By Dr. Rafat Amari
The True dates for the
Construction of the Temple of Mecca, the Digging of the Well of Zamzam, and the
Transfer of the Black Stone to Mecca
Islamic claims that Abraham and
Ishmael founded the temple in the city of Mecca
are recognized as false, when we study the black Stone, which was the heart of
the temple.
Abraham never went to where Mecca
was eventually built, nor did his son, Ishmael, or Ishmael’s son, Nabaioth.
Despite these facts, Ibn Ishak, Mohammed’s biographer, claimed Abraham was
responsible for building the temple at Mecca,
and that it was then run by Ishmael, and eventually Nabaioth. The story,
created by Ibn Ishak and his companions, goes on to say that after Nabaioth,
the tribe of Jurhum, which they claim inhabited Mecca at the time of Abraham, took the
responsibility to serve the Temple
at Mecca. According to
the story, they served until the tribe of Khuzaa'h came from Yemen.
This was after the dam at Ma'rib began to show signs of damage and drove them
away. The story continues that, when the tribe of Khuzaa'h came to Mecca,
they defeated Jurhum. Jurhum then left Mecca
to hide the black Stone of the temple and two golden gazelles. They hid them in
the water spring called Zamzam, then covered the spring, the stone and the
gazelles with dust so they would escape detection.[i][i][1]
The date these things supposedly happened is critical. According to the stories, Jurhum lived in Mecca until the Ma'rib dam was damaged, and the tribe of
Khuzaa'h left Yemen.
We know these things occurred around the year 150 A.D.
Islamic tradition is
illogical when it talks about Jurhum and the hiding of a spring of water and
the Black Stone.
If Jurhum’s story were true, why
did the classical authors, who visited and wrote about western Arabia mention
all the tribes who were living there, even the tiny ones, but never once
mention Mecca
or the tribe of Jurhum? Second, after being defeated, how could Jurhum bury two
precious golden gazelles and a revered stone belonging to Mecca’s
temple without any of the inhabitants noticing? Any tribe leaving Mecca would surely take its golden treasure
and not bury it in a public place, well-known to all. And this spring of water was the only spring
in Mecca.
Third, the black Stone was a revered
stone. It is not easy to move it from its location in the temple, without
people noticing where it was placed. According to Islamic claims, the war
erupted over who should be responsible for the temple. How could a defeated
Jurhum tribe succeed in moving the stone without the winning Khuzaa'h tribe
intervening, or at least noticing where the stone had been hidden? The fourth
argument concerns the spring of water itself. If it existed in western Arabia, its location would be important to remember.
After all, water was especially important for the Arabians living in the
desert. Islamic tradition claims this spring existed since the time of Abraham.
If it were miraculously brought into existence when the angel Gabriel gave
water to Hagar and her child, Ishmael, then its existence would have been
known, not just in Mecca, but in many other
cities around Mecca.
Bedouins would have come to the spring to water their sheep. Area inhabitants would have come to refresh
themselves. No one could hide the spring, even if it were possible to cover it
with dust.
The story of Jurhum hiding items in the spring during the 2nd century A.D.
continues by claiming that Abdel Mutaleb, the grandfather of Mohammed,
rediscovered the spring near the end of the 5th century. We can only conclude
that the spring never existed before the time of Abdel Mutaleb, and that digging by finally the Mecchians found underground
water, which eventually became a spring. This phenomenon of digging to find
water which comes in the form of a spring is common in the Middle
East. To claim that a spring existed in a city for 2,500 years
before Jurhum succeeded in covering it for another three centuries is an
impossible assertion, since the springs
of Arabia were significantly more important to the Bedouins than the Red Sea itself. You may hide the sea from the eyes of
thirsty tribes, but you cannot hide a spring and its location for that amount
of time.
It is also impossible to believe that the black Stone was hidden for
three or four centuries. The stone was considered the main shrine, or sacred
element, in each temple, called Kaabah in Arabic. This revered stone, which
represented the moon, was considered to be divine. The worship of the Arabian
Star Family with Allah, who was the moon as its head, revolved around the black
stone. Ellat, Allah’s wife, was the sun, and al-'Uzza and Manat, his daughters,
represented two planets. The Muslims believe the black Stone divinely came from
Allah, who was the moon before the planet Venus replaced it in Allah’s title.
How could a black stone, greatly worshipped and revered by the people, be
hidden while they were fighting to preserve the prestige they found in serving
it? It is implausible to suggest that
they could hide their greatly-worshipped stone, without any of the people who
chased the defeated Jurhum noticing where it was hidden, especially when the
place where it was claimed to be hidden was the spring of water from which they
drank every day of the battle. Hiding the worshipped stone in such a way is
more implausible than hiding the spring of water itself.
