Arab News
June 9, 2003
We mentioned last week a false report accusing the Prophet’s
companions of behavior which does not fit with their status as the
first generation of Muslims who provided a model community. We
discussed some points in that false report and explained the facts
as they actually happened. One point in the report that requires to
be dwelt upon is that of the choice of the Prophet’s successor as
the head of the first Muslim state. The report says: “The Ansar
were thrown in confusion, seeking to be the rulers either by
themselves or in partnership with the Muhajirin.”
Muhammad ibn Al-Arabi clarifies that shortly after the
Prophet’s death, “the Ansar gathered in a meeting place
belonging to the Sa’idah clan for consultation, with no clear plan
as to what they should do. The Muhajirin, i.e. the Prophet’s
companions who had migrated with him to Madinah, heard of the
meeting.
Some of them suggested that they should send to the Ansar to come
over for consultation. Abu Bakr said: ‘No. It is better that we
should go to them.’ A number of the Muhajirin including Abu Bakr,
Umar and Abu Ubaydah went and joined the Ansar where they all
participated in the discussion. Some of the Ansar suggested that
there could be a leadership of two people, one from the Ansar and
one from the Muhajirin. Abu Bakr, however, replied with a long
speech which was all true and to the point. He said, for example,
‘We provide the overall leaders and you provide the ministers.’
He also quoted the Prophet as saying: ‘The leaders come from the
Quraysh.’ The Prophet also said: ‘I commend the Ansar to you:
accept whatever their good people do, and pardon those of them who
might do badly.’ God has described us (meaning the Muhajirin) as
truthful, and described you as successful. He has commanded you to
be with us, saying: ‘Believers, have fear of God and be among
those who are truthful.’ (9: 119) He added much that is right and
true, supporting it with strong evidence. The Ansar remembered all
that he quoted and accepted his argument. They pledged their loyalty
to Abu Bakr Al-Siddiq as the leader.”
This is how Ibn Al-Arabi replies to the false report, showing in
his very concise style how Abu Bakr was chosen as the first Caliph,
or leader of the Muslim state, after the Prophet. Needless to say,
Ibn Al-Arabi, who lived in Andalusia over 800 years ago, was writing
to a readership that was strongly committed to Islam, and highly
respectful of the Prophet’s companions. He did not need to provide
too many details. In his annotation of Ibn Al-Arabi’s book, Muhibb
Al-Din Al-Khateeb mentions that when the Ansar gathered in their
meeting place, Saad ibn Ubadah, the leading figure from the Khazraj
was present. They felt that they should provide the government.
After all, Madinah was their city, and they were the ones who
supported Islam through thick and thin, providing the majority of
the Muslim fighting force. It was only a relatively small group from
the Quraysh that migrated to Madinah, constituting the Muhajirin.
Hence, it should not consider itself as an elite group.
Apparently there was more than one speaker from the Ansar as some
of the Muhajirin joined them in their meeting place. One of those
speakers, Al-Hubab ibn Al-Mundhir, described himself as a man of
much experience and strong following. It was he who suggested that
there should be two leaders, one from each group. There is no doubt
that Al-Hubab was highly experienced, and a man of sound judgment.
He is quoted to have given the Prophet very sound advice shortly
before the Battle of Badr and the Battle of Khaybar, and the Prophet
acted on his advice on both occasions.
Abu Bakr’s speech dwells on the virtues of both the Muhajirin
and the Ansar, quoting the Prophet and referring to the Qur’an in
both cases. If we look at the Hadiths to which he referred, we find
the following one related by Al-Bukhari: “This matter of
government belongs to the Quraysh. Anyone who takes a hostile
attitude to them will be thrown on his face, as long as they are
true to the faith.” Another Hadith is reported by Abdullah ibn
Umar, who quotes the Prophet as saying: “Government continues to
belong to the Quraysh, even though they are (no more than) two.”
Another report by Anas ibn Malik mentions: “We were at the home of
a man from the Ansar when the Prophet came over and stood near the
door placing his hand against the pillar. He said: ‘The leaders
are from the Quraysh. They have a right against you, and you have a
similar right against them...’” (Related by Ahmad)
The Prophet is also quoted to have said: “The leaders belong to
the Quraysh: they respond to an appeal for mercy, honor their
commitments and rule justly. Any of them who does not do that shall
incur the curse of God, the angels and all mankind.”
It should be explained here that these Hadiths do not mean that
every Muslim community must have a head of government who belongs to
the Quraysh tribe. This is not possible in practice. The Hadiths are
informative, rather than providing a binding directive.
There is strong evidence from the Quraysh and the Sunnah to
confirm that a Muslim community chooses its leader on the basis of
his personal qualities, not his descent or tribal affiliation.
Moreover, the last of the Hadiths quoted here outlines some common
features of the Quraysh people which make them especially qualified
for leadership.
As for the Prophet’s praise of the Ansar, this comes in many
Hadiths. We may cite the highly authentic one related by Al-Bukhari
as reported by Anas ibn Malik: “Abu Bakr and Al-Abbas passed by a
group of the Ansar who were in tears. (This was apparently when the
Prophet was in his last illness).
“Abu Bakr asked the reason for their crying. They said: ‘We
remembered how we used to attend the Prophet and he would speak to
us.’ Abu Bakr went into the Prophet’s home and told him. The
Prophet then went out to the mosque, having tied a band over his
head.
He stood on the pulpit - and that was the last time he did so -
and praised God and thanked Him. He then said: ‘I commend to you
the Ansar: they are my group and close companions on whom I rely.
They have fulfilled their commitment, and they still await what
belongs to them. Hence accept whatever their good people do, and
pardon those of them who might do badly.’”
This Hadith is reported in several ways, all in largely similar
wording, which adds to its authenticity.
It commends the Ansar and shows how the Prophet loved them and
appreciated what they did in supporting him and serving the cause of
Islam. The Prophet also refers here to the pledge the Ansar gave
him, which constituted the basis of his migration, together with his
companions, from Makkah to join them in their city. They committed
themselves to supporting him against all opposition, and he
acknowledges here, shortly before his death, that they had fulfilled
their pledges.
At the time of the pledge at Aqabah, they asked him about their
reward for honoring their commitments, and he replied:
“Paradise.” This is what he meant by saying: “They have
fulfilled their commitment, and they still await what belongs to
them.” This is a clear statement that they deserved the reward of
admission into heaven.
In his speech, Abu Bakr also mentions the Qur’anic description
of both groups. Both descriptions are mentioned in the following
verses that speak about the division of any property the Muslims
gain from the enemy without fighting: “To the poor who have
migrated and have been driven from their homelands and their
possessions, seeking favor with God and His goodly acceptance, and
who aid (the cause of) God and His Messenger: it is they who are the
truthful. And to those who, before them, had their abode in this
realm and in faith, who love all the ones who come to them for
refuge, and who harbor in their hearts no grudge for whatever the
others may have been given, but rather give them preference over
themselves, even though poverty be their own lot: such people who
are saved from their own covetousness are indeed the ones who shall
be successful.” (59: 8-9)
When Abu Bakr referred to these verses and quoted the Prophet’s
Hadiths, he was certain to achieve unity among both groups of the
Muhajirin and the Ansar, because both were genuinely committed to
the cause of Islam. None sought personal gain or position. Hence,
they all agreed to assign the position of leadership to Abu Bakr,
the closest to the Prophet of all his companions. Theirs was the
best choice indeed.
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