during the day time. First things must
come first. On the Day of Judgment only those will come out successful
whose good deeds are weighty. Those whose evil deeds out-weigh the
good deeds, will have a terrible time. For success and salvation, you
have to make the Qur'an and the truth your guides. You know, Omar,
that the verses of the Qur'an speak of good reward and punishment side
by side. This is to put the fear of Allah in the believer's heart and
to make him pray for forgiveness. Omar, when you read in the Qur'an
about the inmate of fire, pray to Allah not to make you one of them.
But when you read about the dwellers of Paradise, pray for being one
of them Omar, if you follow the path I have chalked out fo ryou, you
will find me by your side."
When OMar had left the
dying Caliph raised his hands in prayer and said:
"Lord! I have taken
this step in the best interest of the Muslims. I feared disunion among
them, so I took this step, the consequences of which are best known to
You. After careful thought I have appointed a man who is the
sinceristy and the most energetic worker for the well-being of the
people. I am at death's door now, so help the Muslims, Lord after I am
no more. THye are Your servants. Their future is in Your hands. Lord,
keep their rules on the right path. Make Omar one of the noblest
Caliphs and help the Muslims help him."
Abu Bakr Passes Away
After an illness of two weeks, Abu Bakr passed
away. He was sixty-three at the time. He was buried by the side of the
Holy Prophet.
Before his death he
said, "Do not use new cloth to cover my dead body. The sheet of cloth
I have on will do for me. Wash it clean."
"But this is too old
and worn, father," said his daughter Aisha.
"This old and worn sheet will do for me," he
replied.
This parting wish was
acted upon. The second wish of the dying Caliphs was, "Sell my land
and pay back in the public treasury all the money I got as my salary."
This was also done. Before he became the Caliph, Abu Bakr was a
well-to-day merchant. The affairs of the Caliphate left him no time to
look after his own business. The matter was put before the Companions.
They allowed the Caliph a salary of six thousand dirhams a year. All
this money was paid back to the Bait-ul-Mal (the Public Treasury)
after the Caliph's death.
Thus Abu Bakr, the
first Caliph, left behind a noble example of selfless service. He
lived and worked for Islam to the last breath. And for his tireless
labors, he sought no worldly reward.
Two Years of Abu Bakr's Calpihate
Abu Bakr was Caliph for only two years, three
months and ten days. This was a relatively short period of time in the
life of people. But during this short period, Abu Bakr was able to do
great things for Islam. These achievements have made his name
immortal. They have placed him among the greatest men of all time.
When Abu Bakr too over,
Islam was confined to Arabia alone. And here, too its hold was rather
shaky. In many parts of the country, Islam was but a name. It was not
a way of life with most people. Scores of tribes had thought of the
Holy Prophet has a mere king. They tried to throw off his yoke as soon
as he was no more. Abu Bakr taught these people a lasting lesson. He
taught them that Islam was a way of life.
Abu Bakr was able to do
this because of his unshakable faith. No difficulties could take him
off the path of the Prophet. Usama might be youthful and
inexperienced, but Abu Bakr would not hear a word against him. He was
appointed by the Prophet. There might be rising in the country, but
Abu Bakr would not put off the expedition to Tabuk. The Prophet had
ordered it. Abu Bakr stood unequalled in his love for Allah and His
Apostle. This was the secret of his unbending strength. It was this
inner strength that carried him through the darkest hours of his
Caliphate.
Abu Bakr was as sincere
as he was firm in faith. He lived up to every word of what he said at
the beginning of his Caliphate. He was never anything but the faithful
agent of Allah and His Apostle, and the humblest servant of his
people. It was this fact which won him the deepest love and respect
for all classes of his people. The result was that Islam took an
unshakable hold on the coutrny of its birth. Soon it gathered enough
strength to overlap its boundaries. It struck at the two most feared
powers of the time. And lo! it was successful. Abu Bakr had put Islam
on the road to worldwide expansion.
Islam means total
submission to the will of Allah. It means that utter absence of all
selfishness. The Holy Prophet showed by his example hwo that goal
could be reached. He showed how the power of the State should not be
used for private ends but for the public good. Abu Bakr was the first
among his followers to live up to the Prophet's example. He go tno
personal gain out of the Caliphate. He spent every minuted of the last
two years of life in the service of his people, but got not a penny as
wages.
Abu Bakr had several
sons and many near relatives. For public offices, he did not choose
anyone of them. He rather chose other people who were more fit for
public service. He had to nominate his own successor to prevent
quarrels. But his choice fell on none of his own relatives. His choice
was rather the man whom he honestly believed to be the best among the
Companions. All the same, he did not force his choice on people. He
put his proposal before the Companions. When they had agreed to it, he
put it before the people.
In short, Abu Bakr
showed the world what government of the people, for the people, and by
the people really meant. Neither the East nor the West had ever known
such a form of government before. The mighty empires of Iran and
Byzantium were based upon naked force.
In short Abu Bakr kept
going the great work of the Prophet. For that he had to fight hard. He
fought with a will and with a faith that amazed everyone. Islam is for
ever grateful to him for the great services he rendered to it