The story of the black Stone has some important implications. The black
Stone was not in existence near Mecca
until, perhaps, the end of the 5th A.D. century. That’s why Islamic tradition
tried to justify the absence of the stone by inventing implausible stories.
Therefore, we can estimate that the black stone, which was the main element of
worship in all Kaabahs of Arabia, was brought
from another area – most probable Yemen
– toward the end of the 5th century A.D.
Asa’d Abu Karb was the
True Builder of Kaabah in the Beginning of the 5th century A.D.
It
is said that prior to the construction of the Kaabah, a tent existed on the
spot where it was built.[ii][ii][2]
The tribe of Khuzaa'h came from Yemen
around the 2nd century
A.D. In the 4th century A.D., they moved
toward the area where Mecca
was eventually built. Since they didn’t find a temple there in which to
worship, they pitched their tent in a field.
Information from the writers of the 8th century A.D., who depended on
information from the time of Mohammed, indicates the Kaabah was built at the beginning
of the 5th century A.D. by a Himyarite pagan Yemeni leader named Asa’d Abu
Karb. He is also called Abu Karb Asa’d,
and he reigned in Yemen from 410 to 435 A.D.[iii][iii][3] The fact that the Islamic historians admit
that Asa’d Abu Karb was the first ruler in history to dress the Kaabah is a
significant indicator that he was the true builder of the Kaabah.[iv][iv][4] Dressing a temple in Arabia
was the second stage of its construction. It included decoratively finishing
the inside walls, putting carpets on the walls and the floor, and adding
textured and crocheted items on various parts of the interior building.
(Arabians will not pray in a temple which is not dressed.) Asa’d Abu Karb used
Amer from Azed to build the inside walls of the Kaabah.[v][v][5]
(Azed is a tribe which came from Yemen at the same time Khuzaah’s
tribe came.) So Asa’d Abu Karb, the
first to build and dress the Kaabah, must have first built it when there was
just a tent where the Yemeni tribe of Khuzaa'h worshipped. Asa’d Abu Karb, also
called Tubb'a, occupied the city of Yathrib
before coming to Mecca.[vi][vi][6] It seems he found many temples in Yathrib,
but when he came to Mecca,
he didn’t find any temple there. Because the inhabitants were recent emigrants
from Yemen,
Asa’d Abu Karb built them a modest temple in the Yemeni style. He did this to
connect the people with himself. He also wrote a poem in which he described the
sun setting in a spring of black mud, something Mohammed included in the Qur’an.
Additions by Quraish to
the Building Which Asa’d Abu Karb Built
Quraish, the tribe Mohammed came
from, later occupied the city. They acquired a black stone from Yemen so that
their temple would be like all the other Kaabahs which, according to the
worship of the Star Family of Arabia, were built around a black stone. Family
Star worship started in Yemen,
the place from which the Quraish emigrated. The first Kaabah built by Asa’d Abu
Karb, had a wood roof. That roof burned, so next they used wood carried by a
Byzantine ship, which stopped on the coast of the Red Sea
at a place called “al-Shaebieth “. The
owner of the ship was a Coptic Egyptian named Bachum. He sold the wood to them
and made the roofing for the Kaabah.[vii][vii][7] Later, when Mohammed was still young, further
elements were added to the simple building.[viii][viii][8]
These facts about the construction of the temple at Mecca should cause Muslims to question all
that Ibn Ishak and his companions said about the city, in their attempt to back
Mohammed’s claim in the Qur’an that the temple was built by Abraham and
Ishmael.
YEMENI RESPONSIBILITY IN
BUILDING THE TEMPLE
OF MECCA
The Yemeni tribe of
Khuzaa'h built the city of Mecca
in the 4th century A.D. Yemeni pagan religious worship has left its
fingerprints all over the temple, showing that Abraham and Ishmael could not
have built it.
We
will discuss why the marks of Yemeni worship characterized the temple of Mecca. The sayings and customs of
Mohammed are called Hadith. “Sahih Muslim” and “Sahih Buchari” are considered
the main authoritative books which contain the words or Hadith of Mohammed. In
those books, we read about Mohammed’s custom
to embrace and kiss two stones, “the Yemenite Rukun” and “the Black
Stone”. Ibn Abbas the
cousin of Mohammed and the reporter of his authoritative Hadith, says that
Mohammed customarily embraced the two Yemeni Rukuns. By “Yemeni Rukuns,” he
meant the Black Stone and the other stone, also called Rukun.[ix][ix][9]
From this we know that Kaabeh had two main elements, also called Rukuns, which
were considered sacred. Those were the stones around which the Kaabeh was
built. These were the true elements revered by the inhabitants of Mecca
and by Mohammed.
