Muhammad: Legacy of a Prophet

Transcript of the Program Muhammad: Legacy of a Prophet

NARRATOR
Fourteen hundred years ago, a humble merchant who could not read or write changed the face of Arabia. His name was Muhammad. Today, his influence has spread to every corner of the world including the United States.... This is his story ... and the story of millions of Americans who revere him as God's final prophet. Major Funding of Muhammad: Legacy of a Prophet has been provided by the CORPORATION FOR PUBLIC BROADCASTING and by THE DAVID AND LUCILE PACKARD FOUNDATION, ARABIAN BULK TRADE, SABADIA FAMILY FOUNDATION, THE EL-HIBRI FOUNDATION, the IRFAN KATHWARI FOUNDATION, and MIR IMRAN. Additional funding has been provided by many other organizations and individuals.

NARRATOR
"He was neither tall and lanky, nor short and heavy set. When he looked at someone, he looked them in the eyes. He was the most generous-hearted of men, the most truthful of them in speech, the most mild-tempered of them, and the noblest of them in lineage. Anyone who would describe him would say, 'I never saw before or after him the like of him.'" Muhammad, described by a contemporary.

KAREN ARMSTRONG
Muhammad was a man who faced an absolutely hopeless situation. There was a whole continent of people virtually killing one another in an endless, hopeless vendetta, going down a chute of violence and warfare, feeling that society was coming to an end and had no hope. He gave them hope single-handedly. In the space of 23 years, he brought peace and new hope to Arabia and a new beacon for the world.

NARRATOR
Islam, the religion Muhammad first brought to Arabia, now claims 1.2 billion followers around the world. There are an estimated 7 million Muslims in America, where it is the country's fastest growing and most diverse religion.

MICHAEL WOLFE
Like America itself, the Muslims in this country come from all over the world. They have a common bond, not only in their religious faith and in their mosques, but also in this story of Muhammad. They all look to it. This is the source of how a Muslim should behave, of how to be a constructive citizen, of how to be a good parent, of how to be a good child, of how to seek knowledge and truth. These are values that are expressed most clearly for Muslims in the story of Muhammad.

JAMEEL JOHNSON
In the Qur'an, Allah says that Muhammad is the best example of behavior for you. And, that's what he is: the guide for how we deal with each other and, when we're in a position of authority, how we attempt to implement justice and law.

KEVIN JAMES
Prophet Muhammad, he asked the question to people around him: do you love your creator? Serve your fellow man first. What does that tell you? It tells you, forget about all this intellectual, "Yeah, I love God and this and that." If you're gonna, you know, forget about talking the talk, you need to walk the walk. You want to serve God, then you have to serve people. What more noble way to serve people than to risk your own life to save them.

DAISY KAHN
September 11th has changed the whole world, and it also has put the Muslim community in the spotlight. Muslims have a lot of hostility being hurled at them. But this is also a time of transformation. Many people are very eager to understand Islam and want to know who the Prophet is. What is the Qur'an? Who are the Muslims? How do they live?

NAJAH BAZZY
Through the stories about Prophet Muhammad, we were able to make connections, and, all of a sudden, you would feel you can relate to things that happened 1500 years ago ... to see that the issues weren't old fashioned, rather they were universal. And that's what he's taught me.

NARRATOR
This is the story Muslims have passed down from generation to generation for 1400 years. A story about the merchant, husband, father, statesman, and warrior whom they consider the final prophet. The man whose legacy continues to shape their lives today.

JOHN VOLL
The life of Muhammad is, even in its details, probably better known than any other major religious figure before modern times. His followers made careful efforts to record memories that they had of things that he had said and done. Many of these traditions may have been made up later on, but at the core there seems to me to be little reason to doubt that there is a picture and a portrait of a living man.

NARRATOR
According to Muslim sources, Muhammad bin Abdullah--or son of Abdullah--was born in the year 570 in the city of Mecca, in what is today Saudi Arabia. A poet of the times described Mecca as a place where winter and summer were equally intolerable. The world into which Muhammad arrived was a brutal one defined by hunger, violence, and tribal warfare.

KAREN ARMSTRONG
You could not exist without your tribe. An individual in this dangerous world had absolutely no chance of survival. And, that meant that the tribe had become, perhaps, the most sacred value in Arabia.

HAMZA YUSUF
It's a society that's based on the idea of vigilantism. That, if somebody attacked my clan, then I have a right to go and attack anyone from his clan. They saw justice as taking revenge.

NARRATOR
The Arabs of the sixth century had no written code of law, no common religion, and no central government. In this dangerous world, Muhammad had the good fortune to be born into Mecca's powerful tribe, the Quraysh. But, his father died before he was born, and his mother died when he was only 6. His uncle Abu Talib was left to raise the young orphan.

M. CHERIF BASSIOUNI
He surely had to have worried about his future, about what he would be. And so, he must have been a very introspective child. Muhammad had the habit of going out in the desert, contemplating the stars, and thinking about why he was an orphan ... wondering how life would be to him in the future.

KAREN ARMSTRONG
Orphans were marginal people, and he felt very, very strongly identified with the poor and disadvantaged for the rest of his life.

NARRATOR
The Mecca of Muhammad's youth was both a religious and a commercial center at the crossroads of two major trading routes. Pilgrims came from all over Arabia to worship the hundreds of idols that surrounded the Ka'aba, an ancient shrine in the heart of the city. The Ka'aba was surrounded by a sacred area where fighting was not allowed. The commerce generated by the pilgrims made it possible for a young man in Muhammad's circumstances to make a living in the markets of Mecca. Soon, Muhammad began acting as an agent for wealthy merchants, taking their goods on caravans throughout Arabia. These journeys exposed him to a variety of other tribes and communities and a range of new ideas.

M. CHERIF BASSIOUNI
He probably learned about the differences between tribes. People speaking different languages. He encountered Christians and Jews. And, he learned from them about their faith, their religion, and their cultures.

KAREN ARMSTRONG
Muhammad would have become aware that, for the Jews and the Christians, the holy scripture was very important. Both got scriptures in which God had sent a sacred message to prophets, and that this was a way in which people could relate to the divine. When Muhammad was about 25 years old, he had a major change in his life. A wealthy widow, an older woman named Khadija, asked him to take her caravans into Syria for her.

DAISY KAHN
Muhammad took all her goods, went with the caravan to Syria, and did an incredible job. And, her respect for him turned into admiration for him. And, she inquired about him through one of her friends.

NARRATOR
Shortly thereafter Khadija asked Muhammad to marry her. "I like you because of our relationship," she said, "And your high reputation among your people; your trustworthiness, good character, and truthfulness."

HAMZA YUSUF
And, this is interesting. She is a very beautiful woman. But she's, she's 40. She is, she is moving into her maturity. And he's a 25 year-old youth. Um, he's an orphan. And, and he accepts this, uh, proposal, and it's arranged through the family. And he does, indeed, marry her.

KAREN ARMSTRONG
And, people have often said rather sneeringly that this was just a marriage of convenience on his part. He'd just married the wealthy widow for his own, ah, gain and profit. But, there's no doubt in my mind that he deeply, deeply loved Khadija.

NARRATOR
Over the course of their marriage, Khadija and Muhammad had four daughters and two sons who died as infants. He was a family man, and a successful and respected merchant. But, as Muhammad approached his own 40th birthday, he was becoming increasingly restless and troubled by the problems of Meccan society.

KAREN ARMSTRONG
Within a few generations, they had gone from this kind of brutal existence in the Arabian Steppes, to becoming financiers, bankers, businessmen, and merchants with a lot of money. And, this was great, of course, and people were delighted. But, it was a very disturbing time because the market economy demanded, as we know only too well in the West, a strong competitive streak. People no longer felt that they had to take care of the poor and the needy, the weaker members of Quraysh any longer. They had to make as much money at they possibly could.

M. CHERIF BASSIOUNI
They had a marvelous society. They had a trading town, they were booming, they were doing business. They were living like an affluent society. And, when you have an affluent society, the tendency is to become hedonistic. To look at, you know, what are the pleasures of life?

NARRATOR
Muhammad would often retreat to the mountains outside Mecca to meditate. It was on one such retreat in the year 610 that Muhammad had an experience that would transform history.

SEYYED HOSSEIN NASR
The Prophet used to retire from time to time into a hill called Jabal al-Nur, the Mountain of Light. When you climb up that mountain, and many people still do it, on top of you find a cave called al-Hira in Arabic. The Prophet would often times retire into it to contemplate and to pray. To be still with God. The coming of the revelation was an immediate act. The descent from heaven came suddenly.

KAREN ARMSTRONG
Muhammad was woken from sleep and felt himself absolutely enveloped by a terrifying divine presence. He says it's an angel that seemed to squeeze him, ah, in a devastating embrace, and it felt as though all the breath was being squeezed out of his body. And, a voice said to him, "Recite." And, Muhammad said, "No, I am not a reciter." The voice again said, "Recite. Recite." And then squeezed, as he said, almost beyond his endurance, Muhammad felt the first inspired words of a new scripture in Arabic pouring from his lips.

SEYYED HOSSEIN NASR
(in Arabic) That is, recite in the name of thy Lord who created.

KAREN ARMSTRONG
And, Islam had come into being.

SEYYED HOSSEIN NASR
And, the Prophet, of course, having received the divine word, began to tremble in tremendous fear. Because there's no common ground between the human reality and the divine reality, he ran out of the cave. When he ran out of the cave, he looked back, and the Archangel filled up the whole of the sky.

KAREN ARMSTRONG
Everywhere you looked there was Gabriel ... not just a single angelic image but a presence, a being, a power.

