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Chapter 5
Past Civilisations
But how many (countless) generations
before them have We destroyed? Can you find a single one of them
(now) or hear (so much as) a whisper of them? (Surah Maryam: 98)
Man is on earth to be tested. Throughout history,
the pure messages and the revelations of Allah communicated to people
by His messengers provided guidance for mankind. These messengers
and books always summoned man to the right path, the path of Allah.
Today, the last book of Allah, His only unaltered revelation to mankind
is available: the Qur'an.
In the Qur'an, Allah informs us that
He showed the right path to all people throughout world history
and warned them through His messengers of the day of judgement and
hell. However, a majority of these people denounced the prophets
sent to them and showed animosity towards them. Because of their
arrogance, they brought Allah's wrath down upon themselves and were
quite suddenly wiped off the face of the earth. The relevant verse
follows:
As also 'Ad and
Thamud, and the Companions of the Rass, and many a generation between
them. To each one, We set forth parables and examples; and each
one We broke to utter annihilation (for their wrong actions). And
the (disbelievers) must indeed have passed by the town on which
was rained a shower of evil: did they not then see it (with their
own eyes)? But they fear not the Resurrection. (Surat al-Furqan:
38-40)
The news of previous peoples, which constitutes
a great part of the Qur'an, is certainly one of the issues of the
revelation to be contemplated. The lessons that are to be drawn from
their experience is stated as follows in the Qur'an:
See they not how many of those
before them We did destroy? Generations We had established on the
earth, in strength such as We have not given to you, for whom We
poured out rain from the skies in abundance, and gave (fertile)
streams flowing beneath their (feet): yet for their wrong actions
We destroyed them, and raised in their wake fresh generations (to
succeed them). (Surat al-An'am: 6)
Another verse addressed to men of understanding
who can take warning and take heed is the following:
But how many
generations before them did We destroy (for their wrong actions),
stronger in power than they? Then did they wander through the land:
was there any place of escape (for them)? Verily in this is a message
for any that has a heart and understanding or who gives ear and
earnestly witnesses (the truth). (Surah Qaf: 36-37)
Allah in the Qur'an tells us that these cases of
destruction should be a warning for succeeding generations. Nearly
all the destructions of ancient peoples related in the Qur'an are
identifiable, thanks to current archive studies and archaeological
finds, and thus can be studied. Yet it would be a great mistake to
develop only a historical or scientific approach while examining traces
of these cases in the Qur'an. As stated in the following verse, each
of these incidents is a warning from which to draw lessons:
So, We made it
an example to their own time and to their posterity, and a lesson
to those who fear Allah. (Surat al-Baqarah: 66)
Yet, we should consider one significant fact: those
communities who resisted obeying the commands of Allah did not suffer
under Allah's wrath suddenly. Allah sent them messengers to warn them
so that they would regret their behaviour and submit to Him. That
all troubles befalling men is a reminder for the grievous punishment
in the hereafter is stated in the Qur'an:
And verily We make them taste the
lower punishment before the greater, that happily they may return.
(Surat as-Sajdah: 21)
Destruction often followed when these warnings evoked
no response in the communities and when their perversity increased.
All these communities were punished by the wrath of Allah. They disappeared
from the pages of history and were replaced by new generations. These
communities actually received benefit from the favours of Allah, led
their lives in prosperity, indulged in the enjoyment of all sorts
of pleasures and, while doing all these things, never occupied themselves
with the remembrance of Allah. They never reflected on the fact that
everything in this world is doomed to extinction. They savoured the
moment and never thought about death and beyond. To them, anything
and everything to do with worldly life seemed eternal. Yet, the real
eternal life lies beyond death. They had no gain whatsoever from this
perception of life; however, history provides sufficient evidence
of their bitter destruction. Despite the passage of thousands of years,
their memories remain as a warning, reminding current generations
of the ends of those who stray from their Creator's path.
Thamud
Thamud are one of those communities that perished due
to insolence towards divine revelation and overlooking the warnings
of Allah. As stated in the Qur'an, Thamud were known for their prosperity
and power and they were a nation who excelled in art.