It seems that the Black Stone was brought from Yemen
at the time of Abdel Mutaleb, the grandfather of Mohammed. Islamic tradition
claimed it was hidden with the spring of Zamzam for centuries prior to
Mohammed. I demonstrated previously that
such a claim could not be true. The fact is that Mohammed and Islamic tradition
endeavor to connect the pagan Yemeni worship of the ancestors of Mohammed,
which transferred from Yemen
to the Temple of Mecca, with Ishmael and Abraham, even
though there are historical evidences that point to the contrary. We will look
at some of them.
First, the confirmed date of the construction of the city of Mecca is sometime after
the 4th century A.D. Abu Karb Asa’d was
the first to consecrate the Kaabah, which reveals that he was the builder of
the Kaabah. He did this during his reign in Yemen, which was between 410 and
435 A.D. The two Rukuns, or stones, which were the main elements of worship in
the temple, were of Yemeni origin. The date on which the Black Stone first
appeared in Mecca
was at the time of Mohammed’s grandfather, sometime between 495 and 520 A.D.
Though Islamic tradition was aware of these facts, people invented unreliable
stories to fill the historical gaps. I’ve already proved such stories are not
logical, and are easily refutable.
An important factor in tracing Yemeni responsibility for constructing
the Temple at Mecca,
and in establishing the true date of construction for such Temple,
is found in the Himyarite kingdom
of Yemen. Abu Karb Asa’d,
the reigning monarch of Himyarite kingdom, tried to extend his empire over
central western Arabia in order to control the spice route from Yemen to North
Arabia, and then to the Fertile Crescent. Abu Karb Asa’d, also called Tubb'a,
occupied the cities of central western Arabia
at the beginning of the 5th century A.D. Among those cities were Mecca and Yathrib, also
called al-Medina. The occupier’s strategy was to bind these cities to his
kingdom by reinforcing the Yemeni religious system which the inhabitants of Mecca and Yathrib were
already embracing. The inhabitants of Mecca had
emigrated from Yemen,
so they were of Yemeni origin. Yathrib
was formed by two Yemeni tribes, Oas and Khazraj. They, too, emigrated to
Yathrib after the dam at Yemen
was damaged around 150 A.D. These tribes were living with two Jewish tribes,
Beni Kharithah and Beni Nathir, which were already established. Abu Karb Asa’d
was of Yemeni origin. He built the Kaabeh at Mecca
to reinforce his rule over the city, and to show favor to the citizens of Mecca who were without a
temple of worship. They, like him, shared the same pagan beliefs.
Tubb'a's ideas of Jewish
and Yemeni pagan myths and their influence on the Arabians of central western Arabia, and consequently on Mohammed.
Tubb’a also tried to build bridges
with the Jewish community in Yathrib. He learned their religious thoughts and
rites. He learned the Jewish myths, such as the legend of the hoopoe bird that announced the kingdom of Saba
to Solomon. This myth came from the Jewish mythological book called the Second
Targum of Esther. Mohammed incorporated the same myth into the Qur’an.
To accomplish his ends, Tubb'a brought two Jewish rabbis to Yemen.[x][x][10] They added to his knowledge by teaching him
many Judaic religious rites and myths, enabling him to mix various items in his
own Yemeni pagan background with Jewish mythology and religious tradition. For
example, he combined Arabian star worship with Jewish myths. With mixed knowledge like this, he thought he
could control the regions in central western Arabia,
where people of Jewish and Arabian origin lived. He then claimed himself to be
a prophet, expounding many thoughts which the Yemeni people considered
indisputable about the sun, the earth and the cosmos. At Mecca, in an attempt to convince his
listeners that he was a prophet, he taught that the sun sets in a spring of
black mud.[xi][xi][11]
This myth, too, was incorporated by Mohammed in the Qu'ran.
After his death, Tubb'a’s claim left an impression on many groups, even
on groups that lived until the time of Mohammed. Mohammed considered him as a
Muslim and almost as a prophet.[xii][xii][12] There have been myths about Tubb'a among the
Arabians. Al-Taberi attributed victories to him in China
and Tibet.
This is unhistorical, but it shows how great an impact Tubb'a left on the
Arabians at the time of Mohammed, to the
point that many considered him to be a prophet.[xiii][xiii][13]
The Kaabah of Mecca was built for the
Arabian Star worship and it shares all the characteristic of the Kaabahs that
were built for their worship.