KAREN ARMSTRONG
This is how the ineffable, incomprehensible, utterly transcendent, indescribable God makes itself known to us.

HAMZA YUSUF
This was something that really shook him to the very core of his being. And, he goes down from that mountain, and he is shaking. And I think it's, it's shock. Here is somebody who, who's gone looking for this transcendent reality, and this transcendent reality is now replying.

NARRATOR
Muhammad was so shaken by this experience that he feared he might be possessed. He ran home directly to Khadija.

KAREN ARMSTRONG
And there, he flung himself into her lap, and he said, "Cover me, cover me, hold me," until the terror had passed. Khadija was the person who reassured him. He asked, "Have I become a kahin, a soothsayer?" And she said, "No my dear, this is not what God does. This revelation comes from God."

NARRATOR
The message Muhammad received on the Mountain of Light was simple: He was to recite the words of the one true God. But, Muhammad still had doubts that his experience was genuine.

KAREN ARMSTRONG
Khadija, ah, thought it would be a good idea to consult her cousin Waraqa, who was a Christian.

HAMZA YUSUF
She is saying, we need to go to somebody that knows about these things. Because, if you're told you're being given a message from God, well, there have been previous messages. So, let's go ask Waraqa ... who knows the scripture. He knows, uh, the Torah and the, the Gospel.

KAREN ARMSTRONG
And as soon as Waraqa heard about this, he immediately said, "Muhammad is the Prophet, ah, who will bring the revelation of the one God to the Arabs," and he warned Muhammad, uh, that he would have a really rough time.

HAMZA YUSUF
He says, "Your people are going to reject you, and they will chase you out of this city." This has never come to any human being, except when they were persecuted. Because, this is basically undermining the paradigm.

REUVEN FIRESTONE
And after a while, Muhammad began to realize that the messages he had been receiving fit a pattern that he knew about from Jewish and Christian tradition as well ... that there are such things as prophets. There are people who receive messages from the divine, and he began to realize that indeed he was one of them as well.

MOHAMED ZAKARIYA
When we think of prophecy, we come from a tradition in America where we think of Charlton Heston, you know, the great big beard and the winds always blowing. And he's wearing raggedy clothes and, they're, and they're ranting people. You know, they're ranting and raving. In the Islamic view, a prophet isn't this kind of person at all. But, it's the person who has been selected very reluctantly from his people. God selected him, and they couldn't get out of the clutches. In a sense, they had to do it.

M. CHERIF BASSIOUNI
You have to think in terms of a tribal Bedouin society. What is the worst thing that could happen to somebody? It is not death. It is shame. And so, I am sure that in his own mind, the idea of being shamed was probably very important. I mean, think of the double loss of face, you know: he's gonna lose face, he's gonna be shamed in front of his people. He's gonna be shamed in front of Allah who gave him that message.

KEVIN JAMES
One of the drawing features to me as a non-Muslim who came from just a very diverse background, was his humility. And his human-ness.

NARRATOR
Kevin James is a Supervising Fire Marshal in Brooklyn, New York, who converted to Islam as a young man.

KEVIN JAMES
I also felt a kinship to him personally. And, there are probably about a billion Muslims who would say the same thing: personal, this personal kinship that they feel with him. Ah, he grew up an orphan. Now, I'm not an orphan, I have two parents. But, my position in society, I've always felt separate. America is a racial nation. And, either you're Black, you're White, you're Italian, you're Jewish, you're this and that. So, coming from a mixed background, I've felt like, kind of, in limbo. My father is Native American and African-American, and my mother is Jewish. They were very a-religious, I would say, to the point of being atheist or agnostic. As children, I recall, we'd get a dreidel on Hanukkah, we had a menorah in the house, and we also had a Christmas tree and exchanged presents. So, I just never really identified with any religion; instead, what was always emphasized was discussion and dialogue and seeking for the truth. So, I went through a period of trial and error, of searching. And I stumbled, I guess, I almost literally stumbled on Islam. What appealed to me was the universality of the message. Any religion that gives a code of righteous ethical conduct and respect and gratitude and obedience to one being, is Islam. So, here's a book, the Holy Qur'an, which validates other religions, the diversity of mankind, and puts the onus of salvation on the believer. The Qur'an teaches you that the saving of one life is like saving all of humanity. And, that's one of the reasons I became a firefighter. What more noble calling is there than to save a person's life, to save people, to save their property?

FDNY MARSHAL #1
There was another fire in the back.

KEVIN JAMES
Okay. Yeah. So, show me what you have. From being a fire fighter, I became a Fire Marshall, that's an arson investigator. That's another form of prevention, of saving lives. I guess there's no doubt what caused this. The fire fighter, he'll risk his life to save you whether you're Black, Brown, Red, Jew, Muslim, Christian, Atheist. He's not asking you what your philosophy is or looking at your color. He's looking to get you out of the building. That's why many people say that fire fighting is a calling, because of that self-sacrifice. The willingness just to put others before yourself. To be a good Muslim, you serve people. And specifically, Prophet Muhammad, he asked the question to people around him: "Do you love your creator? Serve your fellow man first."

NARRATOR
The message Muhammad had received from God revealed that his people would be held accountable in the next life for their behavior in this one. Although Muhammad was initially reluctant to tell others about his experience, a new revelation commanded him to make his message public.

HAMZA YUSUF
So he calls all of his family members together and he says, "What would you say if I told you that there was this army waiting to attack us on the other side of that hill?" They said that they would believe him, and he said, "What would you say if I told you I'm a messenger from God?" They think it's absurd, "You, you called us together for this?" And, he asks, "Will no one support me in this?" And, the only person is a, is a child, Ali, who is his cousin, uh, gets up and says, "I will support you." And they, they think this is hilarious. That this is, this person who is going to follow this prophet is, is a child.

M. CHERIF BASSIOUNI
Think about it, there is a man, a middle-aged man, who doesn't know how to read or write, who has no wealth, who is an orphan. Yes, he is from a very important tribe, but he works for a woman, and he now says, "I'm the Prophet. God has spoken to me." This is not going to fly.

NARRATOR
The divine message that Muhammad brought to his fellow Meccans carried with it a sharp warning for their increasingly materialistic society.

KAREN ARMSTRONG
He was coming to warn the people of Mecca and the surrounding countryside and his own tribe of Quraysh that, unless they pulled themselves together and started creating a more just and decent society, restoring the old tribal values of looking after the poor, the orphan, the widow, the oppressed, then there was going to be a terrible catastrophe.

HAMZA YUSUF
The Arabs did not believe in the after-life. They really thought that life ended with death and that there was no resurrection, there was no coming back, there was no reincarnation.

M. CHERIF BASSIOUNI
So now Muhammad is saying that, you know that one God we spoke of? When you are going to die, you don't just disappear. But, you're going to be accountable to that God for the good deeds and the bad deeds.

KAREN ARMSTRONG
He was bringing a moral, ethical, social message to his people. That we're all in the same boat before God, and we must treat each other well, with compassion and justice and equity.

NARRATOR
The revelation that Muhammad received on the Mountain of Light was only the first of many that he would continue to receive for the rest of his life.

HAMZA YUSUF
The revelation does not come in a lump sum. It doesn't just come down from heaven like, here is the book, now go out and teach it to the people. No. It is coming down slowly. It's coming down as events unfold. And, it's explaining the events, but it's also coming down in a way that he can absorb it. Because the idea is that this thing is so tremendous. This thing is so immense that it's not something that we can give you all at once. This is going to take time.

KAREN ARMSTRONG
He used to say that he never once experienced a revelation without feeling that his soul had been torn from his body.

SEYYED HOSSEIN NASR
The Prophet could be sitting, he could be on horseback, he could be walking, or he could be talking. He would suddenly be seized by the divine word.

KAREN ARMSTRONG
He would feel a great weight descend upon him. He would sweat profusely, even on a cold day. Sometimes, he said it would be like the reverberations of a bell. "And that," he said "Is hardest for me, it's not the words that were coming." But, he would have to listen very hard for the meaning of the communication, the divine communication coming through.

NARRATOR
After Muhammad received each revelation, he would recite it to the people who were with him, and they would pass it on to the community.

M. CHERIF BASSIOUNI
When the Prophet, who did not know how to read and write, started revealing the words of the Qur'an, they acquired credibility because of the very nature of the words spoken. People would, would look at them and say that these, my goodness, these cannot be the words of a man. He could not have made this up.

QAZWINI RECITES FROM THE Qur'an IN ARABIC

KAREN ARMSTRONG
The Qur'an is the most extraordinary, beautiful discourse. It doesn't come over in translation, but the Arabic is extraordinary. When the first Muslims heard the Qur'an, many of them were converted to the Prophet's message. Not necessarily because of its content, but because of its beauty.

JOHN VOLL
That revelation was presented in a society where there were people who were professional memorizers. They could hear something recited once and they could repeat it. The recitation, then, by Muhammad was preserved carefully and immediately in the minds both of memorizers and of people who were able to write down notes. What we now call the Qur'an represented the complete collection of those words that Muhammad recited when he said, "This is the revelation of God."

ZAKARIYA
All we have of the Prophet, and all we have of the word of God are actually words. We don't have any pictures. We don't have any statues. All we have left is words. We can take those words, and, through the art of calligraphy, we can make them more vivid, more accessible.

NARRATOR
For Mohamed Zakariya, words are the basis of an art form. To prevent idolatry, Muhammad discouraged the creation of any images of himself or other prophets. Calligraphy eventually became Islam's highest art form. Among the sacred texts Zakariya writes is the Hilye, a portrait of the Prophet in words.