And remember how He made you inheritors
after 'Ad and gave you habitations in the land: you build for yourselves
palaces and castles in (open) plains, and carve out homes in the
mountains; so bring to remembrance the benefits (you have received)
from Allah, and refrain from evil and mischief on the earth. (Surat
al-A'raf: 74)
In another verse, the social environment of Thamud
is illustrated as follows:
Will you be left
secure, in (the enjoyment of) all that you have here? Gardens and
springs, and cornfields and date-palms with spathes near breaking
(with the weight of fruit)? And you carve houses out of (rocky)
mountains with great skill. (Surat ash-Shu'ara: 146-149)
Exulting in affluence, Thamud led an extravagant
life. In the Qur'an, Allah says that the prophet Salih was sent to
Thamud to warn them. The prophet Salih was a person who was well-known
among Thamud. His people, who did not expect him to proclaim the religion
of truth, were surprised by his calling them to abandon the perversity
they were in. A small part of the community complied with Salih's
summons, but most did not accept what he said. In particular, the
leaders of the community denied Salih and were antagonistic towards
him. They tried to injure those who believed in Salih and to oppress
them. They were enraged against Salih because he called them to worship
Allah. This rage was not specific to Thamud: they were repeating the
mistake made by the people of Nuh and 'Ad who preceded them in history.
This is why the Qur'an refers to these three peoples as follows:
Has not the story reached you,
(O people!), of those who (went) before you? Of the people of Nuh,
and 'Ad and Thamud? And of those who (came) after them? None knows
them but Allah. To them came messengers with clear (signs); but
they put their hands up to their mouths, and said: "We deny (the
mission) on which you have been sent, and we are really in suspicious
(disquieting) doubt as to that to which you invite us." (Surah Ibrahim:
9)
Thamud were determined to remain arrogant and never
change their attitude towards the prophet Salih and even were making
plans to kill him. Salih warned them further saying: "Will you be
left secure, in (the enjoyment of) all that you have here?" (Surat
ash-Shu'ara: 146-149) Indeed, the Thamud increased their perversity
being unaware of the penalty of Allahand adressed prophet Salid with
pride and exultation:
"O Salih! Bring
about your threats, if you are a messenger (of Allah)!" (Surat al-A'raf:
77).
The prophet Salih told them, by Allah's revelation,
that they would be perished in three days.
Three days later, the prophet Salih's warning came true and Thamud
perished.
The (mighty)
blast overtook the wrongdoers, and they lay prostrate in their homes
before the morning, as if they had never dwelt or flourished there.
Ah! Behold! For Thamud rejected their Lord and Cherisher! Ah! Behold!
Removed (from sight) were Thamud! (Surah Hud: 67-68)
Thamud paid dearly, by being destroyed, for not
obeying their messenger. The buildings they had constructed and the
works of art they had produced could not protect them from the penalty.
Thamud were destroyed with a grievous penalty just like all the other
peoples who have denied faith before and after them. In brief, their
ends matched their attitude. Those who revolted were utterly ruined,
and those who obeyed received eternal deliverance.
The People of Saba
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| The Ma'rib Dam was a work of a very
advanced technology. Yet the dam collapsed and the "Arim flood"
laid waste to the people of Saba and their land. |
The story of the people of Saba (Sheba in the Bible)
is recounted in the Qur'an as follows:
There was, for Saba, aforetime,
a sign in their homeland – two Gardens to the right and to the left.
"Eat of the Sustenance (provided) by your Lord, and be grateful
to Him: a territory fair and happy, and a Lord Oft-Forgiving!"But
they turned away (from Allah), and We sent against them the Flood
(released) from the dams, and We converted their two garden (rows)
into "gardens" producing bitter fruit, and tamarisks, and some few
(stunted) Lote-trees. That was the requital We gave them because
they ungratefully rejected faith: and never do We give (such) requital
except to such as are ungrateful rejecters. (Surah Saba: 15-17)
As related in the verses above, the people of Saba lived
in a region noted for its arrestingly beautiful and fruitful vineyards
and gardens. In such a country, where living standards and circumstances
were so high, what they should have done was be grateful to Allah.
Yet, as stated in the verse, they "turned away from Allah". Because
they laid claim to all their prosperity, they lost it all. As we
are informed by the verse, the Arim flood laid waste the whole country.
