Bilal Ibn Rabah RA was the first
announcer of the time of Muslim prayer and the troublemaker to the idols. He
was one of the miracles of faith and truthfulness, one of Islam’s great
miracles. For out of every ten Muslims, from the beginning of Islam until today
and until Allah wills, we will meet seven, at least, who know Bilal. That is,
there are hundreds of millions of people throughout the centuries and
generations who know Bilal, remember his name, and know his role just as they
know the two greatest Caliphs in Islam, Abu Bakr RA and Umar RA!
Before Islam, Bilal was no more than
a slave who tended herds of camels for his master for a handful of dates. Had
it not been for Islam, it would have been his fate to remain a slave, wandering
among the crowd until death brought an end to his life and caused him to perish
in the profoundest depths of forgetfulness.
However, his faith proved to be
true, and the magnificence of the religion which he believed in gave
him, during his lifetime and in
history, an elevated place among the great and holy men of Islam. Indeed, many
human beings of distinction, prestige, or wealth have not obtained even one-tenth
of the immortality which Bilal the Abyssinian slave gained. Indeed, the black
colour of his complexion, his modest lineage, and his contemptible position
among people as a slave did not deprive him, when he chose to embrace Islam, of
occupying the high place which his truthfulness, certainty, purity, and
self-sacrifice qualified him for. For him, all this would not have been on the
scale of estimation and honour except as an astonishing occurrence when
greatness is found where it could not possibly be.
The news of Muhammad’s SAW call
began and reached his ears when people in Makkah began to talk about it and
when he began listening to the discussions of his master and his guests,
especially Umayah lbn Khalaf, one of the elders of the Bani Jumah, of which
Bilal was one of the slaves. How often did he hear Urnayah talking to his
friends for some time and to some persons of his tribe. Many times they talked
about the Messenger with words that were overflowing with anxiety, rage, and
malice!
Bilal, on the other hand, was
receiving between those words of insane fury and rage the attributes of this
new religion. He began to feel that they were new qualities for the environment
which he lived in. He was also able to receive during their threatening,
thunderous talks their acknowledgement of
Muhammad’s nobility, truthfulness,
and loyalty. Yes indeed, he heard them wondering and amazed at what Muhammad
came with. They said to one another, ‘Muhammad was never a liar, magician, or
mad, but we have to describe him this way until we turn away from him those who
rush to his religion.’
He heard them talking about his
honesty and loyalty, about his manliness and nobility, and about his purity and
composure of his intelligence. He heard them whispering about the reasons which
caused them to challenge and antagonize him: First, their allegiance to the
religion of their fathers; Second, their fear over the glory of the Quraish
which was bestowed upon them because of their religious status as a centre of
idol worship and resort in the whole of the Arabian Peninsula; Third, the envy
of the tribe of Bani Hashim that anyone from them should claim to be a prophet
or messenger.
One day Bilal Ibn Rabah recognized
the light of Allah and heard His resonance in the depths of his good soul. So
he went to the Messenger of Allah and converted to Islam. It did not take long
before the news of his embracing Islam was spread. It was a shock to the chiefs
of the Bani Jumah, who were very proud and conceited. The devils of the earth
sat couched over the breast of Umayah Ibn Khalaf, who considered the acceptance
of Islam by one of their slaves a blow that overwhelmed them with shame and
disgrace.
Bilal gave a profound lesson to
those of his age and every age, for those of his religion and every religion, a
lesson which embraced the idea that freedom and supremacy of conscience could
not be bartered either for gold or punishment, even if it filled the earth. He was
stripped naked and laid on hot coals to make him renounce his religion, but he
refused. The Messenger SAW and Islam made this weak Abyssinian slave a teacher
to all humanity in the art of respecting conscience and defending its freedom
and supremacy. His torturers used to take him out in the midday heat when the
desert turned to a fatal hell.
Then they would throw him naked on
its scorching rocks and bring a burning hot rock, which took several men to
lift from its place, and throw it onto his body and chest. This savage torture
was repeated every day until the hearts of some of his executioners took pity on
him. Finally, they agreed to set him free on condition that he would speak well
of their gods, even with only one word that would allow them to keep their pride
so that the Quraish would not say they had been defeated and humiliated by the
resistance of their persevering slave.
But even this one word, which he
could eject from outside his heart and with it buy his life and soul without
losing his faith or abandoning his conviction, Bilal refused to say. Instead he
began to repeat his lasting chant: ‘One… One!’ His torturers shouted at him, imploring
him, ‘Mention the name of Al-Laat and Al-‘Uzza.’ But he answered, ‘One . . .
One’ They said to him, ‘Say as we say.’ But he answered them with remarkable
mockery and caustic irony, ‘Indeed my tongue is not good at that.’