MOHAMED ZAKARIYA
Transmitted from Ali, who, when asked to describe the Prophet, would say: "His face was not narrow, nor was it fully round, but there was a little bit of roundness to it. When he looked at someone, he looked at them with his face turned perfectly towards them. Whoever saw him unexpectedly was in awe of him, and whoever associated with him familiarly loved him. Anyone who would describe him would say, 'I never saw before him or after him the like of him. Peace be upon him.'" That's the most famous of the Hilyes. It gives you a description of the qualities of a person so that you almost can see them in your, uh, eyes, in your mind's eye. I like to think it's like having a little memento of the Prophet near you so that you can look at it and think of it now and then. And, of course, he's not with us, but the Hilye brings him, uh, his presence a little closer.

KAREN ARMSTRONG
Muhammad was always very insistent that he was not a divine figure, and he always warned his followers not to do with him what the Christians had done to Jesus and put him on a pedestal and say that he was God or divine. He was not. He was an ordinary human being, and the Muslims have taken that seriously. But, what they do say is that Muhammad is the perfect man. That, if you look at Muhammad, you can see how a perfect act of surrender to the divine had been made.

NARRATOR
Muhammad's message slowly began to attract followers, especially among the downtrodden and the oppressed within Meccan society.

HAMZA YUSUF
It's really the people that don't have anything, uh, to lose and everything to gain. They are the ones that are responding to this message. Many of the followers are poor people, slaves, women who don't have protectors. It's spreading amongst the disenfranchised of Mecca.

IMAM QAZWINI
Prophet Muhammad noticed that he lived in a society that denigrated women. They were viewed as second-hand citizens, objects, or personal belongings that belonged to the man. And, that disturbed the Prophet.

NARRATOR
Early in his prophetic career, Muhammad condemned female infanticide. Later revelations would give women legal rights in marriage, allow them to divorce, and protect their inheritance rights.

KAREN ARMSTRONG
Of course, it's absurd and anachronistic to expect Muhammad to be a feminist in the 21st Century sense. Uh, but nevertheless, what he did for women in the context of his times was amazing.

NARRATOR
Although most women were second-class citizens in pre-Islamic Arabia, Muhammad's own wife, Khadija, was wealthy and powerful.

HAMZA YUSUF
There's been this idea that women prior to Islam were chattel, that they had no rights. And, I think that for many levels of the women, that is true; but for a certain level of woman, which Khadija would have been amongst, that is not true.

DAISY KHAN
Khadija is an inspiration because, in spite of the male dominated society that she lived in, she was a working woman. And so, there are some parallels for modern women to learn from her example.

DAISY KHAN
I grew up in Kashmir, which is in the foothills of the Himalayas in northern India. And, I came to America when I was 15 years old. As I started becoming part and parcel of this culture and society, I gravitated towards just wanting to be like everybody else ... and tended to stray away from my own faith. And, for a while there, I went through some very, very dark stages in my life, where I wanted nothing to do with my faith and almost just walked away from my faith. As I got older, I recognized that there was this very empty hole inside of me. So, I started searching for God in all kinds of places. You know, Rumi has this beautiful story where he says, "I looked for God, I went to a temple, and I didn't find him there. Then, I went to a church, and I didn't find him there. And then, I went to a mosque, and I didn't find him there. And then finally, I looked in my heart, and there he was." The challenges that I faced in my life are the very same challenges that a lot of young girls are facing. And, when they come to me with their questions, I feel like a person who has already traveled the road. I dispense advice to them from real experience as to how I would have dealt with something.

MENTORING GROUP

WOMAN IN PINK SWEATER
I've noticed how, when it comes to women, we are only supposed to marry Muslim men. Uh, why is that now? Especially because the Qur'an says that, believing men and women should marry, believing men and women. It doesn't point out that men can marry such and women can't.

WOMAN IN PINK HIJAB
I've heard plenty of people say that, in fact, that's an interpretation.

DAISY KHAN
Some of the issues are deeply personal, ah, issues with gender relations, like dating and, ah, marriage. And, other issues have to do with, you know, certain Islamic laws and how to reconcile with some of those things.

WOMAN
I want to exchange with her. See? Hers is prettier.

DAISY KHAN
And, these are all sticky wickets, as we say. The fact that I've walked the walk helps a little bit for me to dispense advice to these people.

DAISY GIVES CALL TO PRAYER IN ARABIC

NARRATOR
In Mecca, opposition to Muhammad was growing. His message of monotheism and his campaign against idolatry threatened the lucrative trade that fueled the Meccan economy.

HAMZA YUSUF
The business of Mecca was to draw pilgrims to Mecca. They wanted to make money. And the way they drew pilgrims to Mecca is, people came to visit their gods. Well, here's somebody who is saying that these gods, they are not real. They're stones, they're rocks. You're wasting your time. Now, that message has economic implications to the Quraysh. They are worried. This, this man is going to undermine our business.

NARRATOR
In the tribal system, Muhammad was protected by his uncle, Abu Talib, so the Meccans went to Abu Talib and asked him to turn Muhammad over to them.

KAREN ARMSTRONG
Abu Talib was in a difficult position. He was not a Muslim. But, it went against the grain for him to simply hand over his beloved nephew to these people who would kill him with impunity. So, he took Muhammad to one side and said, "Look don't do this. Don't do this. Don't do this to us. Can't you just keep quiet?"

HAMZA YUSUF
And at that point, the Prophet says if they put the sun in my right hand and the moon in my left hand, I will not stop preaching what I am preaching until this message is conveyed or until I die conveying it. And, this is what he tells his uncle, and, at that point, he begins to weep. And, his Uncle looks at him and realizes the depth of the conviction of this man, and he says, "Say whatever you want, you have my protection."

JAMEEL JOHNSON
One of the things that the Prophet Muhammad taught us was that it is our duty to try to correct injustices in the world. If you see something wrong, change it with your hands. If you're not able to change it, then speak out against it. If you're not able to do that, then feel bad about it in your heart. But, that is the weakest form of faith. Wherever possible, the Muslim should try to take action and not let an injustice go by without calling it what it is, and asking for change.

CONGRESSMAN MEEKS
Alright. What do we have?

JAMEEL JOHNSON
TO CONGRESSMAN MEEKS
The book's prepared for the week.

NARRATOR
Dealing with change is part of Jameel Johnson's job. As Chief-of-Staff for Congressman Gregory Meeks of New York, he manages the Congressman's schedule and briefs him on policy issues.

JAMEEL JOHNSON
TO CONGRESSMAN MEEKS
The biggest problem with the bill is that there's the issue of discrimination using federal funds. Because it's not like a private plan.

CONGRESSMAN MEEKS
So you're telling me that you recommend a 'no' vote.

JAMEEL JOHNSON
I'm recommending a 'no' vote. As we had said in the beginning, I'm gonna give you the technical part and what I think the issue is; you take care of the politics.

CONGRESSMAN MEEKS
Good deal ... What else do we have?

JAMEEL JOHNSON
My goal is not necessarily simply to seek votes or campaign money or to be accepted as a part of the game. As Muslims, we must seek justice, so what I try to do is educate. In many cases, the best things that you are able to do with that kind of education are to decrease prejudice and to increase understanding. If I practice my Islam on the job and do that without trying to interfere with anyone else's practice, whether they be religious or otherwise, then I make it easier for the next Muslim that comes on board-- Especially also, if I do a good job, because then some of the prejudice, some of the misunderstanding goes away.

NARRATOR
Johnson coordinates the Friday prayer service, or Jumah, on Capitol Hill.

JAMEEL JOHNSON
It's grown since we started it; it used to be sometimes three, five, 10 of us. Now, there can be up to 40, 50 people. We're busting out of the room that we're in. It's kind of a re-energizing, kind of refilling our fuel tank with faith again for the rest of the week.

JUMAH PRAYER LEADER
The image of the messenger gives us an example of somebody who is extremely successful as a head of state; nevertheless, he never had to compromise his integrity.

JAMEEL JOHNSON
One of the most important things for a Muslim is remaining constantly in remembrance of Allah. What we are commanded to do is that we make formal prayer five times a day. Because, when we live in a society that constantly gives us acceptance and praise because of material things or achievement, we need that constant remembrance of Allah to bring us back to the right path. As some say, keeping our eyes on the prize. And, prayer is that remembrance. Even though Islam isn't the biggest faith in America, even though it sometimes is ridiculed, the fact of the matter is that I can practice; I can make my five prayers a day. It was much harder for the Messenger of Allah and his companions to do this.

NARRATOR
The first Muslims faced a torrent of ridicule and abuse when they practiced Islam in public. Attacked by crowds throwing stones, they retreated to the surrounding mountains to pray in secret. Many pagan families split apart when their children converted to Islam. Finally, the leaders of Muhammad's tribe, the Quraysh, decided that harassment alone would not be enough to stop him.

HAMZA YUSUF
The Quraysh, they see it as, 'our honor is being threatened, we need to deal with this.' This is the point where they begin to really increase their persecution; they start sanctions on the house of Beni Hashim, which is the sub-clan of the Prophet Muhammad. They begin to prevent them from trading, from transacting.

KAREN ARMSTRONG
And, that meant that basically they were being starved out. They couldn't buy food; they couldn't do business. Abu Talib, ah, was ruined by this. The Hashim lived in one street, and Muhammad, Khadija, and the children moved into this street. And, this became a little Muslim ghetto.

HAMZA YUSUF
And this leads to real hardship. There's a period of time when, according to the tradition, they're actually eating from the leaves of trees.