The Glorious Sumerians
Sumer was a collection of city-states around the lower
Tigris and Euphrates in what is now southern Iraq. In our day, the
terrain that someone travelling to southern Iraq would most frequently
encounter is nothing but vast desert. Most of the land, with the
exception of cities, and regions that have since been afforested,
is covered with sand. These deserts, once the homeland of the Sumerians,
have been there for thousands of years. Their glorious country,
which today we are likely to meet only in textbooks, was as real
as any contemporary civilisation. These people were as alive as
we are today and they created architectural masterpieces. In a sense,
the magnificent cities built by the Sumerians are part of the cultural
heritage of our own time.
Among what survives of the cultural remains of the Sumerians,
we have information about an elaborate funeral held for Puabi, one
of their queens. Vivid accounts of this splendid ceremony are to
be found in a number of sources and they tell us that the dead body
of the queen was embellished in an extraordinary way. Her corpse
was dressed in cloth fashioned from beads of silver, gold and precious
stones, and with tassels of pearls. On its head was a wig decorated
with a crown encrusted with golden leaves. A vast amount of gold
was also placed in the tomb.
In brief, Queen Puabi, an important name in Sumerian
history, was buried with a splendid treasure. According to accounts,
these matchless riches were carried to her tomb by a procession
of guards and servants. Queen Puabi may have been buried together
with treasures beyond counting, but that did not save her body from
being reduced to a skeleton.
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Queen Puabi may have been buried together
with treasures beyond counting, but that did not save her
body from being reduced to a skeleton.
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Like all other people in her kingdom, for
whom she may have felt contempt because they were poor, her body
decayed under the ground becoming a putrefying mass of bacteria.
This is surely an impressive example showing that the wealth and
properties of this world by no means ensure salvation from a disastrous
end.
The Minoans
Land and sea may lie relatively still for centuries.
Then, an upheaval suddenly unleashes a cataclysm. Perhaps no event
illustrates such a horror so clearly as the calamity of ancient
Thera. What happened there may have been the most explosive volcanic
eruption in history. Towering over the Aegean Sea some 3,500 years
ago, a mile-high volcano formed a ten-mile-wide island. There loomed
over a magnificent civilisation centred some seventy miles to the
south on the island of Crete. At its peak, perhaps 30,000 people
dwelled in Akrotiri, Thera's main city, in which were erected fresco-decorated
palaces and from which were dispatched ships laden with goods for
trade. While scholars remain uncertain of the exact date – estimates
range from 1470 to 1628 BCE – they know the sequence of events.
Light earth tremors were followed by a violent quake, aftershocks,
and an explosion whose reverberations were audible as far as Scandinavia,
the Persian Gulf, and the Rock of Gibraltar. Huge tidal waves arched
up and smashed Amnisos, the harbour of Knossos. Today, only the
remains of those glorious palaces are left.
The Minoan civilisation, one of the most important civilisations
of the period, most probably never expected such a drastic end.
Those people who boasted of their wealth and properties lost everything
they had. Allah, in the Qur'an, underlines that the drastic ends
of such ancient civilisations should be reflected on by contemporary
societies:
Does it not teach them a lesson,
how many generations We destroyed before them, in whose dwellings
they (now) go to and fro? Verily in that are Signs: Do they not
then listen? (Surat as-Sajdah: 26)
The Disaster of Pompeii
For historians the remains of Pompeii are striking testimony
to the debauchery that once prevailed there. Even the streets of
Pompeii, a symbol of the degeneration of the Roman Empire, evoke
the enjoyment and pleasure indulged in by this city: the once busy
streets lined with taverns, night-clubs, and brothels, still provide
glimpses that the disaster left of the daily life.
Here, on soil now enriched with volcanic ash, were once
prosperous farms, lush vineyards and luxurious summerhouses. Situated
between the slopes of Vesuvius and the sea, Pompeii was the favourite
summer resort of wealthy Romans who had escaped the sweltering capital.
Yet, Pompeii witnessed one of the most fearsome volcanic eruptions
in history, obliterating the town from the face of the earth. Today,
the remains of the inhabitants of this city – asphyxiated by the
poisonous vapours of Vesuvius as they were going about their daily
lives as usual – vividly portray details pertaining to the Roman
way of life. The disaster struck Pompeii, together with the neighbouring
city Herculaneum, on a summer day, just at a time when the region
was crowded with wealthy Romans spending the season in their glorious
villas.
