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The Actual Operation begins:
The Prophet
began the
campaign by reducing the minor strongholds one after the other. The first fort
he was to attack was Na‘im, the first defence line with a formidable strategic
position. Marhab, the leader of the fort, invited ‘Amr bin Al-Akwa‘ to meet
him in combat and the latter responded; when ‘Amr struck the Jew, his sword
recoiled and wounded his knee, and he died of that wound. The Prophet
later said: "For him (‘Amir) there
is a double reward in the Hereafter." He indicated this by putting two of
his fingers together. ‘Ali bin Abi Talib then undertook to meet Marhab in
combat, and managed to kill him. Yasir, Marhab’s brother, then turned up
challenging the Muslims to a fight. Az-Zubair was equal to it and killed him on
the spot. Real fighting then broke out and lasted for a few days. The Jews
showed courage and proved to be too formidable even to the repeated rushes of
the veteran soldiers of Islam. However, they later realized the futility of
resistance and began to abandon their positions in An-Na‘im and infiltrate
into the fortress of As-Sa‘b.
Al-Hubab bin Al-Mundhir Al-Ansari led the attack on
As-Sa‘b
fortress and laid siege to it for three days after which the Muslims stormed it
with a lot of booty, provisions and food to fall to their lot therein. This
victory came in the wake of the Prophet’s
invocation to Allâh to help Banu Aslam in their relentless and daring attempts
to capture that fort.
During the process of the war operations, extreme hunger
struck the Muslims. They lit fires, slaughtered domestic asses and began to cook
them. When the Prophet
inquired about the
fires and cooking, he ordered that they throw away the meat and wash the cooking
pots, forbidding the practice of eating such meat.
The Jews, meanwhile, evacuated An-Natat and barricaded
themselves in Az-Zubair fort, a formidable defensive position inaccessible to
both cavalry and infantry. The Muslims besieged it for three days, but in vain.
A Jew spy told the Prophet about a subterranean water source that provided them
with water, and advised that it be cut off in order to undermine their
resistance. The Prophet
did that so the Jews got out to engage with the Muslims in fierce fighting
during which some Muslims and ten Jews were killed, but the fort was eventually
conquered.
Shortly after this battle, the Jews moved to ’Abi Castle
and barricaded themselves inside. The same events recurred; the Muslims besieged
the new site for three days and then the great Muslim hero Abu Dujanah Sammak
bin Kharshah Al-Ansari — of the red ribbon — led the Muslim army and broke
into the castle, conducted fierce military operations within and forced the
remaining Jews to flee for their lives into another fort, An-Nizar.
An-Nizar was the most powerful fort, and the Jews came to the
established conviction that it was too immune to be stormed, so they deemed it a
safe place for their children and women. The Muslims, however, were not dismayed
but dragged on the siege, but because standing at a commanding top, the fort was
impregnable. The Jews inside were too cowardly to meet the Muslims in open fight
but rather hurled a shower of arrows and stones on the attackers. Considering
this situation, the Prophet
ordered that rams
be used and these proved effective and caused cracks in the ramparts providing
an easy access into the heart of the fort, where the Jews were put to rout and
fled in all directions leaving behind their women and children.
With these series of military victories, the first division
of Khaibar was totally reduced, and the Jews in the other minor fortresses
evacuated them and fled to the second division.
The Second Part of Khaibar conquered:
When the Prophet , along
with his army, moved to this part of Khaibar, Al-Katiba, he laid a heavy siege
to it for fourteen days with the Jews barricading themselves inside their forts.
When he was about to use the rams, the Jews realized that they would perish,
therefore, they asked for a negotiable peace treaty.
There is one controversial point in this context. Was this
part of Khaibar (with its three forts) conquered by force? Ibn Ishaq clearly
stated that Al-Qamus fort was conquered by force. Al-Waqidi, on the other hand,
maintained that the three forts were taken through peace negotiations, and
force, if any, was resorted to only to hand the fort over to the Muslims; the
two other forts surrendered without fighting.
Negotiations:
Ibn Abi Al-Huqaiq was dispatched
to the Messenger of Allâh
to negotiate the surrender treaty. The Prophet
agreed to spare their lives on condition they
evacuate Khaibar and the adjacent land, leaving whatever gold and silver they
had in their possession. However, he stipulated that he would disavow any
commitment if they concealed anything. Shortly afterwards, the forts were handed
over to the Muslims and all Khaibar was reduced and brought under the sway of
Islaam.
This treaty notwithstanding, Abi
Al-Huqaiq’s two sons
concealed a leather bag full of jewels, and money belonging to Huyai bin Al-Akhtab,
who carried it with him when Banu Nadir had been banished. Kinanah bin Ar-Rabi‘,
who had hidden the musk somewhere, was obdurate in his denial and so he was
killed when the musk was discovered and his dishonesty was proven. Abi Al-Huqaiq’s
two sons were killed in recompense for breaching the covenant, and Safiyah,
Huyai’s daughter was taken as a captive.
Distribution of Spoils:
In accordance with the agreement already concluded, the Jews
would be obliged to evacuate Khaibar, but they were anxious to keep on
cultivating the rich soil and fine orchard for which Khaibar was famous. They,
therefore, approached the Prophet
with the request that they be allowed to cultivate their lands and they would
give half of the produce to the Muslims. Muhammad
was kind enough to accede to their request.
