9. At-Tawba (Repentance, Dispensation) |
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Maududi's Introduction |
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This Surah is known by two names -- AT-TAUBAH and AL-BARA'AT. It is called
AT-TAUBAH because it enunciates the nature of taubah (repentance) and
mentions the conditions of its acceptance.(vv. 102. 118). The second
name BARA' AT (Release) is taken from the first word of the Surah. Why
This is the only Surah of the Quran to which Bismillah is not prefixed.
Though the commentators have given different reasons for this, the
correct one that which has been given by Imam Razi: namely,this is
because the Prophet (Allah's peace be upon him) himself did not dictate it at the beginning
of the Surah. Therefore the Companions did not prefix it and their
successors followed them., This is a further proof of the fact that
utmost care has been taken to keep the Quran intact so that it should
remain in its complete and original form.
This Surah comprises three discourses:-
The first discourse (vv. 1-37),
was revealed in Zil-Qa'adah A. H. 9 or thereabout. As the importance
of the subject of the discourse required its declaration on the
occasion of Haj the Prophet (Allah's peace be upon him) despatched Hadrat Ali to follow
Hadrat Abu Bakr, who had already left for Makkah as leader of the
Pilgrims to the Ka'abah. He instructed Hadrat Ali to deliver the
discourse before the representatives of the different clans of Arabia
so as to inform them of the new policy towards the mushriks.
The
second discourse (vv., 38-72) was sent down in Rajab A. H. 9 or a
little before this, when the Prophet (Allah's peace be upon him) was engaged in making
preparations for the Campaign, of Tabuk. In this discourse, the
Believers were urged to take active part in Jihad, and the shirkers
were severely rebuked for holding back their wealth and for hesitation
to sacrifice their lives in the way of Allah because of their
hypocrisy, weak faith or negligence.
The third discourse (vv. 73-I 29)
was revealed on his return from the Campaign of Tabuk. There are some
pieces in this discourse that were sent down on different occasions
during the same period and were afterwards consolidated by the Prophet (Allah's
peace be upon him) into the Surah in accordance with inspiration from Allah. But
this caused no interruption in its continuity because they dealt with
the same subject and formed part of the same series of events. This
discourse warns the hypocrites of their evil deeds and rebukes those
Believers who had stayed behind in the Campaign of Tabuk. Then after
taking them to task, Allah pardons those true Believers who had not
taken part in the Jihad in the Way of Allah for one reason or the
other.
Chronologically, the first discourse should have come last; but
being the most important of the three in regard to its subject-matter,
it was placed first in the order of compilation.
Now let us consider the historical background of the Surah. The series
of events that have been discussed in this Surah took place after the
Peace Treaty of Hudaibiyah. By that time, one-third of Arabia had come
under the sway of Islam which had established itself as a powerful,
well organized and civilized Islamic State. This Treaty afforded
further opportunities to Islam to spread its influence in the
comparatively peaceful atmosphere created by it. After this Treaty,
two events took place, which led to very important results:
The first was the Conquest of Arabia. the Prophet (Allah's peace be upon him) was able to
send missions among different clans for the propagation of Islam. The
result was that during the short period of two years, it became such a
great power that it made the old order of ignorance' feel helpless
before it. So much so that the zealous elements from among the Quraish
were so exasperated that they broke the Treaty in order to encounter
Islam in a decisive combat. But the Prophet (Allah's peace be upon him) took prompt action
after the breach so as not to allow them any opportunity to gather
enough force for this. He made a sudden invasion on Makkah in the
month of Ramadan in A. H. 8 and conquered it. Though this conquest
broke the backbone of the order of ignorance, it made still another
attack on Islam in the battle-field of Hunain, which proved to be its
death-knell. The clans of Hawazin Thaqif, Naur, Jushm and others
gathered their entire forces in the battle field in order to crush the
reformative Revolution, but they utterly failed in their evil designs.
The defeat of 'ignorance' at Hunain paved the way for making the whole
of Arabia the 'Abode of Islam' (Dar-ul-Islam). The result was that
hardly a year had Passed after the Battle of Hunain, when the major
portion of Arabia came within the fold of Islam and only a few
upholders of the old order remained scattered over some corners of the
country.
