Who Is Muhammad?
Muhammad was born in Makkah in the year 570 CE, during the period
of history Europeans call the Middle Ages. Muhammad was the son of
'Abd Allah, a noble from the tribe of the Quraysh. Muhammad's father
died before Muhammad's birth, and his mother, Aminah died shortly
afterwards. Muhammad was raised by his uncle, Abu Talib.
As he grew up, Muhammad became known for his truthfulness, generosity
and sincerity, earning the title of al Amin, the trustworthy one.
Muhammad was frequently called upon to arbitrate disputes and counsel
his fellow Makkans.
Muhammad was of a contemplative nature, and had long detested the
decadence of his society. It became his habit to meditate from time
to time in the Cave of Hira' near the summit of Jabal al Nur, the
'Mountain of Light' near Makkah.
At the age of 40, while engaged in a meditative retreat, Muhammad
received his first revelation from God through the Archangel Gabriel.
This revelation, which continued for twenty-three years, is known
as the Qur'an.
Muhammad began to recite the words he heard from Gabriel and to preach
the truth which God had revealed to him. The people of Makkah were
steeped in their ways of ignorance and opposed Muhammad and his small
group of followers in every way. These early Muslims
suffered bitter persecution.
In the year 622 CE, God gave the Muslim community the command to emigrate.
This event, the hijrah or migration, in which they left Makkah for
the city of Madinah, some 260 miles to the North, marks the beginning
of the Muslim calendar.
Madinah provided Muhammad and the Muslims the safe and nurturing haven
in which the Muslim community grew. After several years, the Prophet
and his followers returned to Makkah, where they forgave their enemies
and dedicated the Ka'bah to the worship of the One God. Before the
Prophet died at the age of 63, the greater part of Arabia was Muslim,
and within a century of his death, Islam had spread to Spain in the
west and as far east as China.
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