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Mus'ab ibn 'Umair - The First Envoy of Islam Historians
and narrators describe Mus'ab as the most charming of the Makkans,
the most handsome and youthful, the flower of the Quraish! He was
born and brought up in wealth, grew up with its luxuries, pampered
by his parents, the talk of the ladies of Makkah, the jewel of
its clubs and assemblies.
The youth heard one day about Muhammad
the Truthful sent by Allah as bearer of glad tidings and a warner
to call them o the worship of One God. When Makkah slept and
awoke, there were no other talk but the Prophet and his religion
and this spoiled boy was one of the most attentive listeners.
That was because, although he was young, the outward appearance
of wisdom and common sense were among the traits of Mus'ab.
He
went one night to the house of Al-Arqam Ibn Al-Arqam, yearning
and anxious. There, the Prophet was meeting his Companions, reciting
the Quran to them and praying with them to Allah the Most Exalted.Mus'ab
had hardly taken his seat and contemplated the verses of the
Quran recited by the Prophet when his heart became the promised
heart that night. The pleasure almost flung him from his seat
as he was filled with a wild ecstasy. But the Prophet patted
his throbbing heart with his blessed right hand, and the silence
of the ocean's depth filled his heart. In the twinkling of an
eye, the youth who had just become Muslim appeared to have more
wisdom than his age and a determination that would change the
course of time.
Mus'ab's mother was Khunaas Bint Maalik and people
feared her almost to the point of terror because she possessed
a strong personality. Mus'ab was satisfied with his faith and
avoided the anger of his mother who had knowledge of his embracing
Islam. He continued to frequent Daar Al-Arqam and take lessons
from the Prophet. The news eventually reached his mother who
was astonished by it. His mother aimed a heavy blow on him. However,
his mother, under the pressure of her motherliness, spared him
the beating and the pain, although it was within her power to
avenge her gods whom he had abandoned. Instead, she took him
to a rough corner of her house and shut him in it. She put shackles
on him and imprisoned him there.
Mus'ab heard the news of the
emigration of some of the believers to Abyssinia and managed
to delude his mother and his guards, and so escaped to Abyssinia
with his fellow emigrants. Later, he returned to Makkah and emigrated
again for the second time under the advice of the Prophet. Mus'ab
became confident that his life had been good enough to be offered
as a sacrifice to the Supreme Originator and great Creator. He
went out one day to some Muslims while they were sitting around
the Prophet, and no sooner did they see him than they lowered
their heads and shed some tears because they saw him wearing
wornout garments. They were accustomed to his former appearance
before he had become a Muslim, when his clothes had been like
garden flowers, elegant and fragrant. The Prophet saw him with
the eyes of wisdom, thankful and loving, and his lips smiled
gracefully as he said, "I
saw Mus'ab here, and there was no youth in Makkah more petted by
his parents than he. Then he abandoned all that for the love of
Allah and His Prophet!"
His mother had withheld from him all
the luxury he had been overwhelmed by, when she could not return
him to her religion. Her last connection with him was when she
tried to imprison him for a second time after his return from
Abyssinia, and he swore that if she did that, he would kill all
those who came to her aid to lock him up. She knew the truth
of his determination when he was intent and decided to do something,
and so she bade him goodbye weeping. When she said to him, "Go away, I am no longer
your mother," Mus'ab went close to her and said, "O Mother, I
am advising you and my heart is with you, please bear witness that
there is no God but Allah and that Muhammad is His servant and
messenger." She replied to him, angrily raging, "By the stars,
I will never enter your religion, to degrade my status and weaken
my senses!" So Mus'ab left the great luxury in which he had been
living. He became satisfied with a hard life he had never seen
before, wearing the roughest clothes, eating one day and going
hungry another. This spirit, which was grounded in the strongest
faith, adorned with the light of Allah, made him another man, one
who appeals to the eyes of other great souls.
While he was in this
state, the Prophet commissioned him with the greatest mission
of his life, which was to be his envoy to Al-Madinah. His mission
was to instruct the Ansar who believed in the Prophet and had
pledged their allegiance to him at 'Aqabah, to call others to
Islam, and to prepare Al-Madinah for the day of the great Hijrah.
There were among the Companions of the Prophet at that time who
older than Mus'ab and more prominent and nearer to the Prophet
by family relations but the Prophet chose Mus'ab the Good. Mus'ab
was equal to the task and trust which Allah had given him and
he was equipped with an excellent mind and noble character. He
won the hearts of the Madinites with his piety, uprightness and
sincerity. And so they embraced the religion of Allah in flocks.
At the time the Prophet sent him there, only 12 Muslims had pledged
allegiance to the Prophet. During the next pilgrimage season,
a few months after that, the Madinite Muslims sent a delegation
of 70 believing men and women to Makkah to meet the Prophet.
