Se e ra h a s a Mo ve me nt
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expression to human nature. That is why this faith lodges itself in
the depths of the human psyche. It even finds a place in the hearts
of one’s enemies. Khalid ibn Walid became a Muslim just before
the conquest of Makkah, but he had been conscious for quite some
time before that of the truth of the message of Islam. Later on,
he told of his early conviction that Muhammad, not the Quraysh,
was in the right, and that he should join forces with the Prophet
of Islam. “I participated in every battle against Muhammad,” he
said. “But there was not one battle from which I did not go away
with the feeling that I was fighting on the wrong side.”
(Al-Bidayah
wan-Nihayah,
Vol. IV)
Many people are reported to have had inclinations towards
Islam long before they accepted the faith. Some even had dreams
about Islam. One such person was Khalid ibn Sa’id ibn-ul Aas. He
saw himself in a dream standing on the edge of an enormous pit of
fire. Someone was trying to push him in. The Prophet Muhammad
came and rescued him from the pit of doom.
Dawah
activity appears to have no relation with economics.
Yet indirectly it is a great economic activity as well. When a
person becomes a Muslim, all his resources are automatically put
at the disposal of the Islamic cause. The first person to provide
the Islamic movement with financial assistance was Khadija, the
Prophet’s wife. Then Abu Bakr, who had accumulated 40,000
dirhams from his trading, put all his capital into the service of
Islam. When he and the Prophet emigrated from Makkah to
Madinah, he took 6000 dirhams with him—enough to finance
the entire expenses of the journey. Uthman donated 10,000 dinars
towards the expedition of Tabuk in 9
a
.
h
. On one occasion alone
AbdulRahman ibn Awf gave 500 horses, to be used in the service
of the Islamic cause. So it was with others who accepted Islam. Just
as they themselves entered the Islamic fold, so did their properties
become part of the Islamic treasury.
Belief in one God is the only creed which does not allow for any
social distinction or racial prejudice. For this reason the masses
flock to join any movement which rises on the basis of this creed.