The second event that contributed towards making Islam a
formidable power was the Campaign of Tabuk, which was necessitated by
the provocative activities of the Christians living within or near the
boundaries of the Roman Empire to the north of Arabia. Accordingly,
the Prophet (Allah's peace be upon him), with an army of thirty thousand marched boldly
towards the Roman Empire but the Romans evaded the encounter. The
result was that the power of the Prophet (Allah's peace be upon him) and Islam increased
manifold and deputations from all corners of Arabia began to wait upon
him on his return from Tabuk in order to offer their allegiance to
Islam and obedience to him. The Holy Quran has described this triumph
in Surah AN-NASR: "When the succour of Allah came and victory was
attained and you saw people entering the fold of Islam in large
numbers...
The Campaign to Tabuk was the result of conflict with the Roman Empire,
that had started even before the conquest of Makkah. One of the
missions sent after the Treaty of Hudaibiyah to different parts of
Arabia visited the clans which lived in the northern areas adjacent to
Syria. The majority of these people were Christians, who were under
the influence of the Roman Empire. Contrary to all the principles of
the commonly accepted international law, they killed fifteen members
of the delegation near a place known as Zat-u-Talah (or Zat-i-Itlah).
Only Ka'ab bin Umair Ghifari, the head of the delegation, succeeded in
escaping and reporting the sad incident. Besides this, Shurahbll bin
Amr, the Christian governor of Busra, who was directly under the Roman
Caesar, had also put to death Haritli bin Umair, the ambassador of the Prophet
(Allah's peace be upon him), who had been sent to him on a similar minion.
These
events convinced the Prophet (Allah's peace be upon him) that a strong action should be taken
in order to make the territory adjacent to the Roman Empire safe and
secure for the Muslims. Accordingly, in the month of Jamadi-ul-Ula A.
H. 8, he sent an army of three thousand towards the Syrian border.
When this army reached near Ma'an, the Muslims learnt that Shurahbil
was marching with an army of one hundred thousand to fight-with them
and that the Caesar, who himself was at Hims, had sent another army
consisting of one hundred thousand soldiers under his brother Theodore.
But in spite of such fearful news, the brave small band of the Muslims
marched on fearlessly and encountered the big army of Shurahbil at
M'utah. And the result of the encounter in which the Muslims were
fighting against fearful odds (the ratio of the two armies was 1:33),
as very favorable, for the enemy utterly failed to defeat them. This
proved very helpful for the propagation of Islam. As a result, those
Arabs who were living in a state of semi. independence in Syria and
near Syria and the clans of Najd near Iraq, who were under the
influence of the Iranian Empire, turned towards Islam and embraced it
in thousands. For example, the people of Bani Sulaim (whose chief was
Abbas bin Mirdas Sulaimi), Ashja'a, Ghatafan, Zubyan, Fazarah, etc.,
came into the fold of Islam at the same time. Above all, Farvah bin
'Amral Juzami, who was the commander of the Arab armies of the Roman
Empire, embraced Islam during that time, and underwent the trial of
his Faith in a way that filled the whole territory with wonder. When
the Caesar came to know that Farvah had embraced Islam, he ordered
that he should be arrested and brought to his court. Then the Caesar
said to him, "You will have to choose one of the two things. Either
give up your Islam and win your liberty and your former rank, or
remain a Muslim and face death." He calmly chose Islam and sacrificed
his life in the way of the Truth.
No wonder that such events as these
made the Caesar realize the nature of the danger that was threatening
his Empire from Arabia. Accordingly, in 9 A. H. he began to make
military preparations to avenge the insult he had suffered at M'utah.
The Ghassanid and other Arab chiefs also began to muster armies under
him. When the Prophet (Allah's peace be upon him), who always kept himself well-informed even
of the minutest things that could affect the Islamic Movement
favorably or adversely, came to know of these preparations, he at once
under- stood their meaning. Therefore, without the least hesitation he
decided to fight against the great power of the Caesar. He knew that
the show of the slightest weakness would result in the utter failure
of the Movement which was facing three great dangers at that time.
First the dying power of 'ignorance' that had almost been crushed in
the battle-field of Hunain might revive again. Secondly, the
Hypocrites of Al: Madinah, who were always on the look-out for such an
opportunity, might make full use of this to do the greatest possible
harm to it. For they had already made preparations for this and had,
through a monk called Abu Amir, sent secret messages of their evil
designs to the Christian king of Ghassan and the Caesar himself.
