A Meditation on the Ghazawat
Meditation on the Prophet’s Ghazawat,
missions, and the battalions he formed and dispatched, will certainly give us
and everybody a true and clear impression that the Prophet
was the
greatest military leader in the whole world as well as the most righteous, the
most insightful and the most alert one. He was not a man of superior genius for
this concern but he was also the Master and the greatest of all Messengers as
far as Prophethood and Heavenly Message are concerned. Besides, all the battles
that he had fought were standard in their application to the requirements of
strictness, bravery, and good arrangements that fitted the terms and conditions
of war. None of the battles he fought was lost as a consequence of shortage of
wisdom or due to any other technical error in army mobilization or a location in
a wrong strategical position. The loss of any of his battle was not due to
misjudgement about occupying the best and the most appropriate sites of battles,
nor was it due to a mischoice of leaders of the fight, for he had proved himself
to be a peculiar sort of leader that differs from any of those leaders that our
world had known and experienced. As regards Uhud and Hunain events, there were
consequences of weakness in some military elements in Hunain; and disobedience
to orders in Uhud. Their non-compliance with wisdom and the plan of the battle
played a passive role in the course of those two invasions.
His genius was clearly shown in these two battles when the Muslims were defeated; for he stood fast facing the enemy and managed, by his superior wisdom, to thwart the enemy’s aim as was the case in Uhud. Similarly he managed to change the Muslims’ defeat in Hunain into a victory. Nothwithstanding the fact that serious grave developments in military operations usually leave the worst impression on the military leaders and entice them to flee for their lives.
We have, so far, discussed the mere aspects of military leadership of the invasions. On the other hand, through these invasions he was able to impose security, institute peace, diffuse dissension and destroy the military might of the enemies through relentless struggle between Islam and paganism.
The Prophet had also profound insight and could differentiate the faithful from the hypocrites and plotters.
Great was the group of military leaders who
fought and excelled the Persians and the Byzantines in the battlefields of
Ash-Sham and Iraq with respect to war strategy and leading the fight procedures.
The very leaders, who succeeded Muhammad
, managed
to drive off the enemies of Islam, from their lands and countries, their gardens
and springs, and their farms. They drove them off their honourable residence and
from the grace and provisions they owned and enjoyed. Those Muslim leaders were
all Muhammad’s men. They were imbued with the spirit of Islam at the hand of the
Prophet
.
Thanks to these battles, the Messenger of Allâh
managed
accommodation, secured land and provided chances of work for all Muslims. He,
even, made a lot of inquiries about the refugee problems who (then) had no
houses or fortunes. He equipped the army with weapons, horses and expenditures.
He had all that realized without exercising a particle weight of injustice. The
Prophet
has
altered the standards and aims of pre-Islamic wars. Their war was no more than
robbing, killing, plundering, tyranny and aggression-oriented wars. Those wars
focused on winning victory, oppressing the weakling and demolishing their houses
and constructions. For them, war was a means by which they can rape or unveil
women, practice cruelty against the weakling, the babies and small children,
spoil tillage and race, and spread corruption on the earth. Islamic wars are
different from pre-Islamic wars. A "war" in Islam is a Jihad. That is to
say it is a noble sacred fight in the way of Allâh for the verification of a
Muslim society that seeks to free man from oppression, tyranny and aggression.
It is a society that everyone everywhere and at all times should be proud of.
Pre-Islamic thoughts and traditions of Al-Jahiliyah period have been
turned upside down by Islam. These were so hard upon the weakling that they had
to invoke Allâh to enable them to get away from that pre-Islamic environment by
saying:
The war of corruption, slaying and robbing that
used to prevail has now turned into a sacred one, Al-Jihad. One of the
greatest aims of Al-Jihad is to free man from the aggression, the
oppression and the tyranny of men of power. A man of power, in Islam, is a
weakling till after the right of the poor is taken from him. War, in Islam, is a
Jihad for the purification of the land of Allâh from deception,
treachery, sinful deeds and aggression. It is a sacred war that aims at
spreading security, safety, mercy and compassion as well as observing the rights
and magnanimity. The Messenger of Allâh
had issued
honourable strict rules about war and bade his soldiers and leaders to comply
with them. They were forbidden to break those rules under any circumstances. In
reference to Sulaiman bin Buraidah’s version, who said that his father had told
him that whenever the Messenger of Allâh
appointed a
leader on an army or on a battalion, he used to recommend him to fear Allâh, the
Great and All-Mighty, when dealing with those who were closest to him and to be
good with all Muslims. Then the Prophet
would say
to him:
The Messenger of Allâh
asked
people to facilitate but he forbade them to bear down hard on others or
constrain. "Pacify", he said, "and do not disincline".[]
When it happened that he arrived at the battlefield by night, he would never
invade the enemy till it was morning. He utterly forbade burning (i.e. torturing
people) in fire, killing children and women or even beating them. He also
forbade theft and robbery and proceeded so far as to say gains acquired through
plundering are not less forbidden than the flesh of a corpse. Corruption of
tillage and race and cutting down of trees were all forbidden unless they were
badly needed and there was no other substitute:
He decreed that envoys cannot be killed. He also stressed on not killing those who made covenants. He even said:
There were some other noble rules which purified wars from their Al-Jahiliyah (pre-Islamic) filthiness and turned them into sacred wars.[]
People embrace the Religion
of Allâh in Large Crowds
The invasion and the conquest of Makkah was —
as we have already stated — a decisive battle that destroyed paganism utterly.
The Arabs as a result of that battle were able to differentiate the truth from
the error. Delusion no longer existed in their life. So they raced to embrace
Islam. ‘Amr bin Salamah said: "We were at a water (spring) where the passage of
people was. So when camel riders passed by us we used to ask them: ‘What is the
matter with people? What is this man (i.e. the Prophet) like?’ They would say,
‘He claims that Allâh has revealed so and so.’ I used to memorize those words as
if they had been recited within my chest. The Arabs used to ascribe their
Islamization to the conquest. They would say: ‘Leave him alone to face his
people. If he were a truthful Prophet he would overcome them.’ So when the
conquest took place, peoples hastened to declare their Islam. My father was the
quickest of all my people to embrace Islam. Arriving at his people he said: ‘By
Allâh I have just verily been to the Prophet
. And he
said: ‘Perform so a prayer at such a time, and so and so prayers at such and
such time. When the prayer time is due let one of you call for the prayer and
appoint the most learned of the Qur’ân among you to be an Imam (leader)
of yours.[]"
This Prophetic tradition manifests the great effect of the conquest of Makkah on
the phase of events. It certainly shows the influence of the conquest of Makkah
upon the consolidation of Islam as well as on the Arabs’ stand and their
surrender to Islam. That influence was absolutely confirmed and deeply rooted
after the invasion of Tabuk. A clear and an obvious evidence of that influence
could be deduced from the great number of delegations arriving in Madinah
successively in the ninth and tenth years of Al-Hijra. The immense crowds of
people who raced to embrace the religion of Allâh and the great army which
included ten thousand fighters in the invasion of the conquest of Makkah had
grown big enough to include thirty thousand fighters sharing in Tabuk invasion.
It was only in less than a year after the conquest of Makkah that this growth in
Islamic army had taken place. A hundred thousand or a hundred and forty four
thousand Muslim pilgrims shared in Hajjatul -Wada‘ (i.e. Farewell
Pilgrimage); it was such an enormous number of Muslims surging — as an ocean of
men — round the Messenger of Allâh
, that the
horizon echoed their voices and the expanses of land shook whereby while saying
Labbaik (i.e. Lord, here we are worshipping), glorifying and magnifying
Allâh, and thanking Him.