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The Battle of Mu’tah It was the most significant and the fiercest battle during
the lifetime of the Messenger of Allâh The Prophet Killing envoys and messengers used to be regarded as the most
awful crime, and amounted to the degree of war declaration. The Prophet Zaid bin Haritha was appointed to lead the army. Ja‘far bin Abi Talib would replace him if he was killed, and ‘Abdullah bin Rawaha would succeed Ja‘far in case the latter fell. A white banner was raised and handed over to Zaid. The Prophet He At the conclusion of the military preparations, the people of
Madinah gathered and bade the army farewell. ‘Abdullah bin Rawaha began to
weep at that moment, and when asked why he was weeping, he swore that it was not
love for this world nor under a motive of infatuation with the glamour of life
but rather the Words of Allâh speaking of Fire that he heard the Prophet The Muslim army then marched northward to Ma‘ân, a town
bordering on geographical Syria. There news came to the effect that Herclius
had mobilized a hundred thousand troops together with another hundred thousand
men of Lakham, Judham and Balqain — Arabian tribes allied to the Byzantines.
The Muslims, on their part had never thought of encountering such a huge army.
They were at a loss about what course to follow, and spent two nights debating
these unfavourable conditions. Some suggested that they should write a letter to
the Prophet Zaid bin Haritha, the closest to the Messenger’s heart, assumed leadership and began to fight tenaciously and in matchless spirit of bravery until he fell, fatally stabbed. Ja‘far bin Abi Talib then took the banner and did a miraculous job. In the thick of the battle, he dismounted, hamstrung his horse and resumed fighting until his right hand was cut off. He seized the banner with his left hand until this too was gone. He then clasped the banner with both arms until a Byzantine soldier struck and cut him into two parts. he was posthumously called "the flying Ja‘far" or "Ja‘far with two wings" because Allâh has awarded him two wings to fly wherever he desired there in the eternal Garden. Al-Bukhâri reported fifty stabs in his body, none of them in the back. ‘Abdullah bin Rawaha then proceeded to hold up the banner and fight bravely on his horseback while reciting enthusiastic verses until he too was killed. Thereupon a man, from Bani ‘Ajlan, called Thabit bin Al-Arqam took the banner and called upon the Muslims to choose a leader. The honour was unanimously granted to Khalid bin Al-Waleed, a skilled brave fighter and an outstanding strategist. It was reported by Al-Bukhâri that he used nine swords that broke while he was relentlessly and courageously fighting the enemies of Islaam. He, however, realizing the grave situation the Muslims were in, began to follow a different course of encounter, revealing the super strategy-maker, that Khalid was rightly called. He reshuffled the right and left flanks of the Muslim army and introduced forward a division from the rear in order to cast fear into the hearts of the Byzantine by deluding them that fresh reinforcements had arrived. The Muslims engaged with the enemies in sporadic skirmishes but gradually and judiciously retreating in a fully organized and well-planned withdrawal. The Byzantines, seeing this new strategy, believed that they were being entrapped and drawn in the heart of the desert. They stopped the pursuit, and consequently the Muslims managed to retreat back to Madeenah with the slightest losses. The Muslims sustained twelve martyrs, whereas the number of
casualties among the Byzantines was unknown although the details of the battle
point clearly to a large number. Even though the battle did not satisfy the
Muslims’ objective, namely avenging Al-Harith’s murder, it resulted in a
far-ranging impact and attached to the Muslims a great reputation in the
battlefields. The Byzantine Empire, at that time, was a power to be reckoned
with, and mere thinking of antagonizing it used to mean self-annihilation, let
alone a three-thousand-soldier army going into fight against 200,000 soldiers
far better equipped and lavishly furnished with all luxurious conveniences. The
battle was a real miracle proving that the Muslims were something exceptional
not then familiar. Moreover, it gave evidence that Allâh backed them and their
Prophet,Muhammad Mu’tah Battle, after all, constituted the forerunner of the blood encounter to take place with the Byzantines subsequently. It pointed markedly to a new epoch of the Islaamic conquest of the Byzantine empire and other remote countries, to follow at a later stage. |
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