NARRATOR
Famine destroyed the fortunes of Muhammad's protector, Abu Talib, and his follower Abu Bakr. The survival of both the clan and Islam were in jeopardy. But for Muhammad, the damage hit even closer to home.

KAREN ARMSTRONG
Khadija, Muhammad's beloved wife, uh, perhaps weakened by the privations, actually died. And, that was just a crippling blow for him. It left him feeling alone and vulnerable and weak. He would miss her all his life, I think. Then, the catastrophe happened that Abu Talib died, perhaps himself weakened by the deprivation in food. Now, without Abu Talib, Muhammad was fair game for assassination. And, there's a terrible moment where he utters this heart breaking prayer, saying, "Oh my god, I have no other protector but you, Allah." And, how was he going to move forward? He'd done what Allah had told him to do. He had proclaimed this message, and all that he seemed to have done was to stir up hostility and hatred and split his tribe down the middle. This wasn't improving matters. He must have felt an almost, a sort of a dark night of the soul.

HAMZA YUSUF
He is at the low point of his mission. He's been almost 13 years now in Mecca, and the results are not, they are not impressive. But at this point, at this low ebb, he is now being prepared for the most extraordinary mystical experience of his prophetic life, and that is what is known as the night ascension.

KAREN ARMSTRONG
The story goes that one night he was sleeping near the Ka'aba, and he was woken from sleep by Gabriel, who mounted him on a Buraq, a magical steed. And, they flew from Mecca to Jerusalem. And, then he began an ascent. Up through the seven heavens to the divine throne, at every stage of the heavens he meets various prophets of the past. He meets Abraham, he meets Jesus and John the Baptist. He meets Moses, and finally, he enters into the divine presence. And there, the sources are silent because, when you enter into the presence of God you have gone beyond words.

SEYYED HOSSEIN NASR
And, he receives from God the highest form of knowledge and truth and many injunctions of the religion itself, including the final form of the daily prayers. Now all of this took place in a time beyond time. That's why some sources say that, as the door was swinging when he left, it was still swinging when he came back.

JOHN VOLL
For later Muslims, this also meant that the departure point, that is Jerusalem, the Dome of the Rock, also became important. Many Muslims say that there are three holy cities in Islam: Mecca, Medina (the City of the Prophet), and Jerusalem.

HAMZA YUSUF
When he comes back, somebody asks him what have you been doing? He says, "I went to Jerusalem last night," and this man says, "You went to Jerusalem last night? Are you willing to say that publicly?" So, they assemble this group, and they tell him, "Describe Jerusalem for us." And, he begins to describe it in very exact detail. And, they're shocked. They don't what to make of this now.

NARRATOR
The story of the Night Journey not only incited Muhammad's enemies. It caused doubt, even, among some of his followers.

HAMZA YUSUF
This is something that they hadn't really expected. A journey that takes them a month to be made in an evening and to come back. What Abu Bakr says is, "Listen, I believe that he's getting messages from God." That is certainly more extraordinary than making a Night Journey to Jerusalem.

NARRATOR
As Muhammad's relationship with the Meccans continued to deteriorate, his enemies decided that the time had come to eliminate him.

HAMZA YUSUF
And, they decide to get a youth from each clan. They all come together, and they're going to strike him with one blow together. So, the blood is distributed amongst all the clans.

NARRATOR
Under cover of darkness, the assassins surrounded Muhammad's home. Inside, a covered figure lay asleep. As dawn broke, they prepared to strike. But, Muhammad had been forewarned of the plot. He asked his cousin Ali, whom he knew the Quraysh would not harm, to take his place. By the time the assassins burst into his home, Muhammad and his companion Abu Bakr had escaped into the desert.

NARRATOR
With the Meccans in hot pursuit, Muhammad and Abu Bakr set out on a circuitous route to the oasis settlement of Yathrib, 250 miles to the North. For several months, Muhammad had been sending his followers there for refuge. Now, he was about to join them.

KAREN ARMSTRONG
Yathrib was quite different from Mecca. It was an agricultural settlement. People grew dates, and they had farms, and there were a number of clans and tribes living together in the settlement. The settlement was engulfed in tribal warfare of the worst kind. It was an example of where the whole system in Arabia was beginning to break down. One killing led to another, and nobody could seem to find a solution.

NARRATOR
Nobody, that is, until the clans of Yathrib heard about the trustworthy Muhammad. Hoping he could unify their warring factions, which included two major pagan tribes and their Jewish allies; a delegation from Yathrib had taken the dramatic step of inviting Muhammad to move to their settlement.

REUVEN FIRESTONE
The deal is that he will serve as their binding arbitrator; that is, both sides to the conflict have agreed already that they will accept the arbitration of Muhammad, whatever it would be.

KAREN ARMSTRONG
The people of Yathrib vowed that they would take the Muslims on board as honorary tribesmen; they would be their protectors. Anyone who hurt the Muslims, they would retaliate. And, the Muslims agreed to do the same.

KAREN ARMSTRONG
This move from your tribe to join up with people who were no kin to you at all was absolutely unheard of. Muhammad was really going off into the wilderness here; he was breaking every tie. Doing something utterly shocking and novel.

IMAM QAZWINI
When Prophet Muhammad was leaving, he stood up on a hill, and he was looking on Mecca, and his tears were coming down out of his eyes. And he talked to Mecca, and he said, "God knows that I love you, Mecca, so much; but it is your people who are chasing me out."

NARRATOR
In Yathrib, Muhammad's followers anxiously awaited the Prophet's arrival. Had the man they hoped would save them been able to save himself? Had the Meccans captured or even killed him? When Muhammad finally reached the outskirts of the city, his relieved followers rushed to greet him with a song Muslims around the world still sing 1,400 years later.

NEW HORIZON'S SCHOOL KIDS SINGING
Oh the wise moon rose over us, from the valley of Wadan. And, we always do show gratefulness where the call is to Allah.

NARRATOR
Muhammad's arrival marked the beginning of a dramatic new chapter in the history of Islam. For the first time, he would be the leader of a sovereign community based on Islamic law. Yathrib would henceforth become known as Medina.

M. CHERIF BASSIOUNI
Muhammad arrives in Medina as somebody who was escaping danger. He's been invited there, but he doesn't know what to expect. So at each stage of his life, there's a new challenge, and obviously, there are new fears and new doubts. And so, he started thinking in terms of policy. In terms of strategy. In terms of tactics. And, that's what ultimately made him into a statesman. Because that's what a statesman does.

KAREN ARMSTRONG
Now, unlike Jesus or the Buddha, who seem to have been purely spiritual leaders with no temporal responsibilities whatever, Muhammad found himself now head of state. Having transferred the Muslim families from Mecca to Medina, he now had to make sure they could survive there.

NARRATOR
The survival of the fledgling community depended on its ability to defend itself against attacks from Mecca. To respond to this possibility, Muhammad developed a novel political solution.

REUVEN FIRESTONE
He essentially establishes a pact, an agreement. Sometimes, it's called the Constitution Of Medina. Whether you were a Pagan or a Muslim or a member of the Jewish tribes or any other tribes in Medina, you had to sign on to this pact. And, the pact established that, if there were ever an attack on Medina from the outside, all the inhabitants of the town of would be responsible to defend the city. This way, Muhammad really developed a revolutionary idea, which was to transcend your tribal responsibilities, your petty 'particularism,' and to begin to think in larger terms, as an entire community.

KAREN ARMSTRONG
Now, this was a very fearful terrifying time for Muslims; but nevertheless, it was seen as a creative time when faith was at its strongest. It's a creative act for Muslims to look back at the Muslim community in Medina and try to apply the ideals to their own society, so that they can reproduce something of the Prophet's original spirit.

IMAM QAZWINI
I came here to this country, and I came with a feeling that I left back in my original country in Iraq many memories, many painful memories. One of them was that my grandfather as well as 13 members of all my family were persecuted and imprisoned by the dictator Saddam Hussein. That reminds me of the agony and pain many early immigrants went through when they came to Medina.

NARRATOR
Like many other Muslims who have fled persecution in their native countries, Imam Hassan Qazwini was drawn to America by the promise of religious freedom and economic opportunity.

NARRATOR
He immigrated to Dearborn, Michigan, a community that boasts the highest per capita concentration of Muslims in the United States, where people are almost as likely to speak Arabic as English.

IMAM QAZWINI
Hijra, migration, it has a shining aspect for me, as well as for the Prophet and his companions who came with him from Mecca to Medina. And, that shining aspect was the freedom, religious freedom that they faced in Medina. Muslims here in America, they feel they are more free in practicing their religion than in many other Muslim countries.

NAJAH BAZZY
In many ways, this whole immigration process from Mecca to Medina very much parallels what's happened in my own city here in Dearborn, in our own backyard. And, I see it play out in the hospital where I work.

N. BAZZY SPEAKING ARABIC TO PATIENT

NARRATOR
NAJAH BAZZY is a nurse at Dearborn's Oakwood Hospital. She conducts training sessions to help bridge the gap of understanding between the hospital staff and their Muslim patients, many of whom are immigrants.

N. BAZZY SPEAKING TO GROUP
I know you're all nurses, and I know that you're in this profession, just as I am, to serve, to do a good job. But, it's real easy for us to get caught up in our own baggage. We're all human, and we all have a certain set of preconceived notions, just as you walk through the door and you saw me for the first time, just as you might have seen Alijah.

NAJAH BAZZY
In the sensitivity training inevitably, they know very little about the faith of Islam. They think that the faith of Islam is a very maybe terroristic, militant, barbaric, "spread by the sword" faith. And so, when they have a Muslim up there talking about patient rights, dignity, issues around health and illness, all of a sudden you see all of these stereotypes that people have as part of, you know, the baggage as we grow up, just kind of fall.

