of California Press, 2002).
Eid
See
holidays
; i
d
al
-a
dha
; i
d
al
-f
itr
.
Emigrants
(Arabic:
muhajirun)
The emigration, or h
iJra
, of m
Uhammad
and his
first followers from m
ecca
to m
edina
is consid-
ered to be the foundational event in the history
of the early Muslim community. Beginning in 622
and continuing until the conquest of Mecca in
630, small groups of supporters, men and
Women
alike, abandoned their old homes to escape per-
secution and took up residence in Medina (then
known as Yathrib). These people are remembered
in Islamic tradition as the Emigrants. They were
converts from different tribes and classes in Mecca
and tribes outside Mecca who joined Muhammad
in Medina. Aside from members of Muhammad’s
immediate family, the Emigrants also included his
cousin and son-in-law a
li
ibn
a
bi
t
alib
(d. 661)
and the other men who would become the first
caliphs after Muhammad’s death—a
bU
b
akr
(d.
634), U
mar
ibn
al
-k
hattab
(d. 644), and U
th
-
man
ibn
a
FFan
(d. 656). According to early his-
torical sources, not every Emigrant was of Arabian
descent; one was b
ilal
, a former slave from Ethio-
pia, and another was Salman, a Persian convert.
It is estimated that the total number of Emigrants
was less than 400.
Together with the a
nsar
(helpers), Arab con-
verts to Islam from Medina, the Emigrants held a
place of honor in early Islamic society. Muham-
mad formed a brotherhood between them when
they first arrived in Medina, and he soon con-
cluded a series of agreements with other Arab and
Jewish groups that ensured that the Emigrants
would enjoy protection and solidarity in their
new home. They participated in the early battles
against Muhammad’s opponents in Mecca and
Medina and were given priority in the distribu-
tion of the booty. Both the Emigrants and the
Ansar would later be remembered for the roles
they played in collecting, reciting, and comment-
ing on the q
Uran
. They also played an important
role in the transmission of the
hadith
. Although
the status of the Emigrants remained high after
Muhammad’s death, their political influence in
the community shifted to leaders of the q
Uraysh
tribe in Mecca, who had once led the opposition
against Muhammad. Abu Bakr (r. 632–634) relied
on the Quraysh, who had converted to Islam after
630, for support in his claim to become the first
caliph
and for assistance in keeping the commu-
nity unified. This laid
the basis for the eventual
rise of the U
mayyad
c
aliphate
, which was led by
descendants from the Banu Umayya, a leading
Quraysh clan.
In the 20th century, other Muslims would be
called Emigrants. These included those who moved
to Turkey from Russia and southeastern Europe to
avoid being ruled by non-Muslim governments, as
well as Indian Muslims who moved to p
akistan
as
a result of the 1947 partition of i
ndia
.
See also
caliphate
; c
ompanions
oF
the
p
rophet
.
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