Abu Bakr As-Siddiq went to them
while they were torturing him and shouted at them, ‘Are you killing a man
because he says, ‘Allah is my Lord?” Then he shouted at Umayah lbn Khalaf,
‘Take more than his price and set him free.’ It was as if Umayah were drowning
and had caught a lifeboat. It was to his liking and he was very much pleased
when he heard Abu Bakr offering the price of his freedom, since they had despaired
of subjugating Bilal. And as they were merchants, they realized that selling
him was more profitable to them than his death. They sold him to Abu Bakr, and
then he emancipated him immediately, and Bilal took his place among free
men. When As-Siddiq put his arm round
Bilal, rushing with him to freedom, Umayah said to him, ‘Take him, for by
Al-Laat and Al-‘ Uzza if you had refused to buy him except for one ounce of
gold, I would have sold him to you.’ Abu Bakr realized the bitterness of
despair and disappointment hidden in these words. It was appropriate not to
answer, but because they violated the dignity of this man who had become his
brother and his equal, he answered Umayah saying, ‘By Allah, if you had refused
to sell him except for a hundred ounces, I would have paid it.’ He departed
with his companion to the Messenger of Allah, giving him news of his
liberation, and there was a great celebration. After the Hijrah of the
Messenger SAW and the
Muslims to Al-Medina and their
settling there, the Messenger instituted the Adhaan. So who would become the
muezzin five times a day? Who would call across distant lands, ‘Allah is the
Greatest’ and ‘There is no god but Allah’? It was Bilal, who had shouted
thirteen years before
while the torture was destroying
him, ‘Allah is One… One.’ He was chosen
by the Messenger that day to be the first muezzin in Islam. With his melodious
soul- stirring voice, he filled the hearts with faith and the ears with awe
when he called: Allah is the Greatest, Allah is the Greatest Allah is the Greatest,
Allah is the Greatest I bear witness that there is no god but Allah I bear
witness that there is no god but Allah I bear witness that Muhammad is the Messenger
of Allah I bear witness that Muhammad is the Messenger of Allah Come to Prayer Come
to Prayer Come to Success Come to Success Allah is the Greatest, Allah is the
Greatest There is no god but Allah Fighting broke out between the Muslims and
the army of the Quraish who came to invade Al- Medina. The war raged fiercely
and terribly while Bilal was there attacking and moving about in the first
battle. Islam was plunged into the Battle of Badr, whose motto the Messenger
SAW ordered to be, ‘One… One.’
In this battle, the Quraish
sacrificed their youth and all their noblemen to their destruction. Umayah Ibn
Khalaf, who had been Bilal’s master and who used to torture him with deadly
brutality, was about to retreat from fighting. But his friend Uqbah Ibn Abu
Mu’it went to him when he heard the news of his withdrawal, carrying a censer
in his right hand. When he arrived he was sitting among his people. He threw
the censer between his hands and said to him, ‘O Abu ‘Ally, use this. You are
one of the women.’ But Umayah shouted at him saying, ‘May Allah make you and
what you came with ugly!’ And he did not find a way out, so he went out to
fight.
What other secrets does destiny
conceal and unfold?
‘Uqbah Ibn Abu Mu’it had been the
greatest supporter of Umayah in the torture of Bilal and other weak Muslims.
And on that day, he himself was the one who urged him to go to the Battle of
Badr where he would die, just as it would be the place where Uqbah would die!
Umayah had been one of the shirkers from war. Had it not been for what Uqbah
did to him, he would not have gone out fighting. But Allah executes His
command. So let Umayah go out, because there was an old account between him and
one of the slaves of Allah. It was time to settle it. The Judge never dies. As
you owe, you shall be owed to.
Indeed destiny would be very much
pleased to mock the tyrants. Uqbah, whose provocations Umayah used to listen to
and follow his desire to torture the innocent believers, was the same person
who would lead Umayah to his death. By the hand of Bilal himself and Bilal
alone! The same hands that Umayah used to chain and whose owner he beat and
tortured. Those very hands were on that day, in the Battle of Badr, on a rendezvous
that destiny had set the best time for, with the torture of the Quraish who had
humiliated the believers unjustly and aggressively. That is what really happened.
When the fighting began between the two sides, and the side of the Muslims
shouted the motto, ‘One . . . One,’ the heart of Umayah was startled, and a
warning
came to him. The word which his
slave used to repeat yesterday under torture and horror became today the motto
of a whole religion and of a whole new nation.
The swords clashed in the battle and
the fighting became severe. As the battle neared its end, Umayah lbn Khalaf
noticed Abd Ar Rahman Ibn Awf, the Companion of the Messenger of Allah. He
sought refuge with him and asked to be his captive, hoping to save his life.