N. BAZZY SPEAKING TO GROUP
When you transcend culture, you arrive at a universal place where our humanness is all the same. You grieve the same. We all cry when someone we love dies. When we deliver, those of us who deliver, we all experience labor.

NAJAH BAZZY
Something happened in Dearborn that further established a need for this kind of work, and that was a huge immigration process as a result of the Gulf War.

NARRATOR
As a critical care nurse, Najah Bazzy often has to counsel patients with terminal illnesses, like this Iraqi immigrant who has just been diagnosed with uterine cancer.

N. BAZZY TO NURSE IN HALLWAY
I said to her, "What do you think you have?" And she said, "I have an infection in the uterus, and they took it out." Maybe she's not hearing it the first time; maybe she doesn't need to hear it. Maybe she can't hear it.

N. BAZZY TO OTHER NURSE IN HALLWAY
They're just not saying the "C" word at all. They're not using that word with her. And, they want to just maintain hope, and uh ... just want to treat it delicately, okay? (Okay.) Alright.

NURSE
Ok. Thanks. Salaam Alaykum

NAJAH BAZZY
These are families immigrating from a way of life. And mostly, because they have been torn by war. And so, they get here, and the helpers are here. And, it's quite obligatory to be that helper.

NARRATOR
When Muhammad arrived in Medina, he made it clear that helping immigrants would be one of the cornerstones of the new Islamic society.

HAMZA YUSUF
This is his message: spread peace, feed people food, and do some devotional practice, and you will enter paradise without any trouble. Two-thirds of that message is about other people. The secret of Medina is it's a place where human beings are going to attempt to live up to the ideal of the Islamic tradition.

JOHN VOLL
Part of the arrangement was that the people of Medina agreed that they would provide housing and support for the immigrants as they came in. And very often, they were even paired so that certain people had direct responsibility for specific people from Mecca.

SEYYED HOSSEIN NASR
And, that did not take place in 24 hours. It came step-by-step, step-by-step, and within a few months, you now had two groups, the Helpers, so called, El Ansar, that is, those Medinan Arabs who had become Muslims, and the Meccans, who had become Muslims before them. And, in this way, for the first time, he created the Islamic Ummah, that is, the Islamic people. That bond which transcends all other bonds.

NAJAH BAZZY
He said to these people, these are now your neighbors, these are your brothers and sisters. He establishes that sense of humanity, that Ummah. We are all connected to one another; we are all responsible for one another.

N. BAZZY TO VOLUNTEERS
A couple of you guys to carry to my car, ok?

NAJAH BAZZY
There's a mosque in the heart of Detroit, and it's run by an Imam who started a soup kitchen. I want the kids to be able to see that that's part of Muhammad's message.

YOUTH
This is the exit right here.

NAJAH BAZZY
Hang on everybody, it's a sharp turn.

NADIA BAZZY
Hajji is like not a good driver.

NAJAH BAZZY
Listen, I'm a good driver.

CATHOLIC MAN
This is the first test. If you can't pass this test the rest of it's off.

IMAM ABDULLAH EL-AMIN
The majority of the ones that come for the soup kitchen are non-Muslim. It's only about, maybe one or two people that are Muslim that come for the soup kitchen. And, we let them know that it's a part of who we are, as to why we're doing this. It's a part of what God has commanded for the Muslims, for a human being to be charitable.

CATHOLIC MAN
I'm studying to be ordained as a Catholic Deacon, so I had run into Abdullah when he made a presentation about Islam, and uh ... I was really attracted to the works of this mosque. I was never aware that there was an active part of Muslim faith life that really reached out to the poor. I wasn't even sure that it was part of your creed. Abdullah went through misunderstandings that would commonly exist ... he started with the term Black Muslim. What does that bring to mind? And honestly, it brought to mind certain things that would make you fearful. Certain kinds of maybe aggressive behavior, nationalistic kinds of thinking, you know, as if we are going carve ourselves off from the others and have no fellowship. He said, "If I tell you what the stereotypes are that I have of Catholics, when you listen to them, you'll say oh those are extreme examples, those are not what we are about."

IMAM QAZWINI
Dearborn is the place where the early immigrants of Arab, Lebanese, and Middle Eastern people came and settled down. This country embraced them and opened its door for them. Yet, they needed time to adjust and go through that difficulty they faced when they came to this country. They are two different societies, two different cultures.

NARRATOR
Najah Bazzy and Ali Bazzy are raising their family in the suburbs of Dearborn. Their children are third generation American Muslims.

ALLIE BAZZY
We're trying to combine the best of both worlds and give our kids the family values that our parents teach and realize that they live in, uh, you know, a land in the United States which has, you know, many opportunities for our kids to prosper in.

SON
You still can't beat me.

ALLIE BAZZY
I'll beat you tonight.

SON
Can you? Huh?

ALLIE BAZZY
Can you shoot 5 and 0?

SON
I can shoot 5 and 0 from anywhere.

ALLIE BAZZY
5 and 0 anywhere? Right now? Let's go.

NARRATOR
Like many Dearborn families, the Bazzy's struggle daily to balance the sometimes conflicting demands of their faith and modern American society.

NARRATOR
Their daughter, Nadia, has decided to wear the hijab, or head covering, that was first worn by Muhammad's wives. Many Muslim women still wear the hijab as a sign of modesty and piety.

NAJAH BAZZY
TO NADIA
Well, we're gonna back you one way or the other. That's a given.

NAJAH BAZZY
Our daughter came to us and said, "I made a decision." And, she's 16 now. And she said, "I've decided that I want to wear hijab."

ALLIE BAZZY
The last time when you put it on right?

NADIA BAZZY
You made me take it off.

ALLIE BAZZY
No, I didn't make you take it off. I sort of persuaded you, thinking, try and bring it out the other, end of the light of it, right? And, you resented me for that, correct?

NADIA BAZZY
Big time.

ALLIE BAZZY
I just thought maybe if you go through high school, and then put it on after high school, that then, if then, at least at that point in life, you'll be able to see what you want to do in life, and that ... because you gotta understand something. You know, you never know where you're gonna be and where you're gonna go in life. I mean, it's, sure, this hijab is accepted in our community here, and, you know, you maybe do well. And, you end up being a doctor or a lawyer, whatever, you'll be doing very well for yourself. But, look what just happened to you when you went down to Tennessee. I mean, here you have her driving a bus, and the state police trooper wants to stop over, we've got a whole bus full of people, because he sees hijabs.

NAJAH BAZZY
I think for Nadia, he probably feels much like I feel. There is great reverence for it, and then there's that, that, oh my gosh, I want to protect my daughter from the world. I don't want people to think she's a terrorist. I don't want people to think she's oppressed. I don't want people to think I'm her father, I made her put that on her head. All of those kinds of things come into play.

NAJAH BAZZY
TO NADIA
I don't think Baba is, you know, trying to hurt you here. He's trying to show you a picture of the real world, and what you need to do is show him a real picture of your world. He's a father; he has some legitimate concerns.

ALLIE BAZZY
So my point is that you're still the same Nadia.

NAJAH BAZZY
Ali, maybe she's not done talking to you. You've talked to her. Give her a few minutes and now let her talk to you.

NADIA BAZZY
Do you know that I'm, that I'm doing this for myself and for you?

ALLIE BAZZY
Remember something. You're not doing it for me. You're doing it for yourself and God. All right? You're the one who has to answer to God.

NADIA BAZZY
So do you.

ALLIE BAZZY
I will answer to God. Don't worry about that. I have my positives and my negatives in life, and I will answer to God, don't worry about it.

NADIA BAZZY
Baba, all that I do is a reflection of you.

ALLIE BAZZY
You're in good shape, then. You're in good shape, right?

NAJAH BAZZY
So, are we at peace?

ALLIE BAZZY
I never knew we were at war.

NADIA BAZZY
Oh, Baba, you're doing it again.

NAJAH BAZZY
He wasn't exactly thrilled about when I wore hijab, either.

NAJAH BAZZY
No, you weren't. I mean, neither were my mom and dad. They, I took it off after two weeks. I mean, it's natural. But, you gotta know what you wanna do. If you wanna do it, you're strong enough to do it. That's the end of it. There's gonna be days where you probably are gonna want to take it off. You know, some days are stressful. But, I think you're strong.

ALLIE BAZZY
Muhammad also tells you that, you know, you should always give what's best, uh, for your daughter. And, me as a father, I'm just trying to give my daughter the opportunity ... to be able to see, uh, life from a wider angle and a bigger perspective.

NAJAH BAZZY
People would immigrate into different parts of the country, but what was interesting is that they would all manage to find their way into Dearborn, a great many of them. And, the reason for that is because the mosques were in place.

NARRATOR
Dearborn's newest mosque will be the largest in North America. Like the first mosque in Medina, it is being built with help from the entire community.

NAJAH BAZZY
There are great feelings of ownership to the mosque when the community builds it. People are baking food. Every year, they contribute between $50,000 to $100,000 to the income and the operating costs of our mosque.

NAJAH BAZZY
So, we have the building of this mosque, kind of metaphorically, and the laying of the bricks and this new foundation with all these new immigrants in Dearborn. And, everybody brings their contribution.

IMAM QAZWINI
Prophet Muhammad established the first center in Medina for Muslims, and that was his mosque. And, it was not only a place where Muslims went and did their prayer or offered their supplication, it was the center for the entire community. It was the headquarters of the Prophet. He would become a judge and solve problems among people inside the mosque. So, he receives delegations, he would declare war or peace. The mosque was serving multiple purposes in the life of Prophet Muhammad.