The Messenger
divided the land of Khaibar into two: one half to provide
the food to be stored in case of any accidental calamity that might befall the
Muslims, and for entertaining the foreign delegates who started to frequent Madeenah
a lot; the other half would go to the Muslims who had witnessed
Al-Hudaibiyah event whether present or absent. The total number of shares came
to 36, of which 18 were given to the people above-mentioned. The army consisted
of 1400 men of whom were 200 horsemen. The horseman was allotted 3 shares and
the footman one.
The spoils taken at Khaibar were so great that Ibn ‘Umar
said: "We never ate our fill until we had conquered Khaibar."
‘Aishah (Ra) is narrated to
have said: "Now we can eat our fill of dates."
On their return to Madeenah, the Emigrants were able to return
to the Helpers of Madeenah all the gifts they had received. All of this affluence
came after the conquest of Khaibar and the great economic benefits that the
Muslims began to reap.
The conquest of Khaibar coincided with the arrival of the
Prophet’s cousin Ja‘far bin Abi Talib and his companions along with Abi Musa
Al-Ash‘ari and some Muslims from Abyssinia (Ethiopia).
Abu Musa Al-Ash‘ari narrated that he and over fifty
companions, while in Yemen, took a ship which landed them in Abyssinia
(Ethiopia) and they happened to meet there Ja‘far and his companions. He said,
"We stayed together until the Prophet
sent an envoy asking us to come back. When we
returned, we found out that he had already conquered Khaibar, yet he gave us our
due shares of the spoils." The advent of those men came at the request made
by the Messenger of Allâh
to Negus, king of
Abyssinia (Ethiopia), through a Prophetic deputy, ‘Amr bin Omaiya Ad-Damari.
Negus sent them back, 16 men altogether with their wives and children on two
boats. The rest of emigrants had arrived in Madeenah earlier.
In the same context, Safiyah, whose husband Kinanah bin Abi
Al-Huqaiq was killed for treachery, was taken as a captive and brought along
with other prisoners of war. After the permission of the Prophet
was sought, Dihyah Al-Kalbi chose one of them and she happened
to be Safiyah. The other Muslims, however, advised that Safiyah, being the
daughter of the chief of Bani Quraiza and Bani Nadir, should be married to the
Prophet , who agreed to their opinion, invited
her to Islaam, freed and took her as wife on her embracing Islaam. The wedding
feast consisted of dates and fat, and was held on his way back to Madeenah at a
spot called Sadd As-Sahba’.
After the conquest of Khaibar, a Jewish woman called Zainab
bint Al-Harith offered the Prophet
a roasted sheep she had poisoned. He took a mouthful, but it
was not to his liking so he spat it out. After investigation, the woman
confessed that she had stuffed the food with poison alleging that if the eater
were a king, she would then rid herself of him, but should he be a Prophet, then
he would be bound to learn about it. The Prophet , however, connived at her treacherous
attempt, but ordered that she be killed when Bishr bin Al-Bara’ died of that
poison.
The number of Muslims who were martyred was controversial,
but it ranged between 16 and 18, while the number of Jews killed came to 93.
The rest of Khaibar also fell to the Muslims. Allâh cast
fear into the hearts of the people of Fadak, a village standing to the north of
Khaibar, and they hastened to ask for peace, and be allowed to leave in safety,
and give up their wealth in return for that. The Prophet
entered into an agreement with them
similar to the previous one with the people of Khaibar. Fadak was exclusively
the Prophet’s because neither Muslim cavalry nor camelry were involved in
fight thereby.
No sooner had the Prophet
discharged the affair of Khaibar than he started a
fresh move towards Wadi Al-Qura, another Jewish colony in Arabia. He mobilized
his forces and divided them into three regiments with four banners entrusted to
Sa‘d bin ‘Ubada, Al-Hubab bin Mundhir, ‘Abbad bin Bishr and Sahl bin
Haneef. Prior to fighting, he invited the Jews to embrace Islaam but all his
words and exhortations fell on deaf ears. Eleven of the Jews were killed one
after another and with each one newly killed, a fresh call was extended inviting
those people to profess the new faith. Fighting went on ceaselessly for
approximately two days and resulted in full surrender of the Jews. Their land
was conquered, and a lot of booty fell in the hands of the Muslims.
The Prophet
stayed in Wadi Al-Qura for four days, distributed the booty
among the Muslim fighters and reached an agreement with the Jews similar to that
of Khaibar.
The Jews of Taima’, hearing beforehand about the successive
victories of the Muslim army and the defeats that their brethren, the Jews, had
sustained, showed no resistance when the Prophet
reached their habitation. On the contrary,
they took the initiative and offered to sign a reconciliation treaty to the
effect that they receive protection but pay tribute in return. Having achieved
his objective and subdued the Jews completely, the Prophet
made his way back home and arrived in Madeenah in late Safar or early Rabi‘ Al-Awwal 7 A.H.
It is noteworthy that the Prophet , being the best amongst war experts,
realized quite readily that evacuating Madeenah after the lapse of the prohibited
months (Muharram, Dhul Qa‘da and Dhul Hijja) would not be wise at all with the
presence of the desert Bedouins roaming in its vicinity. Such a careless
attitude, the Prophet
believed, would tempt
the undisciplined mob to practice their favourite hobby of plundering, looting
and all acts of piracy. This premonition always in mind, the Prophet
dispatched Aban bin Sa‘id at the head of
a platoon to deter those Bedouins and forestall any attempt at raiding the
headquarters of the nascent Islamic state during his absence in Khaibar. Aban
achieved his task successfully and joined the Prophet
in Khaibar after it had been conquered.
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