Abd Ar-Rahman accepted his supplication and granted him refuge. Then he took
him and walked with him amidst the battle to the
place where captives were held. On the way Bilal noticed him and shouted, ‘The
head of kuft (disbelief), Umayah lbn Khalaf! May I not be saved if he is
saved!’ he lifted up his sword to cut off the head which was all the time full
of pride and arrogance. But Abd Ar-Rahman Ibn Awf shouted at him, ‘O Bilal, he
is my captive!’ A captive while the war was still raging? A captive while his
sword was still dripping blood because of what he had been doing just moments
before to the bodies of the Muslims? No! In Bilal’s opinion, this was irony and
abuse of the mind, and Umayah had scoffed and abused the mind enough. He
scoffed until there was no irony remaining for such a day, such a dilemma, and
such a fate! Bilal realized that he would not be able alone to storm the
sanctuary of his brother in faith, Abd Ar-Rahman Ibn Awf. So he shouted at the
top of his voice to the Muslims, ‘O helpers of Allah! The head of Kufr, Umayah Ibn
Khalaf! May I not be saved if he is saved!’ A band of Muslims approached with
swords dripping blood. They surrounded Umayah and his son, who was fighting with
the Quraish. Abd Ar-Rahman Ibn Awf could not do anything. He could not even
protect his armour which the crowd removed. Bilal gazed long at the body of Umayah,
who fell beneath the smashing swords. Then he hastened away from him shouting,
‘One… One.’
The days went by and Makkah was
conquered. The Messenger SAW entered it, thankful and saying, ‘Allah is the
Greatest,’ at the head of 10,000 Muslims. He headed for the Kabah immediately,
this holy place which the Quraish had crowded with idols amounting to the
number of days of the year. ‘The truth has come and falsehood has vanished.’ Ever
since that day, there has been no Uzza, no Laat and no Hubal. Man will not bow
to a rock or idol after today. People will worship no one with all his conscience
but Allah, Who has no likeness, the One, Most Great, Most High. The Messenger
SAW entered the Kabah accompanied by Bilal. He had hardly entered it when he
faced a carved idol representing Ibrahim AS prophesying with sticks.
The Messenger SAW was angry and
said, ‘May Allah kill them. Our ancestor never did prophesy with sticks. Ibrahim
was not a Jew or Christian, but he was a true Muslim and was never a
polytheist.’ Then he ordered Bilal to ascend to the top of the mosque and call
to Prayer, and Bilal called the Adhaan. How magnificent was the time, place,
and occasion! Life came to a standstill in Makkah, and thousands of Muslims
stood like motionless air, repeating in submissiveness and whispering the words
of the Adhaan after Bilal while the polytheists were in their homes hardly
believing what was happening. Bilal lived with the Messenger of Allah SAW,
witnessing all the battles with him, calling to Prayer and observing the rites
of this great religion that took him out of darkness to light and from
servitude to freedom. The stature of Islam along with the stature of Muslims
was elevated. Every day Bilal was getting closer to the heart of the Messenger
of Allah, who used to describe him as ‘one of the inhabitants of Paradise.’ But
Bilal remained just as he was, noble and humble, always considering himself
‘the Abyssinian who only yesterday was a slave.’ One day he was proposing to two
girls for himself and his brother, so be said to their father, ‘ I am Bilal and
this is my brother, two slaves from Abyssinia. We were astray and Allah guided
us. We were two slaves and Allah emancipated us. If you agree on us marrying
your daughters, all praise is to Allah; if you refuse, then Allah is the
Greatest.’ The Messenger passed away to Allah, well pleased and well pleasing,
and Abu Bakr As-Siddiq took the command of the Muslims after him. Bilal went to
the caliph (successor) of the Messenger of Allah and said to him, ‘O Caliph of
the Messenger of Allah, I heard the Messenger of Allah SAW say, ‘The best deed
of a believer is jihad in the cause of Allah.’
Abu Bakr said to him, ‘So what do
you want, Bilal?’ He said, ‘I want to defend in the cause of Allah until I
die.’ Abu Bakr said, ‘And who will call the Adhaan for us?’ Bilal said, with
his eyes overflowing with tears, ‘I will not call the Adhaan for anyone after
the Messenger of Allah.’ Abu Bakr said, ‘Stay and call to Prayer for us, Bilal.’
Bilal said, ‘If you emancipated me to be for you, I will do what you want, but
if you emancipated me for Allah, leave me to Whom I was emancipated for.’ Abu Bakr
said, ‘I emancipated you for Allah, Bilal.’ The narrators differ. Some of them
believe that he travelled and remained fighting and defending. Some others
narrate that he accepted Abu Bakr’s request to stay with him in Medina. When
Abu Bakr died and Umar succeeded him, Bilal asked his permission and went to Syria.
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