The fact that the temple at Mecca was built as a
Kaabah for Arabian star worship is shown in many ways. First, it was built in
the same architectural style as other Kaabahs in Arabia.
They were all temples for the same Arabian Family Star religion, in which Allah
is considered the head and Ellat is his wife. All the Kaabahs had a Black Stone as the most revered element. It
represented the star deity in Arabia. Many of
the black stones were meteorites which the Arabs saw descending to earth. They
thought the meteorites they were envoys from the moon, which was considered to
be Allah himself. This is before that title was given to Venus, who replaced
the moon as head of the star family.
Another
thing which shows that the Kaabah of Mecca
was built as a temple for Arabian star worship is that the Kaabah of
Mecca reflects members of the star family in many of its elements. The main
door of the Kaabah was called “the door
of worshippers of the sun,”[xiv][xiv][14] the wife of Allah.
Mohammed confirmed that
the origin of the Kaabah's faith was Yemeni.
The role of Yemeni religious
paganism in building the temple at Mecca,
and its religious nature, cannot be hidden. Even Mohammed recognized the origin
of the religious system of Mecca
as Yemeni. Mohammed uttered many Hadiths about the Yemeni origin of the Kaabah
faith. Such teachings are reported in
the authoritative Hadith, the book of al-Bukhari, in which Mohammed says: “the
faith is Yemeni and the wisdom is Yemeni.” In another Hadith, he says: “the
doctrine and jurisprudence is Yemeni.”[xv][xv][15]
Therefore, not just the Rukuns, the sacred stones in the Kaabah, were from Yemen, but also
religious laws, doctrine and faith are Yemeni. It is undeniable proof that the temple of Mecca was constructed by a Yemeni leader
according to a Yemeni pagan style and specification. He established Yemeni
religiosity at Mecca, and it was known in other
parts of Arabia. How, then, could Abraham have
built the Kaabeh, if what we have learned about its construction is true? How
did the Black Stone come from heaven, and how did Abraham sacrifice on it, and
build the Kaabah around it, if the stone was not in Mecca before the 5th century A.D.? How could Mohammed’s teaching come
from Allah through the angel Gabriel and
still be of Yemeni origin?
The important
Egyptian scholar, Tah Hussein, has criticized Islamic tradition for linking the
construction of Mecca’s
temple to Abraham and Ishmael.[xvi][xvi][16] Tah said :
The case for this episode is very obvious because it is of recent date
and came into vogue just before the rise of Islam. Islam exploited it for
religious reasons."[xvii][xvii][17]
If Muslims search diligently in
history, like this great Egyptian scholar did, they will reach the same
conclusion.
Establishing the Date
the Tribe of Khuzaa'h Built Mecca
Many historical elements help us
determine the true date Mecca
was built. One major factor is the
damage which occurred to the dam of Ma'rib in Yemen around the year 150 A.D. It
caused the emigration of many families and tribes from Yemen to the
north. One of these families was the family of Amru bin Amer, a Yemeni
individual whose progeny fostered many tribes. Among them was Khuzaa'h, which
settled in central western Arabia. Later, they built the city of Mecca.
Other tribes which came from Amru
bin Amer were Oas and Khazraj. They settled in Yathrib, also called al-Medina,
where the Jewish tribes of Beni Kharithah and Beni Nathir were already located.
From the writings of Tabari, the famous Arabic historian, we understand
that this happened at approximately the same time the Lakhmids moved from Yemen to Mesopotamia.
It is also the same time Amru bin Amer, the father of Khuzaa'h, moved from Yemen.[xviii][xviii][18]
The Lakhmids came from Yemen
in the 2nd century A.D. They
lived in a region of Mesopotamia later known to be the city of Hira. Later the Persians used them to protect
Persian borders with the Byzantine Empire, which was dominating Syria. The
first Lakhmid king was Amr I bin Adi, who ruled from 265-295 A.D.[xix][xix][19]
The serious collapse of the dam of Ma'rib precipitated the emigration of tribes
such as Ghassan, which settled in the Byzantine border; Shammar which inhabited
the Syrian Desert; and other tribes which emigrated to the north of Arabia and
the Fertile Crescent.[xx][xx][20] Some of these tribes were related to each
other because they were progeny of Amru bin Amer.[xxi][xxi][21]
Other tribes who came out of Yemen at the time the dam collapsed were Oas and
Khazraj. They went to live in al-Medina. Ozd al-Sarat went to al-Sarat, a
location near Orfeh, which is near where Mecca
was built. The tribe of Khuzaa'h inhabited a place called Mur, also called Mur
al-Thahran,[xxii][xxii][22]
another place near where Mecca
was built.[xxiii][xxiii][23]
Mecca was Built by
Khuzaa'h as a Desolate Station on the Spice Route
There was no city named Mecca in that area; otherwise, Khuzaa'h and Ozd would have
inhabited it, as Oas and Khazraj inhabited the city of Yathrib. For more than a century and a half
Khuzaa'h remained in the area near where Mecca
was later built. They then decided to build a station on the caravan route
where traders could rest and conduct business.
