Utbah Ibn Ghazwan
Umar ibn al-Kattab, the head of the rapidly
expanding Muslim State went to bed early
just after the Salat al-Isha. He wanted to have a rest and feel
refreshed for his nightly
tour of inspection of the capital city which he often did incognito.
Before he could/all
asleep however, the post from the outlying regions of the State arrived
informing him that
the Persian forces confronting the Muslims were proving especially
difficult to subdue.
They were able to send in reinforcements and supplies from many pl aces
to relieve their
armies on the point of defeat. The letter urged Umar to send
reinforcements and in
particular it said:
"The city of al-Ubullah must be considered one of
the most important sources
providing men and material to the Persian forces under attack."
Umar decided then to despatch an army to take the
city of al-Ubullah and cut off its
line of supplies to the Persian armies. His main problem was that he
had so few men left
with him in the city. That was because young men, men of maturity and
even old men had
gone out on campaigns far and wide in the path of God, fi sabilillah.
In these circumstances he determined to follow the
strategy which he knew and which was
well-tried that is, to mobilize a small force and place it under the
leadership of a
strong and able commander. He considered, one after another the names
of the indiv iduals
who were still with him, to see who was the most suitable commander.
Finally, he exclaimed
himself: "I have found him. Yes I have found him."
He then went back to bed: The person he had in
mind was a well-known mujahid who had
fought at Badr, Uhud, al-Khandaq and other battles. He had also fought
in the terrible
battles of Yamamah and emerged unscathed. He was in fact one of the
first to a ccept
Islam. He went on the first hijrah to Abyssinia but had returned to
stay with the Prophet
in Makkah. He then went on hijrah to Madinah. This tall and imposing
companion of the
Prophet was known for his exceptional skill in the use of spears and
arr ows.
When morning came, Umar called his attendants and
said: "Call Utbah ibn Ghazwan
for me," Umar managed to put together an army of just over three
hundred men and he
appointed Utbah as their commander with the promise that he would send
reinforcements to
hi m as soon as possible.
When the army was assembled in ranks ready to
depart, Umar al-Faruq stood before them
bidding them farewell and giving instructions to his commander, Utbah.
He said:
"Utbah, I am sending you to the land of al-Ubullah. It is one of the
major fortresses
of the enemy and I pray that God helps you to take it. When you reach
the city, invite its
inhabitants to the worship of God. If they respond to you, accept them
(as Muslims). If
they refuse, then take from them the jizyah.. If they refuse to pay the
jizy ah then fight
them... And fear God, O Utbah, in the discharge of your duties. Beware
of letting yourself
become too haughty or arrogant for this will corrupt your hereafter.
Know that you were a
companion of the Messenger of God, may God bless him and gr ant him
peace. God honoured
you through him after your being insignificant. He strengthened you
through him after you
were weak. You have become a commander with authority and a leader who
must be obeyed.
What a great blessing if this does not make you v ain and deceive you
and lead you to
Jahannam. May God protect you and me from it."
With this chastening advice and prayer, Utbah and
his army set off. Several women were
in the army including his wife and the wives and sisters of other men.
Eventually they
reached a place called Qasbaa not very far from al-Ubullah. It was
called Qasbaa because
of the abundance of reed-like stalks which grew there.
At that point the army was absolutely famished.
They had nothing to eat. When hunger
gripped them, Utbah ordered some of his men to go and search the land
for something to
eat. One of the men told the story of their search of food:
"While we were searching for something to eat, we
entered a thicket and, lo and
behold there were two large baskets. In one there were dates and in the
other small white
grains covered with a yellow husk. We dragged the baskets with the
grain and said: "T
his is poison which the enemy has prepared for you. Don't go near it
all."
We went for the dates and began eating from it.
While we were busy eating the dates, a
horse which had broken loose from its tether went up to the basket of
grain and began
eating from it. By God, we seriously thought of slaughtering it before
it should die (from
the alleged poison) and benefit from its meat. However, its owner came
up to us and said:
"Leave it. I shall look after it for the night and if I feel that it is
going to die,
I will slaughter it."
In the morning we found the horse quite healthy
with no sign of ill effects. My sister
then said: 'Yaa akhi, I have heard my father saying: Poison does not
harm (food) if it is
placed on fire and cooked well.'
We then took some of the grain, placed it in a pot
and put it on a fire. After a short
while my sister called out: 'Come and see how it has become red and the
husks have begun
to separate leaving white grains.'