NARRATOR
It was at the mosque that Muhammad discussed a sweeping change in strategy with his followers. After years of exercising restraint in the face of persecution by the Meccans, Muhammad received a clear new revelation that marked a dramatic departure from the past. It gave the Muslims limited permission to take up arms in self-defense. The statesman was about to become a general.

HAMZA YUSUF
For 13 years, there's been no sanction to fight. Then, a revelation comes that says, those who have been removed unjustly from their homes, and have been fought because of their religious beliefs, they are sanctioned to fight to defend themselves.

KAREN ARMSTRONG
Killing is always abhorrent, the Qur'an makes it very clear about that, and the Qur'an says that it's always wrong to start a war, to be an aggressor. But persecution is worse than killing. When people have been driven from their homes or deprived of their basic human rights, when an evil ideology comes into the world, sometimes, regrettably, it may be necessary to fight and sometimes lives will be lost.

NARRATOR
Muhammad's first large military engagement occurred near the town of Badr, when 313 Muslims set out to surprise a caravan from Muhammad's own tribe, the Quraysh.

KAREN ARMSTRONG
In a sense, the battle of Badr, which became such a landmark in Muslim history, ah was a sort of mistake. Ah, the Muslims had planned a conventional raid, but the Meccans, when they heard that this band of renegades was attacking their great caravan, they were so enraged they sent out the whole army against them. And, the Muslims were convinced that they were going to die.

M. CHERIF BASSIOUNI
He never wanted to fight the Meccans. I mean, the Meccans are his people, uh, his, his friends, his family. He wants to co-opt them, he wants to make them the key, if you will, to the new Islamic Ummah that he's trying to form, so he doesn't want to go to war with them.

NARRATOR
As he prepared to lead the Muslims into battle, Muhammad took the unprecedented step of establishing clear rules of engagement for his army.

M. CHERIF BASSIOUNI
He makes it very clear to his soldiers that, if they have the right to use force against the Qurayshy, that does not mean that they will do the same thing that has been done in pre-Islamic wars, in which women and children could be killed, in which no prisoners could be taken, no quarter given. No, No. He said that Islam is a religion of law.

NARRATOR
The Meccans had sent an army of about 1,000 men. As the army approached, Muhammad prepared to make a stand near a well. One of his soldiers suddenly questioned his strategy, "Has God revealed it to you?" he asked, "Or is it your own opinion?" When Muhammad answered that he was speaking as a man, not a prophet, the soldier suggested that they stop at a larger well closer to the enemy, so they could deprive them of water. Muhammad agreed at once. The change in strategy proved decisive, and the Muslims recorded a resounding triumph.

KAREN ARMSTRONG
It was a victory that stunned the Muslims. It seemed like a complete reversal, like a miracle. Almost a sort of revelation of God in history. A Furqan, they called it. Something that separated the just from the unjust.

NARRATOR
After the battle, Muhammad received a revelation claiming the victory for God. The Muslims felt that angels had been fighting alongside them. The victory reaffirmed their belief that God was on their side and raised Muhammad's status higher still. But, his followers also knew that the Meccans would seek violent retribution. A year later, an army of 3,000 Meccans returned to face 1,000 Muslims in the battle of Uhud. The resulting rout left the future of Islam in mortal peril.

KAREN ARMSTRONG
It was a horrible battle. And, the corpses of the Muslims were mutilated by the Meccans. And, the Meccan women, as was the were wont to do, came out onto the battlefield and danced around the corpses.

NARRATOR
Sixty-five of Muhammad's soldiers lost their lives in the battle, including a Rabbi who had honored the Medina Pact by fighting alongside Muhammad. The families of the fallen Muslims were now without protectors. Then, Muhammad received a new revelation allowing Muslim men to safeguard these women and children by taking as many as four wives, but only if they could treat them equally.

KAREN ARMSTRONG
That, in itself, in the context of Arabia, was a bit of a restriction because a man could have unlimited number of wives. The context of the permission to polygamy is to say who is going to look after these women. It was an act of faith, not an act of lust that inspired men to take more wives. So, it would be wrong to think of the Prophet as basking decadently in the garden of sensual delights with his harem. His harem was very much a matter of state, and sometimes his wives were rather a mixed blessing.

NARRATOR
Although Muhammad was monogamous during Khadija's life, after her death, he eventually married a number of women, including one of the Uhud widows, Umm Salama.

DAISY KAHN
The reasons for his marriages were really political alliances. It was a tribal society, and for Muhammad to marry into another tribe and take a wife just meant that there was a bond being created with this tribe.

NARRATOR
Among Muhammad's wives were the daughters of his two closest allies, Abu Bakr and Umar. Abu Bakr's daughter, Aisha, would become one of the most influential women in his life.

HAMZA YUSUF
Aisha was very lively. She was, uh, brilliant. She was somebody that questioned the Prophet. She was not somebody that in any way, um, took everything; she questioned him. She said, what does that mean? Uh, why did you do this, why did you do that? Um, she was somebody that really had a, an incredibly active mind. She memorized vast amounts of prophetic traditions, and she's considered to be actually, the transmitter of a large number of, uh, traditions from the Prophet Muhammad.

NARRATOR
In the year that followed the battle of Uhud, the Meccans girded themselves for a final assault that they hoped would finish off the Muslims once and for all. They assembled one of the largest armies ever seen in Arabia and marched on Medina. But Muhammad hit upon a daring defense.

KAREN ARMSTRONG
Muhammad has dug a trench around the whole of the settlement. And, you have an almost comic scene with the Meccan cavalry galloping up to this trench, and pulling back in horror, and saying what is this? They've never seen anything so unsporting in their lives. This is something, they say, the Arabs don't do. It sounds comical, but, surrounded by the powerful Meccan army, the Muslims were expecting all to be killed, to a man, to a woman.

NARRATOR
Stopped by the trench around Medina, the Meccans laid siege to the city and to the hundreds of Muslim families trapped inside. According to the Muslim sources, in their determination to defeat Muhammad, the Meccans had recruited as allies many Bedouin tribes, as well as the largest Jewish tribe within Medina, the Bani Qurayzah. For the Muslims, this defection was the final blow in a relationship that had been strained from the beginning.

REUVEN FIRESTONE
When Muhammad came to town, the organized Jewish community did not accept his prophecy. There were, according to the Islamic sources, some individual Jews that did accept him, but for the most part, the community as a whole did not. If the Jews would accept his Prophet-hood, then he would have tremendous and complete confirmation of his Prophet-hood. But, the Jews were so well respected that, when they rejected his Prophet-hood, and they did it actively, they became a very serious political threat to his very existence in Medina.

NARRATOR
Despite the aid of the Bani Qurayzah, the Meccan siege could not break through the Muslim defenses. When the weather turned bad and the Bedouin tribes began deserting the field of battle, the Meccans themselves lost heart and departed, abandoning their Jewish allies to be tried by the Muslims for the crime of treason.

REUVEN FIRESTONE
Islamic sources believe that the Jews did indeed aid the enemy in trying to defeat Muhammad. This was absolutely against the terms of the Medina agreement. The Jews and the Muslims decided that they would choose an arbitrator to determine what would be the future of the Jews. The person who was chosen was a man who was mortally wounded in the Battle of the Trench. And so, he determined that the women and children of the Bani Qurayzah would be taken as slaves to the Muslims, and the men would be killed.

HAMZA YUSUF
The Prophet agreed with this judgment. When he judged, he said that you have judged according to God and his messenger. And then, uh, approximately 700 men, uh, were killed. Uh, they were executed. So, this definitely occurred.

KAREN ARMSTRONG
All that can be said is that, this cannot be seen as anti-Semitism per se. Muhammad had nothing against the Jewish people, per se, or the Jewish religion. The Qur'an continues to tell Muslims to honor the People of the Book. And, to honor their religion as authentic. And the Jewish tribes that had not rebelled, that had not given help to the Meccans continued to live in Medina completely unmolested. Muhammad was not trying to exterminate Jews. He was trying to get rid of very dangerous internal enemies.

M. CHERIF BASSIOUNI
It's unfortunate that many historians and particularly in contemporary times, both on the Jewish and on the Muslim side, uh, have transformed this. On the Jewish side, they have used that as a way of saying, well, you see, the Muslims hate the Jews and they kill them. And, and on the Muslim side, it says, well, you see, the Jews are full of treachery and can't be trusted. Both are wrong.

KAREN ARMSTRONG
When the other tribes of the peninsula saw the impotence of Mecca, with all its power and might against this little community, they began to switch allegiance and see that Muhammad was the coming man. Now once that happened, once the tide had been turned, after the battle of the trench, and the Muslims were no longer subject to the fear of extermination, Muhammad stopped the fighting.

IMAM QAZWINI
The Prophet Muhammad received a few people, militants who just arrived from one of the battles that they came back from, and they felt so important that we finished this job fighting with the enemies of Islam. And, the Prophet smiled, and he said, 'Let me tell you something. You finished the minor Jihad, and now you have the bigger Jihad ahead of you.' And, they were stunned. They thought that they just finished the biggest achievement in their lives by being willing to sacrifice their own life. And, the Prophet explained that the biggest Jihad is the struggle against your own desires and limitations.

KAREN ARMSTRONG
Jihad does not mean holy war, primarily. The word means 'effort,' 'striving.' And, it's always a hard struggle to put the word of God into practice. When the Qur'an talks about struggling or ... they're not talking always about fighting a holy war; they're talking about this immense struggle to implement a divine imperative in the flawed and tragic conditions of daily life. Fighting might sometimes have to be done as part of the Jihad, but it is by no means the major imperative.