If Mecca had existed before Khuzaah’s
emigration from Yemen, Mecca would have been the
city to which they would go to search out a living, even as their sister
tribes, Oas and Khazraj, went to Yathrib to benefit from commerce and
agricultural activities of the Jewish tribes there. But neither Khuzaa'h nor
Ozd, as new emigrants in semi-deserted areas around the area where Mecca eventually built, found a city to host them when
they left Yemen.
They waited more than 170-200 years before building a city on the caravan
route, which became a station for the caravans competing with Yathrib, which
was about 200 miles away. The station they built, was called Mecca.
It is important to note that none of the tribes who came from Yemen inhabited Mecca. If Mecca
was in existence at the time the dam was seriously damaged, around the year 150
A.D., we would find many tribes locating
in Mecca, because it is closer to Yemen than Yathrib is to Yemen. But,
because the area where Mecca
was eventually built was desolate and had no cities, it induced the tribes of
Ozd and Khuzaa'h to live there. They did so, although they previously lived in a civilized city in Yemen which was Ma'rib, the capital of Saba. This is an important argument which points out that
Mecca could not
have existed before Khuzaa'h built the city in the 4th century A.D.
Let’s review these historical facts. I’ve shown that the Yemeni tribe of
Khuzaa'h built the city of Mecca
in the 4th century A.D. We’ve seen the connection between the temple of Mecca
and Yemeni pagan religious worship. All
this shows that the claim of Islam about Abraham and Ishmael building the temple of Mecca contradicts the true historical
facts. Building faith on the sand is unwise.
[1][i][1] Tarikh al-Tabari, I, page 524
[1][ii][2]
Al-Azruqi, Akhbar Mecca, 1/6
[1][iii][3] A. Jamme, W.F., Sabaean Inscriptions from
Mahram Bilqis (Ma'rib), the Johns Hopkins Press, Baltimore, 1962, Volume
III, page 387; there are also Texts numbered by G. Ryckmans after himself, G.
Ryckmans, Le Museon 66 (1953), pages 363-7, p1.V; quoted by K.A. Kitchen , Documentation For Ancient
Arabia, Part I, Liverpool University Press, 1994, page 219
[1][iv][4] Al-Azruqi, Akhbar Mecca, 1:173; Yaqut
al-Hamawi, Mujam al-Buldan, 4:463
[1][v][5] Ibn Saad, Tabakat, 1, page 64
[1][vi][6] Ibn Hisham 1, page 20
[1][vii][7] Halabieh 1, page 235; Ibn Hisham
I, page 157; al-Azruqi, Akhbar Mecca I, page 104
[1][viii][8] Tarikh al-Tabari, I, page 526
[1][ix][9] Sahih Muslim 9, page 15
[1][x][10] Tarikh al-Tabari, I, page 426-428;
al-Ya'akubi I, page 226
[1][xi][11] Tarikh al-Tabari, I, page 429
[1][xii][12] Halabieh I, page 280
[1][xiii][13] Tarikh al-Tabari, I, pages 331, 332,
360
[1][xiv][14] Halabieh I, page 236
[1][xv][15] Al-Bukhari 5, page 122;
Halabieh I, page 259
[1][xvi][16] Quotation by Alessandro Bausani, L’Islam,
Garzanti Milano, 1980, page 208
[1][xvii][17] Quoted in Mizan al-Islam by Anwar
al-Jundi, page 170 ;Behind the Veil, page 184
[1][xviii][18] Tarikh al-Tabari, I, pages 431 and 360
also mentioned the emigration to the area of Hira in Mesopotamia of tribes
descended from Maad bin Adnan from Yemen.
[1][xix][19] K.A. Kitchen, Documentation For Ancient Arabia, Part I , Liverpool University Press, 1994,
page 251
[1][xx][20] James Montgomery, Arabia and the Bible,
University of Pennsylvania
Press, Philadelphia, 1934, page 126; Montgomery also quotes Philby, The Heart
of Arabia, II, page 97
[1][xxi][21] Ibn Hisham I, page 12
[1][xxii][22] Ibn Hisham I, page 13
[1][xxiii][23] The commentators on Ibn Hisham I, page
13
Copyright
ã 2004 by Dr. Rafat Amari. All rights
reserved.
.
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