Sawda bint Zam'a, may Allah be pleased
with her had been the first woman to immigrate to Abyssinia in the way
of Allah. Her husband ha died and she was now living with her aged
father. She was middle-aged, rather plump, with a jolly, kindly
disposition, and just the right person to take care of the Prophet's
household and family. So Muhammad (peace and blessings of Allah be upon
him) gave permission to Khawla to speak to Sayyiduna Abu Bakr and to
Sawda on the subject. Khawla went straight to Sawda and said, "Would you
like Allah to give you great blessing, Sawda?" Sawda asked, "And what
is that, Khawla?" She said, "The Messenger of Allah has sent me to you
with a proposal of marriage!" Sawda tried to contain herself in spite of
her utter astonishment and then replied in a trembling voice, "I would
like that! Go to my father and tell him that." Khawla went to Zam'a, ad
gruff old man, and greeted him and then said, "Muhammad son of Abdullah
son of Abdul Muttalib, has sent me to ask for Sawda in marriage." The
old man shouted, "A noble match. What does she say?" Khawla replied,
"she would like that." He told her to call her. When she came, he said,
"Sawda, this woman claims that Muhammad son of Abdullah son of Abdul
Muttalib has sent me to ask for you in marriage. It is a noble match. Do
you want me to marry you to him?" She accepted, feeling it was a great
honor. Sawda went to live in Muhammad's house and immediately took over
the care of his daughters and household, while Aisha bint Abu Bakr
became betrothed to him and remained in her father's house playing with
her dolls.
There was great surprise in Mecca that the Prophet
(peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) would choose to marry a
widow who was neither young nor beautiful. The Prophet, however,
remembered the trials she had undergone when she had immigrated to
Abyssinia, leaving her house and property, and crossed the desert and
then the sea for an unknown land out of the desire to preserve her deen.
During the next two years, the Quraish increased their spiteful efforts
to destroy the Prophet and his followers, in spite of the clear signs
that confirmed beyond any doubt that Muhammad (peace and blessings of
Allah be upon him) was indeed the Messenger of Allah. Perhaps the
greatest of these signs during this period was the Prophet's Mi'raj, his
journey by night on a winged horse called the Buraq, through the skies
to the Al-Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem where he led all the earlier Prophets
who had lived before him in the prayer, followed by his ascent on the
Buraq, accompanied by Jibril, through the seven heavens, and then beyond
the world of forms, to the Presence of Allah where he was given the
five prayers that all his true followers have done ever since.
When he described this miraculous journey to the people
of Mecca, they just laughed at him, even though he accurately described
the Al-Aqsa Mosque to them (and they knew that he had never been there
before), and even though he described the place where he had stopped for
a drink on the way to Jerusalem, and even though he told them how on
the way he had told a man where his lost camel was, and even though he
told them that he was seen a caravan, which no one knew about,
approaching Mecca and that it should arrive later on that day. Even
though the Quraish knew that the Prophet's description of the Al-Aqsa
Mosque was completely accurate, and even when they eventually saw the
caravan arrive, and met the man whom he had helped, and saw the place
where he had stopped for a drink, the still refused to believe him.
Only Sayyiduna Abu Bakr, his closest companion and
future father in law, accepted the Prophet's account of his miraculous
journey immediately: "If he had said this," he said, when some scornful
Meccans first gave him the news, "then it is true!"
As the enmity of the Quraish increased, (and while Aisha
was still a small girl), Allah prepared the way for the future growth
of the Muslim community in a place called Yathrib. During the time of
pilgrimage in Mecca one year, twelve men from Yathrib, a small city of
two hundred miles to the north of Mecca, secretly pledged allegiance to
the Prophet, swearing to worship no gods other than Allah, nor to steal,
nor to tell lies, nor to commit adultery, nor to kill their children,
nor to disobey the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him).
They returned to Yathrib, accompanied by a Muslim called Mus'ab ibn
Umayr, who taught them all that he had learned from the Prophet.
As a result, the numbers of Muslims in Madina began to
increase, and when the time of the pilgrimage came again, this time
seventy five people from Yathrib- three of whom were women: Umm Sulaym,
Nsayba bint Ka'b and Asma bint Amr - pledged allegiance in Mecca to the
Prophet Muhammad (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) this time
also swearing that the would defend and protect him, even to the death
if need be. After this, the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allah be
upon him) gave his followers permission to emigrate to Yathrib, and
slowly but surely, in twos and threes, the Muslims began to leave Mecca.
The leaders of the Quraish realized what was happening, and decided to
kill the Prophet before he had a chance to join them. However, Allah
protected the Prophet, and on the very night before the morning on which
they had planned to kill him, the Prophet Muhammad (peace and
blessings of Allah be upon him) and Abu Bakr (may Allah be pleased with
him) slipped out of Mecca and hid in a cave called Thawr, which was to
the south of Mecca.
Everybody knows what happened when the people who were
hunting for them came to the cave: They found a wild dove nesting in the
tree that covered the mouth of a cave, across which a spider had spun
its web. Anyone entering the cave would have frightened away the dove
and broken the spid's web, they thought, so they did and not bother to
look inside it. Their pursuers were so close that if one of them had
glanced down at his feet, he would have discovered them. By the decree
of Allah, the Prophet and Abu Bakr were safe!
Once the Quraish had given up the search, the Prophet
Muhammad (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) and Abu Bakr (may
Allah be pleased with him) circled round the Mecca and rode northwards.
Only one man, a warrior called Suraqa ibn Jusham, suspected their
whereabouts and set off in hot pursuit, thirsting of the reward that the
Quraish had offered to anyone who captured the two men for them. As
soon as he as within shouting distance of the travelers, however, his
horse suddenly began to sink into the sand, and, realizing that if he
did not turn back, then the desert would simply swallow up both him and
his steed, he gave up his pursuit, asked them to forgive him and
returned home.
After a long, hard journey Prophet Muhammad (peace and
blessings of Allah be upon him) and Abu Bakr (may Allah be pleased with
him) reached Yathrib amidst scenes of great rejoicing. Their time in
Mecca had just come to an end, and their time in Medina had just begun -
for Madina is the name that was now given to Yathrib, Madina al
Munawarra, which means 'the illuminated city', the city that was
illuminated by the light of the Prophet Muhammad and his family and his
Companions, may the blessings and peace of Allah be upon him and on all
of them. The journey of the Prophet Muhammad and Abu Bakr is usually
called the hijrah, and it is at this point that the dating of the
Muslims begins, for it was after the hijrah that the first community of
Muslims rapidly grew and flowered and bore fruit. When she was older,
the prophet was worried that Sawda might be upset about having to
compete with so many younger wives, and offered to divorce her. She said
that she would give her night to Aisha, of whom she was very fond,
because she only wanted to be his wife on the Day of Rising. She lived
on until the end of the time of Umar ibn al Khattab. She and Aisha
always remained very close.
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