We placed the white grains in a large bowl and
Utbah said to us: 'Mention the name of
Allah on it and eat it.' We ate and found it exceedingly delicious and
good. We learnt
after that the grain was called rice."
The army of Utbah then went on to the fortified
city of al-Ubullah on the banks of the
River Euphrates. The Persians used al-Ubullah as a massive arms depot.
There were several
fortresses in the city from which towers sprang. These were used as
observatio n posts to
detect any hostile movements outside the city.
The city appeared to be impregnable. What chance
had Utbah of taking it with such a
small force armed with only swords and spears? A direct assault was
obviously futile and
so Utbah had to resort to some stratagem.
Utbah had flags prepared which he had hung on
spears. These he gave to the women and
ordered them to march behind the army. His instructions to them then
were: "When we
get near to the city, raise the dust behind us so that the entire
atmosphere is filled
with it."
As they neared al-Ubullah, a Persian force came
out to confront them, they saw the
Muslims boldly advancing, the flags fluttering behind them and the dust
which was being
churned up and which filled the air around. They thought that the
Muslims in front o f the
flags were merely the vanguard of the advancing army, a strong and
numerous army. They
felt they would be no match for such a foe. They lost heart and
prepared to evacuate the
city. Picking up whatever valuables they could, they rushed to boats
anch ored on the
river and abandoned their well-fortified city.
Utbah entered al-Ubullah without losing any of his
men. From this base he managed to
bring surrounding towns and villages under Muslim control. When news
spread of Utbah's
successes, and of the richness of the land he had occupied, many people
flocked to the
region in search of wealth and easy living.
Uqbah noted that many Muslims now inclined towards
a soft life and followed the ways
and customs of the region and that this weakened their determination to
continue
struggling.
He wrote to Umar ibn al-Khattab asking for
permission to build the garrison town of
Basrah. He described the locations he had chosen for the city and Umar
gave his assent.
Basrah lay between the desert and the ports of the Gulf and from this
base expediti ons
were launched further east. The positioning of the town was for maximum
military
effectiveness (not merely to support an army of occupation).
Utbah himself planned the city and built its first
great masjid which was a simple
enclosure, roofed over at one end and suitable for mass assemblies.
From the mosque, Utbah
and his men went out on military campaigns. These men eventually
settled on the land and
built houses.
Utbah himself however did not build a house for
himself but continued to live in a tent
of cloth. He had seen how preoccupation with worldly possessions had
caused many people to
forget themselves and their real purpose in life. He had seen how men
who no t long ago
knew no food better than rice boiled in their husks, getting accustomed
to sophisticated
Persian patisserie like fasludhanj and lawzinaj made with refined
flour, butter, honey and
nuts of various kinds to the point where they hankered after the se
things.
Utbah was afraid that his din would be affected by
his dunya and he was concerned about
his hereafter. He called men to the masjid of Basrah and addressed them
thus: "O
people! The dunya will come to an end and you will be carried from it
to an abode whic h
will not wane or disappear. Go to it with the best of your deeds. I
look back and see
myself among the early Muslims with the Messenger of Allah may God
bless him and grant him
peace. We had no food then apart from the leaves of trees and our lips
woul d fester. One
day I found a burdah. I tore it in two and shared it with Sad ibn Abi
Waqqas. I made an
aazar with one half and he did the same with the other half. Here we
are today. There is
not one of us but he is an amir of one of the garrison towns. I seek
Allah's protection
lest I become great in my own estimation and little in the sight of
Allah.." With
these words Utbah appointed someone else to stand in his place, and
bade farewell to the
people of Basrah.
It was the season of pilgrimage and he left to
perform the Hajj. He then travelled to
Madinah and there he asked Umar to relieve him of the responsibility of
governing the
city. Umar refused. He could not easily dispense with a governor of the
quality of Utbah
and said to him:
"You place your trusts and your responsibilities
on my neck and then you abandon
me to myself. No, by God, I shall never relieve you." So Umar prevailed
upon him and
commanded him to return to Basrah, Utbah knew that he had to obey the
Amir al-Muminin but
he did so with a heavy heart. He mounted his camel and on his way he
prayed:
"O Lord, do not send me back to Basrah. O Lord, do
not send me back to
Basrah." He had not gone far from Madinah when his camel stumbled.
Utbah fell and the
injuries he sustained proved to be fatal.
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