Prophet Muhammad SAW
Muhammad was the prophet and founder of Islam. Most of his
early life was spent as a merchant. At age 40, he began to have revelations
from Allah that became the basis for the Quran and the foundation of Islam.
Muhammad found unflinching support in his wife and slowly began to attract
followers. His strong monotheistic message angered many of the Meccan merchants
and was ostracized in Mecca. Muhammed and his followers were eventually forced
to emigrate from Mecca to Medina. Muhammad settled in Medina, building his
Muslim community and gradually gathering acceptance and more followers. By 630,
he had unified most of Arabia under a single religion. “There is no God but
Allah, and Muhammad is his prophet.”
The Story of Prophet Muhammad
Early Life
Muhammad was born into the most
powerful tribe in Mecca, the Quraish, around 570 A.D. The power of the Quraish
derived from their role as successful merchants. Several trade routes
intersected at Mecca, allowing the Quraish to control trade along the west
coast of Arabia, north to Syria, and south to Yemen.
Divine Revelations
When he was roughly forty,
Muhammad began having visions and hearing voices. Searching for clarity, he
would sometimes meditate at Mount Hira, near Mecca. On one of these occasions,
the Archangel Gabriel (Jibra'il in Arabic) appeared to him and instructed him
to recite "in the name of [your] lord." This was the first of many
revelations that became the basis of the Qur'an, the holy book of Islam. These
early revelations pointed to the existence of a single God, contradicting the
polytheistic beliefs of the pre-Islamic Arabian Peninsula.
Initially overwhelmed by the
significance of what was being revealed to him, Muhammad found unflinching
support in his wife and slowly began to attract followers. His strong
monotheistic message angered many of the Meccan merchants. They were afraid
that trade, which they believed was protected by the pagan gods, would suffer.
From that point forward, Muhammad was ostracized in Mecca. For a time, the
influence and status of his wife and his uncle, Abu Talib, the chief of the
clan, protected Muhammad from persecution. After they died, however, Muhammad's
situation in Mecca became dire.
The Hijra
Emigration became the only hope for Muhammad and his followers' survival. In 622, they headed to Medina, another oasis town, where they were promised freedom to practice their religion. The move from Mecca to Medina is known as the hijra—the flight—and marks year 1 of the Islamic, or hijri, calendar.
Spreading the Message of Islam
In Medina, Muhammad continued to
receive divine revelations and built an ever-expanding community around the new
faith. The conflict with the Quraish continued, but after several years of
violent clashes, Mecca surrendered. Muhammad and his followers soon returned
and took over the city, destroying all its pagan idols and spreading their
belief in one God.
The Night Journey and Ascension
of the Prophet
Accounts of the ascension (mi'raj ) of Muhammad have captured the imaginations of writers and painters for centuries. One night, while the Prophet was sleeping, the Archangel Gabriel came and led him on a journey. Mounted on the heavenly steed Buraq, Muhammad traveled from the Ka'ba in Mecca to the "Farthest Mosque," which Muslims believe to be the Al-Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem. There he prayed with other prophets such as Moses, Abraham, and Jesus, and ascended to the skies, where he was led by Gabriel through Paradise and Hell, and finally came face to face with God. He then returned to earth to continue spreading the message of Islam. According to Islamic belief, Muhammad was the only person to see Heaven and Hell while still alive.
The Death of Prophet Muhammad SAW
After the Prophet's Death: Emergence of Shi'i and Sunni Sects of Islam
When Muhammad died in 632, he had not named a successor. One faction, the Shi'a, believed that only individuals with direct lineage to the Prophet could guide the Muslim community righteously. They thought that 'Ali, Muhammad's closest surviving blood male relative, should be their next leader (caliph). The other faction, the Sunnis, believed that the Prophet's successor should be determined by consensus and successively elected three of his most trusted companions, commonly referred to as the Rightly Guided Caliphs (Abu Bakr, 'Umar, and 'Uthman), as leaders of the Muslim community; 'Ali succeeded them as the fourth caliph.
Today the Islamic community
remains divided into Sunni and Shi'i branches. Sunnis revere all four caliphs,
while Shi'is regard 'Ali as the first spiritual leader. The rift between these
two factions has resulted in differences in worship as well as political and
religious views. Sunnis are in the majority and occupy most of the Muslim
world, while Shi'i populations are concentrated in Iran and Iraq, with sizeable
numbers in Bahrain, Lebanon, Kuwait, Turkey, Pakistan, and Afghanistan.
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