IMAM QAZWINI
I remember a quotation from Jesus: "Peace be upon him who says that the first step in the reformation journey is to start with your own self. If you want to reform the society you have to reform yourself first." And, that was basically the meaning of Jihad.

KEVIN JAMES
The Prophet put that emphasis on inner development, Jihad, the constant struggle with yourself, to improve yourself and perfect your intent. That you do things only for the sake of God. The most excellent Jihad, holy struggle, is the struggle to control your ego, the self. For a long time, I was deathly afraid of speaking in public, of giving speeches. And I saw that, and I, well, this is my Jihad, I've gotta overcome this fear. If I'm gonna help people, it's gonna be necessary for me to talk in public. To be able just to speak out. And, going back to 1987, I had become active as far as writing articles for papers to have fire safe cigarette legislation enacted. Cigarettes are the largest cause of fire fatalities in the nation. So, I began writing, and because of my position, I could speak from the authority as a fire fighter and, and now a Supervising Fire Marshal. Going back to if you save one life it's like you saved all humanity. Well, I feel I was part of an effort to save thousands of lives each year because of this legislation that we passed in New York State.

M. CHERIF BASSIOUNI
Jihad is misused. There is absolutely nothing in Islam that justifies, uh, the claim of Osama bin Laden, Al Qaeda, or other similar groups to kill innocent civilians. That is unequivocally a crime under Islamic law. Acts of terror and violence that have occurred in the name of Islam are not only wrong; they are contrary to Islam.

KEVIN JAMES
September 11th, I hooked up with two other fire marshals. We found a place to park near the bridge, about several inches of soot. If it had been white and colder out, you would have sworn it was snow. We came over the Brooklyn Bridge, uh, it was just like something out of a movie. It was very quiet, you know, that muffled sound that you have during a blizzard, you know, where you can't hear your feet hitting the ground, it's just very muffled, very quiet. So, we put on our turn out gear, and we started heading over there. And, it's just, I think I could speak for all of, we were just all in a state of shock and disbelief. I just felt, oh, in the back of my head, please don't be Muslims doing this. And, I just felt ah, I just felt sick. We could see this fragment of the World Trade Center sticking up almost like a lopsided crown. Then, we started walking down one way, and we saw some fire fighters, you know, dazed and shell-shocked, saying don't go down there, there are still more collapses happening. I mean, we were dying to go out there and do something. And, you know, we're figuring that some of the brothers or even anyone, you know, people could still be alive, trapped under the rubble. But, we just, it was frustrating; but, I mean, you have to understand that they don't want to lose more people on top of the people who are lost already. This is just, I mean, it was just out and out madness, what they did. The Prophet himself, in the course of the circumstances, engaged in battle, in warfare; but he had a certain code of conduct that he followed. So, you have to separate fanaticism, which every religion has, from the reality and the truth of that religion. These are fanatics who have lost sight of what the purpose of religion is, and they're acting, you know, on their own. What hurt me probably most of all out of the World Trade Center attack, was that, here is a religion that I entered because of the universality and the tolerance that is throughout the book and throughout the sayings of Prophet Muhammad. Yet, these people who did that and were behind it and planned it, they were just so intolerant and so disregarding of their own tenets, that they could do something so horrific and kill people in such a horrible manner. It was hard. It was hard. Because it just, you know, that sinking feeling in the pit of your stomach, it's like, you know, after you do all of this work and you try so hard, now we've gotta deal with this. The Prophet says, "If you're planting a tree and the end of the world comes, you finish planting the tree." It means, you just keep on going, you've got to keep trying to live your life according to what you believe in. And, for me and others, try to keep this from ever happening again.

KEVIN JAMES
September 11th underscored the need to have dialogue with non-Muslims and other faiths, to understand each other, and to try to resolve these hot spots that fester and cause this type of hatred.

DAISY KAHN
Uh, the death and destruction in New York City that was caused by this terrible, terrible act in the name of Islam has propelled the Muslim community in New York to respond in many different ways. And, one of the ways that I want to respond is the way the Prophet would have responded. To just talk about the humanity which we all belong to.

DAISY KAHN
Since September 11th, Muslims have gone to churches, to synagogues, and to schools to explain our faith. However, people still kept asking, where are the Muslims, and why aren't they doing something about it. So, I started thinking about this, and I said, what is it that we are not doing right? Maybe we need to respond in a more gentle way. So, I looked around for the mildest people in our community. The artists in our community. And, the first person I called was Mohamed Zakariya.

MOHAMED ZAKARIYA
Catastrophes have brought us here, but not all is lost. Uh, through our art, we pick up all these broken pieces and try to put them back together again and make something that's gonna work. Revenge, suicide bombing, things of that kind, they have no place in Islam. They must never have a place in Islam. Never. Never. Islam is really a soft thing; it's not a hard thing. And so, we have to approach it with softness and be soft to each other. (Arabic) The Prophet said, "Make it easy and not difficult." So, we should put away all those angry words, the harsh, the strident rhetoric that, that we have been dealing with for all these years that we've suffered through this sweet religion with this beastly stuff ... And come out into the light and be bright. Be bright in America. And, look in the mirror, that's what we have to do. (Salaam Alaykum) (applause)

MOHAMED ZAKARIYA
This piece is the golden rule of Islam. It is the basis of the relations between people. It means that there is no harming of other people in Islam and no returning or retaliating harm for harm. And so, that's why I did it. To respond through the sayings of Muhammad the man.

NARRATOR
By the year 628, the battles that had occupied the Muslims for the preceding four years had come to an end.

KAREN ARMSTRONG
Once the Muslims were no longer fearing the threat of total extermination, Muhammad knew that the time for fighting had stopped. And, it was now time to make an extraordinary initiative, a peaceful, nonviolent initiative. He astonished the whole Muslim community and the whole community of Yathrib by announcing that he was going to go on the Hajj pilgrimage. Dangerous as it was and enormously risky as it was, about 1,000 Muslims volunteered to go with Muhammad. All the rites were fulfilled to the letter. The camels all decked in their special sacrificial garments. The men all in their white garb.

NARRATOR
The Muslims set out on the perilous trip to Mecca, crossing the vast desert without any arms to defend themselves. When they reached Hudaybiyah, just outside the sacred area around Mecca, where violence was forbidden, Muhammad surprised his followers not to enter, but to sit and wait. He then sent an emissary to Mecca seeking permission to complete the pilgrimage.

KAREN ARMSTRONG
Muhammad knew, of course, that he was putting the people of Mecca into a really impossible position, because, if they forbade Arabs to enter the city and perform the rights of the Ka'aba, they would be abusing their position as guardians of the holy places. The Meccans themselves did not know what to do.

NARRATOR
When the emissary did not return quickly, the Muslims feared the worst. But Muhammad's gambit paid off. The Meccans offered to negotiate a treaty. With tensions running high, Muhammad began dictating its first line by stating his own name.

KAREN ARMSTRONG
Ali was taking down the notes with the Meccan negotiator at his side, and when Muhammad began to say, "the Prophet of God," the Meccan said, "I don't believe you are the Prophet of God. I can't sign to that."

JAMEEL JOHNSON
So, he said fine, "Muhammad, Son Of Abdullah." And, many of the Muslims felt that this was a major insult.

KAREN ARMSTRONG
The Muslims, sitting around Hudaybiyah watched this in utter dismay. There was almost a mutiny. A thousand pilgrims stood, refusing to accept this. Muhammad went back into his tent where he had his wife, Umm Salama. And he said to her, "What shall I do?" And she gave him some excellent advice: part of the ritual of the Hajj was that you sacrificed a camel. And, he went out, and he sacrificed one of the camels, and somehow some kind of necessary tension was released.

NARRATOR
The ritual sacrifice of an animal traditionally marked the end of the pilgrimage. Grudgingly, the Muslims considered the pilgrimage complete, and headed back to Medina. Muhammad had compromised on every major point in the treaty. But he had won the most significant concession. In return for postponing their entry into Mecca for a year, the Muslims had secured ten years of peace and official recognition as a political entity. Muhammad had proved himself as capable a diplomat as he was a religious leader.

JAMEEL JOHNSON
There was wisdom in the treaty, because one of the things that was promised to the Muslims was protection as they moved throughout Arabia. That they would not be harmed, and they could move freely. And, what was gained most greatly from that was the dauwa, the teaching of al-Islam.

NARRATOR
On the way back to Medina, Muhammad told a companion, Umar, "I have received a revelation which is dearer to me than anything else beneath the sun. 'Surely,' it said, 'We have given you a clear victory.'"

KAREN ARMSTRONG
Then, more and more and more people came to Islam, more and more people turned to Muhammad. It sent out a huge signal of strength. Strength of purpose, utter courage, utter panache, and utter wisdom that, of course, you could go on to fight, of course he could have gone on being the prophet with the sword; but there are times when to make peace is more daring, more creative, and more enduring.

NARRATOR
One year after signing the Hudaybiyah treaty, Muhammad led his followers on a new pilgrimage to Mecca. After years of rejection, persecution, and humiliation, this was truly a moment of triumph.

KAREN ARMSTRONG
The first pilgrimage of the Muslims after Hudaybiyah must have been an extraordinary event for everybody, because the Meccans couldn't bear it. They decamped and went and sat up in the hills and mountains outside the city, and watched this procession, huge procession of Muslims and some of their confederates, coming on the Hajj, and as it were, taking possession of the city, crying out the pilgrim cry, "Here I am, oh, God, here I come," in a huge cry.