The date was the 24th August 79CE. Investigations at
the site reveal that the eruption progressed in discrete stages.
Before the eruption, the region was shaken several times. Distant,
high-pitched rumblings, deep and terrible, coming from the volcano,
accompanied these quakes. At first, Vesuvius ejected a column of
steam and ash. "Then this roiling cloud rose high into the atmosphere
carrying pieces of old rock torn from the volcano's conduit and
millions of tons of fresh, glassy pumice. Prevailing winds carried
the ash cloud toward Pompeii, where 'small stones' began to fall.
As the sun-extinguishing canopy extended over the city, pumice and
ash rained down on Pompeii, accumulating at the rate of six inches
an hour."
Herculaneum was closer to Vesuvius; most of its residents
fled the city terrified by the fast-moving pyroclastic surge that
roared towards them. Those who did not leave the city immediately,
did not live long to regret their delay. The pyroclastic surge on
reaching Herculaneum killed these tarriers while a slower-moving
pyroclastic flow engulfed the town, burying it. Excavations at Pompeii,
on the other hand, reveal that a majority of its inhabitants were
reluctant to leave the city. They thought they were not in danger
because Pompeii was not very close to the crater. For this reason,
most wealthy Pompeiians did not abandon their homes and instead
took refuge in their houses and shops, hoping the tempest would
soon blow over. They all perished before they had time to realise
that it was too late. In just one day, Pompeii and Herculaneum along
with six nearby villages were wiped off the map. The Qur'an declares
that events such as these are a reminder to all:
These are some of the stories of
communities that We relate to you: of them, some are standing, and
some have been mown down (by the sickle of time). (Surah Hud: 100)
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Pompeii, a place of splendour and beauty,
perished together with its twenty thousand inhabitants.
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The shapes of many agonised Pompeiian victims were preserved
as a warning for succeeding generations.
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Unravelling the secrets of Pompeii was not possible until
centuries later. Rather than mere clues however, the excavations
of the ancient city yielded up vivid representations of its people's
daily lives. The shapes of many of the agonised victims were preserved
intact. The related verse follows:
Such is the chastisement of your
Lord when He chastises communities in the midst of their wrong:
grievous, indeed, and severe is His chastisement. (Surah Hud: 102)
Today, vast ruins are humbling evidence of complex
civilisations that once flourished hundreds, even thousand of years
ago. Many of the builders of the great metropolises from different
epochs of history are now nameless. Their wealth, technology or works
of art did not save them from a bitter end. It was not them but succeeding
generations who took advantage of their rich heritage. With few clues
to guide us, the origins and fates of these ancient civilisations
are mysteries to this day. Yet two things are evident: they assumed
they would never die and they indulged in worldly pleasures. They
left behind great monuments believing that thereby they would achieve
immortality. No less than these ancient civilisations, many groups
of people today also have such a mindset. In expectation of immortalising
their names, a majority of the members of modern societies devote
themselves entirely to accumulating more wealth or to creating works
to leave behind. Moreover, it is more than likely that they revel
in more extravagance than did earlier generations and remain heedless
of Allah's revelations. There are many lessons to be drawn from the
social attitudes and experiences of ancient communities. None of those
early communities survived. The works of art and monuments they left
behind may have helped them be remembered by succeeding generations
but they did not save them from divine punishment or prevent their
corpses from decaying. Their remains stand there only as a reminder
and warning of Allah's wrath on those who are rebellious and ungrateful
for the riches bestowed by Him.
Undoubtedly the lessons to be drawn from such historical
events should eventually lead to wisdom. Only then can one comprehend
that what befell early societies was not purposeless. One may further
realise that only Almighty Allah has the power to create any disaster
at any moment. The world is a place where man is being tested. Those
who submit to Allah will attain salvation. Those who are satisfied
with this world, on the other hand, will be deprived of a blessed
eternity. No doubt, their ends will match their deeds and they will
be judged in accordance with their deeds. Surely, Allah is the Best
of Judges.
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