THE YEAR OF GRIEF
In Rajab, the tenth year of the Prophethood, Abu Talib fell ill and passed
away, six months after leaving the confinement at Ash-Sh‘ib. In another
version, Abu Talib breathed his last in Ramadan, three days prior to the
death of Khadijah (May Allah be pleased with her). On the authority of
Al-Musaiyab, when Abu Talib was on the death bed, the Prophet (Peace be
upon him) entered the room where he saw Abu Jahl and ‘Abdullah bin Abi
Omaiyah. He requested his uncle:
“My uncle, you just make a profession that there is no true god
but Allâh, and I will bear testimony before Allâh (of your being
a believer)”.
Abu Jahl and ‘Abdullah bin Abi Omaiyah addressing him said: “Abu Talib,
would you abandon the religion of ‘Abdul-Muttalib?” The Messenger of Allâh
(Peace be upon him) constantly requested him (to accept his offer), and
(on the other hand) was repeated the same statement (of Abu Jahl and ‘Abdullah
bin Abi Omaiyah) — till Abu Talib gave his final decision and he stuck
to the religion of ‘Abdul-Muttalib and refused to profess that there is
no true god but Allâh. Upon this the Messenger of Allâh (Peace be upon
him) remarked:
“By Allâh, I will persistently beg pardon for you till I am forbidden
to do so (by Allâh)”.
It was then that Allâh, the Magnificent and Glorious revealed this verse:
“It is not (proper) for the Prophet and those who believe to ask
Allâh’s forgiveness for the Mushrikűn (polytheists, idolaters,
pagans, disbelievers in the Oneness of Allâh) even though they be
of kin, after it has become clear to them that they are the dwellers
of the Fire (because they died in a state of disbelief).” [9:113]
And it was said to the Messenger of Allâh (Peace be upon him):
“Verily! You [O Muhammad (Peace be upon him) ] guide not whom
you like.” [28:56]
It goes without saying that Abu Talib was very much attached to Muhammad
(Peace be upon him) . For forty years, Abu Talib had been the faithful
friend — the prop of his childhood, the guardian of his youth and in later
life a very tower of defence. The sacrifices to which Abu Talib exposed
himself and his family for the sake of his nephew, while yet incredulous
of his mission, stamp his character as singularly noble and unselfish.
The Prophet (Peace be upon him) did his best to persuade his octogenarian
uncle to make profession of the true faith, but he remained obdurate and
stuck to the paganism of his forefathers, and thus could not achieve complete
success. Al-‘Abbas bin ‘Abdul-Muttalib narrated that he said to the Prophet
(Peace be upon him) “You have not been of any avail to your uncle (Abu
Talib) (though) by Allâh, he used to protect you and get angry on your
behalf.” The Prophet (Peace be upon him) said: “He is in a shallow fire,
and had it not been for me, he would have been at the bottom of the (Hell)
Fire.”
Abu Sa‘id Al-Khudri narrated that he heard the Prophet (Peace be upon
him) say, when the mention of his uncle was made, “I hope that my intercession
may avail him, and he be placed in a shallow fire that rises up only to
his heels.”
Only two months after the death of his uncle, did the Messenger of Allâh
(Peace be upon him) experience another great personal loss viz., the Mother
of believers, his wife Khadijah passed away in Ramadan of the tenth year
of his Prophethood, when she was sixty-five years old, and he was fifty.
Khadijah was in fact a blessing of Allâh for the Prophet (Peace be upon
him). She, for twenty-five years, shared with him the toils and trials
of life, especially in the first ten years of his ministry of Prophethood.
He deeply mourned over her death, and once he replied in an honest burst
of tender emotions:
“She believed in me when none else did. She embraced Islam when
people disbelieved me. And she helped and comforted me in her person
and wealth when there was none else to lend me a helping hand. I
had children from her only.”
Abu Hurairah reported that Gabriel came to Allâh’s Messenger (Peace be
upon him) and said: “Allâh’s Messenger, lo, Khadijah is coming to you
with a vessel of seasoned food or drink. When she comes to you, offer
her greetings from her Lord, and give her glad tidings of a palace of
jewels in Paradise where there is no noise and no toil.”
These two painful events took place within a short lapse of time and
added a lot to his grief and suffering. The Makkans now openly declared
their campaign of torture and oppression. The Prophet (Peace be upon him)
lost all hope of bringing them back to the right path, so he set out for
Al-Ta’if seeking a supportive atmosphere. But there too, he was disappointed
and he sustained unbearable tortures and maltreatment that far outweighed
his miserable situation in his native town.
His Companions were on equal footing subjected to unspeakable torture
and unbearable oppression to such an extent that his closest friend, Abu
Bakr, to escape pressure, fled out of Makkah and wanted to leave for Abyssinia
(Ethiopia) if it were not for Ibn Ad-Daghanah who met him at Bark Al-Ghamad
and managed to dissuade him from completing his journey of escape and
brought him back under his protection.
Tdeath of Abu Talib rendered the Prophet (Peace be upon him) vulnerable,
and the polytheists availed them of that opportunity to give free rein
to their hatred and highhandedness and to translate them in terms of oppression
and physical tortures. Once an insolent Quraishite intercepted him and
sprinkled sand on his head. When he arrived home, a daughter of his washed
the sand away and wept. “Do not weep, my daughter. Allâh will verily protect
your father.” The Prophet (Peace be upon him) said.
Rapid succession of misfortunes, led the Prophet (Peace be upon him)
to call that period, ‘the year of grief and mourning’. Thenceforth, that
year bore that appellation.
The death of Khadijah left the Prophet (Peace be upon him) lonely. The
name of Sawdah was suggested to him for marriage which he accepted. This
lady had suffered many hardships for the sake of Islam. She was an early
convert to the Islamic Faith and it was by her persuasion that her husband
had embraced Islam. On the second emigration to Abyssinia (Ethiopia),
Sawdah had accompanied her husband As-Sakran bin ‘Amr. He died on their
way back to Makkah leaving her in a terrible state of destitution. She
was the first woman for the Prophet (Peace be upon him) to marry after
the death of Khadijah. Some years later she granted her turn with the
Prophet (Peace be upon him) to her co-wife, ‘Aishah.
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