Besides this, they had also built a mosque near Al-Madinah for holding
secret meetings for this purpose. The third danger was of an attack by
the Caesar himself, who had already defeated Iran, the other great
power of that period, and filled with awe the adjacent territories.
It
is obvious that if all these three elements had been given an
opportunity of taking a concerted action against the Muslims, Islam
would have lost the fight it had almost won. That is why in this case
the Prophet (Allah's peace be upon him) made an open declaration for making preparations for
the Campaign against the Roman Empire, which was one of the two
greatest empires of the world of that period. The declaration was made
though all the apparent circumstances were against such a decision:
for there was famine in the country and the long awaited crops were
about to ripen: the burning heat of the scorching summer season of
Arabia was at, its height and there was not enough money for
preparations in general, and for equipment and conveyance in
particular. But in spite of these handicaps, when the Messenger of
Allah realized the urgency of the occasion, he took this step which
was to decide whether the Mission of the Truth was - - going to
survive or perish. The very fact that he made an open declaration for
making preparations for such a campaign to Syria against the Roman
Empire showed how important it was, for this was contrary to his
previous practice. Usually he took every precaution not to reveal
beforehand the direction to which he was going nor the name of the
enemy whom he was going to attack; nay, he did not move out of Al-
Madinah even in the direction of the campaign.
All the parties in
Arabia fully realized the grave consequences of this critical decision.
The remnants of the lovers of the old order of 'ignorance' were
anxiously waiting for the result of the Campaign, for they had pinned
all their hopes on the defeat of Islam by the Romans. The 'hypocrites'
also considered it to be their last chance of crushing the power of
Islam by internal rebellion, if the Muslims suffered a defeat in Syria.
They had, therefore, made full use of the Mosque built by them for
hatching plots and had employed all their devices to render the
Campaign a failure. On the other side, the true Believers also
realized fully that the fate of the Movement for which they had been
exerting their utmost for the last 22 years was now hanging in the
balance. If they showed courage on that critical occasion, the doors
of the whole outer world would be thrown open for the Movement to
spread. But if they showed weakness or cowardice, then all the work
they had done in Arabia would -end in smoke.
That is why these lovers
of Islam began to make enthusiastic preparations for the Campaign.
Everyone of them tried to surpass the other in making contributions
for the provision of equipment for it. Hadrat Uthman and Hadrat Abdur
Rehman bin Auf presented large sums of money for this purpose. Hadrat
Umar contributed half of the earnings of his life and Hadrat Abu Bakr
the entire earnings of his life. The indigent Companions did not lag
behind and presented whatever they could earn by the sweat of their
labor and the women parted with their ornaments. Thousands of
volunteers, who were filled with the desire of sacrificing their lives
for Islam, came to the Prophet (Allah's peace be upon him) and requested that arrangements
for weapons and conveyance be made for them so that they should join
the expedition. Those who could not be provided with these shed tears
of sorrow; the scene was so pathetic that it made the Prophet (Allah's peace be
upon him) sad
because of his inability to arm them. In short, the occasion became
the touchstone for discriminating a true believer from a hypocrite.
For, to lag behind in the Campaign meant that the very relationship of
a person to Islam was doubtful. Accordingly, whenever a person lagged
behind during the journey to Tabuk, the Prophet (Allah's peace be upon him), on being
informed, would spontaneously say, "Leave him alone. If there be any
good in him, Allah will again join him with you, and if there be no
good in him, then thank Allah that He relieved you of his evil
company".
In short, the Prophet (Allah's peace be upon him) marched out towards Syria in
Rajab A. H. 9, with thirty thousand fighters for the cause of Islam.
The conditions in which the expedition was undertaken may be judged
from the fact that the number of camels with them was so small that
many of them were obliged to walk on foot and to wait for their turns
for several had to ride at a time on each camel. To add to this, there
was the burning heat of the desert and the acute shortage of water.
But they were richly rewarded for their firm resolve and sincere
adherence to the cause and for their perseverance in the face of those
great difficulties and obstacles.
When they arrived at Tabuk, they
learnt that the Caesar and his allies had withdrawn their troops from
the frontier and there was no enemy to fight with. Thus they won a
moral victory that increased their prestige manifold and, that too,
without shedding a drop of blood.
