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Muhammad: From Birth to
Marriage
The
Marriage of `Abdullah and Aminah
`Abd al Muttalib was seventy years
old or more when Abraha arrived in Makkah to destroy the ancient house. His son
`Abdullah was twenty-four years of age and was hence ready for marriage. His
father chose for him Aminah, daughter of Wahb ibn `Abd Manaf ibn Zuhrah, the
chief of the tribe of Zuhrah as well as its eldest and noblest member. `Abd al
Muttalib took his son and went with him to the quarter of the tribe of Zuhrah.
There, he sought the residence of
Wahb and went in to ask for the hand of Wahb's daughter for his son. Some
historians claim that `Abd al Muttalib went to the residence of Uhayb, uncle of
Aminah, assuming that her father had passed away and that she was under the
protection of her uncle. On the same day that `Abdullah married Aminah, his
father `Abd al Muttalib married a cousin of hers named Halah. It was thus that
the Prophet could have an uncle on his father's side, namely Hamzah, of the
same age as he.
As was the custom in those days,
`Abdullah lived with Aminah among her relatives the first three days of the
marriage. Afterwards, they moved together to the quarter of `Abd al Muttalib,
and soon he was to be called on a trading trip to al Sham. When he left, Aminah
was pregnant. A number of stories circulated telling of `Abdullah's marriage
with other women besides Aminah and of many women's seeking to marry `Abdullah.
It is not possible to ascertain the truth of such tales. What is certainly true
is that `Abdullah was a very handsome and strong young man; and it is not at
all surprising that other women besides Aminah had wished to marry him.
Such women would have at least
temporarily given up hope once `Abdullah's marriage to Aminah was announced.
But who knows! It is not impossible that they may have waited for his return
from al Sham hoping that they might still become his wives along with Aminah.
`Abdullah was absent for several months in Gaza. On his way back he stopped
for a longer rest at Madinah, where his uncles on his mother's side lived, and
was preparing to join a caravan to Makkah when he fell ill. When the caravan
reached.
Makkah his father was alerted to
`Abdullah's absence and disease. `Abd al Muttalib immediately sent his eldest
son al Harith to Madinah in order to accompany 'Abdullah on the trip back to
Makkah after his recovery. Upon arriving at Madinah, however, al Harith learned
that `Abdullah had died and that he had been buried in Madinah a month after
the start of that same caravan to Makkah. Al Harith returned to Makkah to
announce the death of `Abdullah to his aged father and his bereaved wife
Aminah. The shock was tremendous, for `Abd al Muttalib loved his son so much as
to have ransomed him with a hundred camels, a ransom never equaled before.
`Abdullah left five camels, a herd
of sheep, and a slave nurse, called Umm Ayman, who was to take care of the
Prophet. This patrimony does not prove that `Abdullah was wealthy, but at the
same time it does not prove that he was poor. Furthermore, `Abdullah was still
a young man capable of working and of amassing a fortune. His father was still
alive and none of his wealth had as yet been transferred to his sons.
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The Birth
of Muhammad (570 C.E.)
There was nothing unusual about
Aminah's pregnancy or delivery. As soon as she delivered her baby, she sent to
`Abd al Muttalib, who was then at the Ka'bah, announcing to him the birth of a
grandson. The old man was overjoyed at the news and must have remembered on
this occasion his loved one `Abdullah. He rushed to his daughter-in-law, took
her newborn in his hands, went into the Ka'bah and there called him
"Muhammad." This name was not familiar among the Arabs, but it was
known. He then returned the infant to his mother and awaited by her side for
the arrival of wet nurses from the tribe of Banu Sa'd in order to arrange for
one of them to take care of the new born, as was the practice of Makkan
nobility.
Historians have disagreed about the
year of Muhammad's birth. Most of them hold that it took place in "the
Year of the Elephant," i.e. 570
C.E. Ibn 'Abbas claims that Muhammad was born on
"the Day of the Elephant." Others claim that he was born fifteen
years earlier. Still others claim that he was born a few days, months, or
years, after "the Year of the Elephant." Some even assert that
Muhammad was born thirty years and others seventy years later than "the
Year of the Elephant." Historians have also differed concerning the month
of Muhammad's birth although the majority of them agree that it was Rabi` al Awwal,
the third month of the lunar year. It has also been claimed that he was born in
Muharram, in Safar, in Rajab, or in Ramadan.
Furthermore, historians have
differed as to the day of the month on which Muhammad was born. Some claim that
the birth took place on the third, of Rabi` al Awwal; others, on the ninth; and
others on the tenth. The majority, however, agree that Muhammad was born on the
twelfth of Rabi` al Awwal, the claim of ibn Ishaq and other biographers.
Moreover, historians disagreed as to the time of day at which Muhammad was
born, as well as to the place of birth.
Caussin de Perceval wrote in his
book on the Arabs that after weighing the evidence, it is most probable that
Muhammad was born in August, 570
C.E., i.e. "the Year of the Elephant," and
that he was born in the house of his grandfather `Abd al Muttalib in Makkah. On
the seventh day after Muhammad's birth, `Abd al Muttalib gave a banquet in
honor of his grandson to which he invited a number of Quraysh tribesmen and
peers. When they inquired from him why he had chosen to name the child
Muhammad, thus changing the practice of using the ancestors' names, `Abd al
Muttalib answered: "I did so with the wish that my grandson would be
praised by God in heaven and on earth by men."