They came with their teacher and their Prophet's envoy, Mus'ab
Ibn 'Umair. Mus'ab had proven, by his good sense and excellence,
that the Prophet knew well how to choose his envoys and teachers.
The days and years passed by. The Prophet and his Companions
emigrated to Al-Madinah, and the Quraish were raging with envy
and the Battle of Badr took place, in which they were taught
a lesson and lost their strong hold. After that, they prepared
themselves for revenge and thus came the Battle of Uhud. The
Prophet chose Mus'ab to bear the standard and he advanced and
carried it. The terrible battle was raging, the fighting furious.
The archers disregarded the orders of the Prophet by leaving
their positions on the mountain when they saw the polytheists
withdrawing as if defeated. But this act of theirs soon turned
the victory of the Muslims to defeat. The Muslims were taken
at unawares by the cavalry of the Quraish at the mountain top,
and many Muslims were killed by the swords of the polytheists
as a consequence.
When they saw the confusion and horror splitting
the ranks of the Muslims, the polytheists concentrated on the
Prophet of Allah to finish him off. Mus'ab saw the impending
threat, so he raised the standard high, shouting, "Allahu Akbar! Allah is the Greatest!" like
the roar of a lion. He turned and jumped left and right, fighting
and killing the foe. All he wanted was to draw the attention of
the enemy to himself in order to turn their attention away from
the Prophet. He thus became as a whole army in himself. Nay, Mus'ab
went alone to fight as if he were an army of giants raising the
standard in sanctity with one hand, striking with his sword with
the other. But the enemies were multiplying on him. They wanted
to step on his corpse so that they could find the Prophet.
Let
us allow a living witness to describe for us the last scene of
Mus'ab the Great. Ibn Sa'd said : Ibrahim ibn Muhammad related
from his father, who said:
Mus'ab Ibn 'Umair carried the standard
on the Day of Uhud. When the Muslims were scattered, he stood
fast until he met Ibn Quma'ah who was a knight. He struck him
on his right hand and cut it off, but Mus'ab said, "And Muhammad is but
a Messenger. Messengers have passed away before him" He carried
the standard with his left hand and leaned on it. He struck his
left hand and cut it off, and so he leaned on the standard and
held it with his upper arms to his chest, all the while saying, "And
Muhammad is but a Messenger. Messengers have passed away before
him". Then a third one struck him with his spear, and the spear
went through him. Mus'ab fell and then the standard.
Nay, the cream
of martyrdom had fallen! He fell after he had struggled for the
sake of Allah in the great battle of sacrifice and faith. He
had thought that if he fell, he would be a stepping stone to
the death of the Prophet because he would be without defence
and protection. But he put himself in harm's way for the sake
of the Prophet. Overpowered by his fear for and love of him,
he continued to say with every sword stroke that fell on him
from the foe, "And Muhammad is but
a Messenger. Messengers have passed away before him" This verse
was revealed later, after he had spoken it.
After the bitter battle,
they found the corpse of the upright martyr lying with his face
in the dust, as if he feared to look while harm fell to the Prophet.
So he hid his face so that he would avoid the scene. Or perhaps,
he was shy when he fell as a martyr, before making sure of the
safety of the Prophet of Allah, and before serving to the very
end, guarding and protecting him. The Prophet and his Companions
came to inspect the scene of the battle and bid farewell to the
martyrs. Pausing at Mus'ab's body, many tears dripped from the
Prophet's eyes.
Khabbaab ibn Al-Arat narrated: We emigrated with
the Prophet for Allah's cause, so our reward became due with
Allah. Some of us passed away without enjoying anything in this
life of his reward, and of them was Mus'ab ibn 'Umair, who was
martyred on the Day of Uhud. He did not leave behind anything
except a sheet of shredded woolen cloth. If we covered his feet
with it, his head was uncovered, and if we covered his feet with
it, his head was uncovered. The Prophet said to us, "Cover
his head with it and put lemon grass over his feet."
The Prophet stood at the remains
of Mus'ab ibn 'Umair saying, while his eyes were flowing with
tears, love and loyalty, "Among the believers are men who have
been true to their covenant with Allah" (33:23) Then he gave
a sad look at the garment in which he was shrouded and said, "I
saw you at Makkah, and there was not a more precious jewel, nor
more distinguished one than you, and here you are bare-headed
in a garment!" Then
the Prophet looked at all the martyrs in the battlefield and
said, "The
Prophet of Allah witnesses that you are martyrs to Allah on the
Day of Resurrection." Then he gathered his living Companions
around him and said, "O people,
visit them, come to them, and salute them. By Allah, no Muslim
will salute them but that they will salute him in return." Peace
be on you, O Mus'ab."
Peace be on you,
O Martyrs. Peace and blessings of Allah be upon you!
(Adapted
from Men around the Messenger by Khalid Muhammed Khalid) |