Who Is the First Anti-Racist? | Dr. Craig Considine

 

 

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Bilal Ibn Rabah was born into slavery—a condition that was compounded after he became one of the first believers to follow the teachings of the Prophet Muhammad. Bilal’s father was an Arab slave and his mother was a former princess of modern-day Ethiopia, who was also enslaved. Bilal was ruled by a master who punished him for his conversion to Islam.

He dragged Bilal around Mecca, encouraging people to mock him. He even tried to force him to renounce his faith by placing a large rock on his chest and pinning him on the ground. Far from renouncing his faith, Bilal showed defiance and strength in the face of persecution and violence. Impressed by Bilal’s steadfastness to the Islamic faith, the Prophet Muhammad sent one of his closest friends, Abu Bakr, to pay for Bilal’s freedom. Once freed, Bilal rose to prominence in the early Muslim community. The Prophet Muhammad appointed him to serve the mosque by using his sonorous voice to call the believers to prayer.

Bilal was a black man and for some, his blackness made him unfit for such as honor. On one occasion, a companion of the Prophet, a man named Abu Dharr, disparagingly said to Bilal, “You son of a black woman!” This drew a swift rebuke from the Prophet Muhammad. “Are you taunting him about his black mother?” asked the Prophet. “There is still some influence of ignorance in you.”

The ignorance the Prophet identified was rooted in the misguided view that a person’s race reflects his or her moral character or social status. In fact, the Prophet’s message of racial equality stood in stark contrast to the prevalent racial animosities of 7th century Arabia. Scholars refer to the period prior to the advent of Islam as jahiliyyah, a time of ignorance, which included racism.

Arguably, the Prophet Muhammad was the first person in human history to declare that no person is above another by virtue of race or ethnicity.

This declaration is crystalized in one of the Prophet’s notable speeches—his Last Sermon, as it is known, which was delivered on Mount Arafat in 632 A.D. In that sermon, the Prophet unequivocally condemned racism when he said: “All mankind is descended from Adam and Eve. An Arab has no superiority over a non-Arab, and a non-Arab has no superiority over an Arab; a white person has no superiority over a black person, nor a black person has any superiority over a white person, except by piety and good action.”

Ever since then, the Prophet Muhammad’s teachings on racial equality have inspired human beings to strive for equality and justice for all. Consider the life of Al-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz, more commonly known as Malcolm X, the Black Muslim civil rights leader who battled racism in the 1950s and 1960s. After performing the hajj, or Islamic pilgrimage, to the city of Mecca, Malcolm wrote his famous “Letter from Mecca,” in which he said: “There were tens of thousands of pilgrims, from all over the world. They were of all colors, from blue-eyed blondes to black-skinned Africans. But we were all participating in the same ritual, displaying a spirit of unity and brotherhood that my experiences in America had led me to believe never could exist between the white and non-white.” He added that he had “never before seen sincere and true brotherhood practiced by all colors together, irrespective of their color.” The hajj for him represented a shift away from racism and towards racial equality.

 

The teachings of the Prophet Muhammad encourage all people to strive towards anti-racism, which is quite different than simply non-racism. While non-racists do not openly express prejudiced views, they also do not work to dismantle racism in a given society. The Prophet of Islam actively challenged and dismantled the covert, overt and systematic racism around him. He identified racism as a symptom and identified its root cause as arrogance in the human heart.

 

As our world becomes more and more diverse and interconnected, it is imperative that we strive to follow the teachings of the Prophet Muhammad. …

 

Website: http://www.emir-stein.org Captions by volunteers (with much gratitude): – Arabic: Abu Muawia – German: Abu Muawia – Indonesian: Galuh Sekar Arum – Malay: Mohammad Ulinnuha

 

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