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Hijrah 1444: The meaning and ‘meaning of meaning’ of migration (II)

But in reading the Qur’an for the Hijrah we run into a brick wall. This is because the Hijra is not effusively celebrated by the…

But in reading the Qur’an for the Hijrah we run into a brick wall. This is because the Hijra is not effusively celebrated by the Qur’an. No chapter is named after it; no complete narration in the Qur’an is dedicated to it.

This is despite the fact that the event of the Hijrah was full of highly enchanting scenarios the like of which Ibn Hisham and other biographers of the Prophet would tell with relish. But the Quran does not mention the Hijrah but calls attention to its event. To do that would probably have run contrary to the Qur’anic style: a style that gives precedence to brevity where detailed narration is expected; a style that makes use of stories not as an end in themselves but as means toward a glorious end; a style which concerns itself with the Prophet but might even treat the Prophet as a second person.

Thus, the story of the saga of the Hijrah is told only in two aayat of the Qur’an. The first reads, partly, thus: “And we have put a barrier before them and a barrier behind them and we have covered them up such that they cannot see” (Q36:8). The second aayat goes thus: “when the unbelievers drove him out with his closest associate and he and his second were in the cave, he assured him (his second): grief not because the Almighty is with us and He caused his peace to descend into his heart and aided him with warriors unseen thus did He utterly humiliated the scheming of the unbelievers…” (Q9:40).

There is a chapter in the Quran titled The Cave (Qur’an 18) but it does not celebrate the cavernous as it appertains to the odyssey of the Prophet of Islam and his companions inside the cave that day. There is another chapter named after the Spider, but alas! not the spider which hung its web at the entrance of the cave in which the Prophet and Abu Bakr Siddiq hid such that the unbelievers who were hitherto in their pursuit felt discouraged from exploring its hidden “treasures”. As far as the Qur’an is concerned it is not the events that make up the story of life that matter but what the story implies for humanity.

In the realm of the spiritual, the Hijrah was all about duty and sacrifice; in the realm of the material and the human, it was an adventure. The first precedes the second both in importance and sequence. The Hijrah was also all about forsaking and repossessing. This is evidenced in the individual and communal realities of those who left what made them humans behind in Makkah in order for them to become greater humans in Madinah. It was a template for the emergence of new figures in history through whose actions the world today now counts the existence of over 1.7 billion Muslims. The Hijrah, while referencing motifs of forsaking and repossessing, amplifies the secret codes for the attainment of excellence in life. It means to be deprived of the world is not the same thing as forsaking the world. Both occurred with reference to the seventy individuals who made that journey during the first Hijrah, the second was relevant to those who willingly left Makkah in order to populate Madinah. The Hijrah as a motif therefore essays the world as operating on a scale: it is either you are deprived of the world or you are made to forsake the world. In both instances, the world is meant to be forsaken not coveted. But the irony lies in the fact that those who forsake the world usually have the world come to them pleading that it be possessed; those who covet the world might or might never gain it; those who excessively covet the world are more likely going to lose it and lose their souls.

Further, the Hijrah had to do with the departure from a space: the departure from Makkah. The Prophet and his companions not only left Makkah in person, but also left Makkah behind. To leave Makkah behind meant leaving the city with its insuperable odour of greed, covetousness, self-conceitedness, oppression of the poor, and sexploitation of women. By leaving Makkah, the Prophet was indirectly calling attention to the existence of the “Makkahs” of today: the “Makkah” in the North and South of Nigeria; the “Makkahs” in Africa and Asia; the “Makkahs” which are awaiting the emigration of humanity; the “Makkahs” of corruption in the various houses of Assembly and the corporate world; the “Makkah” in the Stock Exchange Markets where sharp practices are the order of the day; the ‘Makkah’ in the banking sector where directors feast on the meagre deposits of pauperized Nigerians; the “Makkah” in local government houses where council allocations are “cancelled” on a monthly basis.

 

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