Muhammad's
Nurses
Aminah
waited for the arrival of the wet nurses from the tribe of Banu Sa'd to choose
one for Muhammad, as was the practice of the nobles of Makkah. This custom is
still practiced today among Makkan aristocracy. They send their children to the
desert on the eighth day of their birth to remain there until the age of eight
or ten. Some of the tribes of the desert have a reputation as providers of
excellent wet nurses, especially the tribe of Banu Sa'd.
At
that time, Aminah gave her infant to Thuwaybah, servant of Muhammad's uncle Abu
Lahab, who nursed him for a while as she did his uncle Hamzah later on, making
the two brothers-in-nursing. Although Thuwaybah nursed Muhammad but a few days,
he kept for her great affection and respect as long as she lived. When she died
in 7 A.H.
Muhammad remembered to inquire about her son who was also his
brother-in-nursing, but found out that he had died before her.
The
wet nurses of the tribe of Banu Sa'd finally arrived at Makkah to seek infants
to nurse. The prospect of an orphan child did not much attract them since they
hoped to be well rewarded by the father. The infants of widows, such as
Muhammad, were not attractive at all. Not one of them accepted Muhammad into
her care, preferring the infants of the. living and of the affluent.
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Halimah, Daughter of
Abu Dhu'ayb
Having spurned him at first as her
colleagues had done before her, Halimah al Sa'diyyah, daughter of Abu Dhu'ayb,
accepted Muhammad into her charge because she had found no other. Thin and
rather poor looking, she did not appeal to the ladies of Makkah. When her
people prepared to leave Makkah for the desert, Halimah pleaded to her husband
al Harith ibn `Abd al `Uzza, "By God it is oppressive to me to return with
my friends without a new infant to nurse.
Surely, I should go back to that
orphan and accept him." Her husband answered; "there would be no
blame if you did. Perhaps God may even bless us for your doing so."
Halimah therefore took Muhammad and carried him with her to the desert. She
related that after she took him, she found all kinds of blessings. Her herd
became fat and multiplied, and everything around her seemed to prosper.
In the desert Halimah nursed
Muhammad for two whole years while her daughter Shayma' cuddled him. The purity
of desert air and the hardness of desert living agreed with Muhammad's physical
disposition and contributed to his quick growth, sound formation, and
discipline. At the completion of the two years, which was also the occasion of
his weaning, Halimah took the child to his mother but brought him back with her
to the desert to grow up away from Makkah and her epidemics. Biographers
disagree whether Halimah's new lease on her charge was arranged after her own
or Aminah's wishes. The child lived in the desert for two more years playing
freely in the vast expanse under the clear sky and growing unfettered by
anything physical or spiritual.
The Story of Splitting Muhammad's Chest
It was in this period and before
Muhammad reached the age of three that the following event is said to have
happened. It is told that Muhammad was playing in a yard behind the encampment
of the tribe with Halimah's son when the latter ran back to his parents and
said, "Two men dressed in white took my Qurayshi brother, laid him down,
opened his abdomen, and turned him around." It is also reported that
Halimah said, -"my husband and I ran towards the boy and found him
standing up and pale. When we asked what happened to him, the boy answered,
"Two men dressed in white came up to me, laid me down, opened my abdomen
and took something I know not what away."
The parents returned to their tent
fearing that the child had become possessed. They therefore returned him to
Makkah to his mother. Ibn Ishaq reported a hadith issuing from the
Prophet after his commission confirming this incident. But he was careful
enough to warn the reader that the real reason for Muhammad's return to his
mother was not the story of the two angels but, as Halimah was to report to
Muhammad's mother later on, the fact that a number of Abyssinian Christians
wanted to take Muhammad away with them once they had seen him after his
weaning.
According to Halimah's report, the
Abyssinians had said to one another, "Let us take this child with us to
our country and our king, for we know he is going to be of consequence."
Halimah could barely disengage herself from them and run away with her protege.
This story is also told by al Tabari, but he casts suspicion on it by reporting
it first at this early year of Muhammad's age as well as later, just before the
Prophet's commission at the age of forty.
Orientalists and many Muslim
scholars do not trust the story and find the evidence therefore spurious. The
biographies agree that the two men dressed in white were seen by children
hardly beyond their second year of age which constitutes no witness at all and
that Muhammad lived with the tribe of Banu Sa'd in the desert until he was
five. The claim that this event had taken place while Muhammad was two and a
half years old and that Halimah and her husband returned the child to his
mother immediately thereafter contradicts this general consensus.
Consequently, some writers have even
asserted that Muhammad returned with Halimah for the third time. The
Orientalist, Sir William Muir, refuses even to mention the story of the two men
in white clothes. He wrote that if Halimah and her husband had become aware of
something that had befallen the child, it must have been a sort of nervous
breakdown, which could not at all have hurt Muhammad's healthy constitution.
Others claim that Muhammad stood in no need of any such surgery as God had
prepared him at birth for receiving the divine message. Dermenghem believes
that this whole story has no foundation other than the speculative
interpretations of the following Qur'anic verses :

"Had we not revived your spirit
[literally, "opened your chest"] and dissipated your burden which was
galling your back." [Qur'an, 94:1-3]
Certainly, in these verses the
Qur'an is pointing to something purely spiritual. It means to describe a
purification of the heart as preparation for receipt of the divine message and
to stress Muhammad's over-taxing burden of prophethood.
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(Continuation)
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