In this connection, it is pertinent
to point out that the general impression given by the historians of
the campaigns of the Prophet (Allah's peace be upon him) about the Campaign of Tabuk is not
correct. They relate the event in a way as if the news of the
mustering of the Roman armies near the Arabian frontier was itself
false. The fact is that the Caesar had begun to muster his armies, but
the Prophet (Allah's peace be upon him) forestalled him and arrived on the scene before he
could make full preparations for the invasion. Therefore, believing
that "discretion is the better part of valor," he withdrew his armies
from the frontier. For he had not forgotten that the three thousand
fighters for the cause of Islam had rendered helpless his army one
hundred thousand strong at M'utah. He could not, therefore, even with
an army of two hundred thousand, dare to fight against an army of
thirty thousand, and that, too, under the leadership of the Prophet (Allah's
peace be upon him) himself.
When the Prophet (Allah's peace be upon him) found that the Caesar had
withdrawn his forces from the frontier, he considered thee question
whether it would be worthwhile to march into the Syrian territory or
to halt at Tabuk and turn his moral victory to political and
strategical advantage. He decided on the latter course and made a halt
for twenty days at Tabuk. During this time, he brought pressure on the
small states that lay between the Roman Empire and the Islamic State
and were at that time under the influence of the Romans, and subdued
and made them the tributaries of the Islamic State. For instance, some
Christian chiefs Ukaidir bin Abdul Malik Kindi of Dumatul Jaiidal,
Yuhanna bin D'obah of Allah, and the chiefs of Maqna, Jarba' and Azruh
also submitted and agreed to pay Jizyah to the Islamic State of Al-
Madinah. As a result of this, the boundaries of the Islamic State were
extended right up to the Roman Empire, and the majority of the Arab
clans, who were being used by the Caesar against Arabia, became the
allies of the Muslims against the Romans.
Above all, this moral
victory of Tabuk afforded a golden opportunity to the Muslims to
strengthen their hold on Arabia before entering into a long conflict
with the Romans. For it broke the back of those who had still been
expecting that the old order of 'ignorance' might revive in the near
future, whether they were the open upholders of shirk or the
hypocrites who were hiding their shirk under the garb of Islam. The
majority of such people were compelled by the force of circumstances
to enter into the fold of Islam and, at least, make it possible for
their descendants to become true Muslims. After this a mere impotent
minority of the upholders of the old order was left in the field, but
it could not stand in the way of the Islamic Revolution for the
perfection of which Allah had sent His Messenger.
If we keep in view the preceding background, we can easily find out
the problems that were confronting the Community at that time. They
were:
Subject: Problems of Peace and WarIn continuation of Surah AL-ANFAL, this Surah also deals with the problems of peace and war and bases the theme on the Tabuk Expedition. Topics and their InterconnectionThis portion deals with the sanctity of treaties and lays down principles, rules and regulations which must be kept in view before breaking them, in case the other party does not observe them sincerely. 1 - 12 In this portion the Muslims have been urged to fight in the Way of Allah with the mushrik Arabs, the Jews and the Christians, who were duly warned of the consequences of their mischievous and inimical behaviour. 13 - 37 In this discourse, the Muslims have been told clearly and explicitly that they will inherit the rewards promised by Allah only if they take active part in the conflict with kufr, for that is the criterion which distinguishes true Muslims from hypocrites. Therefore true Muslims should take active part in Jihad, without minding dangers, obstacles, difficulties, temptations and the like. 38 - 72 This portion deals with the problems of hypocrites and lays down rules and regulations governing the treatment that should be meted out to them and points out their distinctive marks from true Muslims. 73 - 90 This portion deals with the case of those who remained behind and did not accompany the Prophet (Allah's peace be upon him) for Jihad to Tabuk. For this purpose they have been separated in different categories, that is, the disabled, the sick, the indigent, the hypocrites, the believers who realized their guilt and punished themselves before the return of the Prophet (Allah's peace be upon him) from Tabuk and those who confessed their error. Their cases have been dealt with in accordance with the nature and extent of their offence. 91 - 110 In order to make their noble qualities look all the more conspicuous and dignified by contrast, the characteristics of the Believers have been mentioned, and they have been reassured that Allah, the Sovereign of the Universe, is their helper and guardian. Accordingly, because of their sincerity, He has forgiven the Three Believers who did not take part in the expedition. 111 - 118 In the concluding portion, general instructions have been given to the Believers for their guidance. 119 - 127 This is the conclusion: "Follow the Messenger who is gentle and compassionate and your greatest well-wisher, and trust in Allah, the Lord of the Universe". 128 - 129 |
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