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later Judaism. In Muhammad's time the Jews were not
only very numerous but also very powerful in various
parts of Arabia. No doubt many of them had settled in
that country at different times, when fleeing from the
various conquerors — Nebuchadnezzar, the successors
of Alexander the Great, Pompey. Titus, Hadrian, and
others — who had overrun and desolated Palestine. They
were especially numerous in the neighbourhood of Medina,
which city they at one time held by the sword. In Muhammad's
time the three large Jewish tribes called Banu Quraidhah,
Banu Nadhir, and Banu Qainuqa', settled in the neighbourhood
of Medina, were so powerful that Muhammad, not long
after his arrival there in A.D. 622, made an offensive
and defensive alliance with them. Other Jewish settlements
were to be found in the neighbourhood of Khaibar and
the Wadi u'l Qura' and on the shores of the Gulf of
'Aqabah. The fact that the Jews possessed inspired books
and were undoubtedly descended from Abraham, whom the
Quraish and other tribes claimed as their ancestor also,
gave the Israelites great weight and influence. Native
legends would naturally therefore undergo a process
of assimilation with the history and traditions of the
Jews. By 1 a summary adjustment, the story
of Palestine became the story of the Hijaz. The precincts
of the Ka'bah were hallowed as the scene of Hagar's
distress, and the sacred |
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well Zamzam as the source of her relief. The pilgrims
hastened to and fro between Safa and Marwa in memory
of her hurried steps in search of water. It was Abraham
and Ishmael who built the temple, imbedded in it the
Black Stone, and established for all Arabia the pilgrimage
to 'Arafat. In imitation of him it was that stones were
flung by the pilgrims as if at Satan, and sacrifices
offered at Mina in remembrance of the vicarious sacrifice
by Abraham. And so, although the indigenous rites may
have been little, if at all, altered by the adoption
of Israelitish legends, they came to be received in
a totally different light, and to be connected in Arab
imagination with something of the sanctity of Abraham
the Friend of God 1... It was upon this common
ground Muhammad took his stand, and proclaimed to his
people a new and a spiritual system, in accents to which
the whole Peninsula could respond. The rites of the
Ka'bah were retained, but, stripped of all idolatrous
tendency, they still hang, a strange unmeaning shroud,
around the living theism of Islam.
"Familiarity with the Abrahamic races also introduced
the doctrine of the immortality of the soul, and the
resurrection from the dead; but these were held with
many fantastic ideas of Arabian growth. Revenge pictured
the murdered soul as a bird chirping for retribution
against the murderer; and a camel was sometimes left
to |
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