Page 112 - The Vision of Islam
P. 112

Seerah as a Movement

          was their sorrow, that when they shaved their heads afterwards,
          it seemed as if they were going to cut one another’s throats. But
          this  truce,  the terms  of  which  appeared  so  unfavourable  to  the
          Muslims, was destined to reap incalculable benefits for them later.
             The treaty of Hudaybiyyah was however a temporary solution.
          The Prophet knew that the Quraysh would one day violate the
          treaty. Therefore,  this  matter  demanded  a  permanent  solution.
          The Prophet’s intuition told him to wait until they broke the treaty
          before doing battle with them. Knowing the negative sentiments
          that spurred the Quraysh on in their fight against the Muslims—
          jealousy, hate, greed and arrogance—the Prophet reckoned that
          they would stop short of no immoral or unreasonable action in
          pursuit of their aims. His estimate proved correct. In Sha’aban 8  a.h.,
          fighting  erupted between the  tribes of Khuza’a  and Banu
          Bakr. The Banu Bakr were allied to the Quraysh and the Khuza’ah
          to the Muslims. In blatant contradiction of the terms of the Treaty
          of Hudaybiyyah, the Quraysh provided their allies with clandestine
          support, thus enabling them to attack the Khuza’ah. This incident
          occurred just two years after the Treaty of Hudaybiyyah. During
          this time the number of people with the Prophet had risen from
          1500 to 10,000. Along with them, the Prophet secretly set out for
          Makkah. So wise and diplomatic was his strategy that Makkah was
          conquered with next to no bloodshed:
             “God has promised  you many future  gains,  and thus  He has
          given you this beforehand, and He has restrained the hands of men
          from you.” (Quran, 48:20)
             At the time the Treaty of Hudaybiyyah was signed, the Prophet
          had been preaching for twenty years and the message of Islam had
          spread throughout the Arabian peninsula. In every tribe, there
          were people in whose hearts the Prophet’s religion had found
          a place. But they still looked up to the Quraysh as their leaders,
          and, for fear of arousing their ire, many who realized the truth of
          Islam were unable to proclaim their faith. They knew that their
          public acceptance of Islam would have amounted to a declaration
          of war against the mightiest tribe in Arabia. Now they heard that
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