NARRATOR
Then came the moment Muhammad had waited seven long years to achieve.

MICHAEL WOLFE
Muhammad sends Bilal, an African ex-slave, this lowest of the low in the eyes of the Meccans, up on to the sacred shrine of the Ka'aba, what the Meccans regard as their shrine, to deliver the call to prayer. And, the hills around Mecca are granite. They're set up for a sonorous voice. And, the call to prayer resonates through the valley.

TIJANI GIVES THE CALL TO PRAYER

NARRATOR
Bilal was proclaiming for all to hear, there is one God and Muhammad is his Prophet.

KAREN ARMSTRONG
It must have been an appalling moment for the Meccans but an extraordinary moment of exhilaration for the Muslims. Performing all the rites punctiliously and then taking no advantage of this, going back peacefully home.

NARRATOR
But the peace between the Muslims and the people of Mecca would not last. By the end of the year, the Meccans had broken the Treaty of Hudaybiyah by attacking a clan allied with Muhammad. In response, 10 days into the holy month of Ramadan, Muhammad and a Muslim army of 10,000 men set out to take Mecca by force.

SEYYED HOSSEIN NASR
The Prophet felt he was strong enough to be able to conquer Mecca. But, as the army approached the city, more and more leaders of the Quraysh realized that they were not going to win, and so many decided to join Islam. The Prophet entered the city without resistance.

HAMZA YUSUF
When he came into Mecca, he came in with his head bowed down. He did not come in as, as, as an arrogant, conquering warrior. He comes in humbled by a victory that he sees is from God.

NARRATOR
After circling the Ka'aba seven times, Muhammad destroyed each of the 360 idols that surrounded it. He then turned to the vanquished Meccans, who had sought refuge inside the shrine, his own brethren, who had oppressed and attacked the Muslims for so many years.

MICHAEL WOLFE
He says, "If you were in my position right now, what do you think you would do?" And, the Meccans are afraid they're about to die. And then he says, "You are all pardoned." He grants them all amnesty. And, this was unheard of in this culture, unheard of in this society. And very unexpected among the Meccans.

NARRATOR
The religion that had begun in ridicule and persecution was now thriving throughout the Arabian peninsula. But shortly after returning to Medina, Muhammad received a premonition of his death. He told his daughter Fatima that every year during Ramadan, the angel Gabriel recited the Qur'an to him and asked him to repeat it. This year, Gabriel had asked Muhammad to recite the Qur'an twice. "I cannot but think," Muhammad said, "that my time has come."

NARRATOR
In February 632, Muhammad made what would be his final pilgrimage to the city of his birth. On his first pilgrimage, he had led a few hundred Muslims back to Mecca. This time, tens of thousands of believers followed in his footsteps.

MICHAEL WOLFE
He arrives in Mecca as the leader of the Muslim people now, not as the enemy of the Meccans. And, they begin to perform the rites of the pilgrimage. And, during this period, Muhammad defines the rites of pilgrimage as they're performed today.

NARRATOR
MICHAEL WOLFE has written extensively about the Hajj, the traditional pilgrimage, which every Muslim is expected to perform at least once. Two to three million Muslims from around the world travel to Mecca every year for this five-day ritual, which takes them in the footsteps of Abraham, the ancient patriarch from whom Muslims, Jews, and Christians all trace their lineage. In 1990, Michael Wolfe, a convert to Islam, took part in his first Hajj.

MICHAEL WOLFE
The Hajj was one of the most attractive elements in Islam to me as a non-Muslim and then as a Muslim. When I finally became a Muslim after 20 or more years of thinking it over, the first thing I wanted to do was make the Hajj. When I circled the Ka'aba for the first time, I was in a state of wonder. You're there with ten of thousands of people, all doing the same thing at once. You're literally putting God at the center of your life. For that period of time.

NARRATOR
At the culmination of the Hajj, on the Plain of Arafat, on a small hill called the Mount of Mercy, Muhammad gave his final sermon.

HAMZA YUSUF
Here is a man who began his mission as this individual in Mecca, persecuted, with, with almost no followers, and his life is completed with a valley filled with tens of thousands of people, uh, that have accepted his message. And, and there he is, preaching to them his final sermon. And in it, in a sense, is a summation of this universal teaching.

MICHAEL WOLFE
He tells them to be good to each other and not to violate each other's rights. For men and women to treat each other humanely, for brothers and sisters to treat each other well, and for Muslims to treat each other as brothers and sisters. And, perhaps most importantly, he calls an end to revenge, to blood killing, to the vendetta, which has bled this culture terribly since he was born. At the end of Muhammad's sermon, he does not list his achievements. This man has unified people. He has taught them monotheism. He has brought them to peace. And yet, he doesn't mark these as his accomplishments. Quite the opposite, he asks his community, "Have I fulfilled my mission to my God, and to you?" You can hear in his words the desire for a completed mission. This is a man of faith who is unsure of his effects. It's a very human moment in which he needs to know, and he asks, and the people affirm that, yes, three times they say, "Yes, you have fulfilled your mission."

M. CHERIF BASSIOUNI
This was not a leader who was looking for his legacy in time. It wasn't for any purpose other than to make sure that, when he was going to face his maker, he was going to be accountable. And he was, he would be in a position of saying, "Allah, I did the best I could. And, and I hope I was successful in doing it." Uh, and that's all what we can do as human beings.

NAJAH BAZZY
I think that if I were to say that I hope to exemplify any part of Prophet Muhammad's life, it would be the issues around the dignity near the end of life.

NAJAH BAZZY IN THE HOSPITAL
He's a good friend of mine, and I know he knows my voice. And now, I know for sure he knows my voice.

NAJAH BAZZY
I'm visiting Mr. Hamoud, who is a patient that's terminal.

NAJAH BAZZY
When he was not in the condition he's in now, he was very delightful, very loving and very much wanting to tell his story. So, we'd sit and listen and talk for long hours, and he'd give me all his history and his past, so we're very bonded.

NAJAH BAZZY
Um, he's slipped into a more terminal stage, meaning less responsive. Well, he responds, he's just unable to speak. Prophet Muhammad has taught us that near the time of death, the holy Qur'an to hear is soothing, very soothing to the soul. And, since it's a part of our lives on a daily basis anyway, we derive great comfort from the hearing of the Qur'an.

NAJAH BAZZY
While I'm stroking a head or I'm speaking softly, I say the things that I think Muhammad would say. Prophet Muhammad has taught us that we don't even understand, we could never comprehend, the value of taking care of the ill or providing for the dying, maintaining their dignity. And, I believe that that's my mission, to be the helper, to be the listener, to be a comforter in many ways. The Prophet knew that death was coming; he had an indication that he would not be around for much longer.

JOHN VOLL
Muhammad had been feeling ill. He'd had some fever. It was clear that he was in real difficulty in terms of his health. And, the household seemed to be convinced that Muhammad was dying.

NAJAH BAZZY
And, while he was on his deathbed, and there were many who surrounded him, especially his close companions and his family, he called for silence around him. And, he wanted it to be a time of quiet and of peace and of calm.

NARRATOR
Embraced by the community he had founded in Medina and cared for by his wives and companions, Muhammad died peacefully on June 8th in the year 632. The news of his death shocked his followers, especially Umar, who believed Muhammad would outlive them all.

JOHN VOLL
People began to hear the Prophet is dead. Umar went to the center square and started to say, there are hypocrites and liars who are saying that the Prophet is dead.

NARRATOR
In the midst of this chaos, Abu Bakr reminded the Muslims of a verse from the Qur'an that had first been revealed after the battle of Uhud, when they feared that Muhammad had been killed.

HAMZA YUSUF
Abu Bakr comes into this scene of pandemonium. And, he immediately, uh, stands up and says, whoever worshipped Muhammad, uh, then know that Muhammad is dead. But, whoever worshipped God, know that God lives on and never dies. And so, suddenly these people are brought to their senses, that indeed, that Muhammad is, is a man. And men are mortal. And, and this is his legacy. He, he did everything within his power to prevent himself from being worshipped. Because he recognized that that was a danger inherent in religious tradition. That the object of worship becomes the messenger, and not, uh, the one sending the message.

KEVIN JAMES
Prophet Muhammad was a man; he was flesh and blood, who brought one of the most eloquent revelations to mankind. He's set an example to mankind through his behavior, through his actions, a living example. This is a legacy that he has left for Muslims.

M. CHERIF BASSIOUNI
Muhammad's legacy is obviously the seed that he planted. It is his righteousness, his honesty, his integrity, his model as, uh, as a political leader, his model as an individual, a man who has, uh, made great accomplishments in his time and yet who didn't let the successes, uh, overpower him, didn't let his ego get the best of him. He remains, I think, more than anything else, a great role model.

JOHN VOLL
Muhammad is the kind of person who combines political and military and social and religious and intellectual dimensions of life in ways that are important for those of us in the 21st century who are struggling to put together complete lives ourselves.

NAJAH BAZZY
If I were to have met Prophet Muhammad on the street, I feel like I would know him. And, as though he would know all of us. The beauty of it is, we live our lives through his examples, but he's not God. Our reverence is to God. And, our reference is to him. So, how I walk, and how I speak, and how I carry myself, and how I treat my husband, and how I treat my mother and my father, and how I behave as a sister and a daughter and a nurse and a friend and a neighbor, that's all Prophet Muhammad in action.

NARRATOR
There's more about Muhammad and his legacy on PBS online. Experience a virtual pilgrimage to Mecca, read essays by people from the program, and much more. Visit PBS online at PBS.org. To purchase a videocassette of Muhammad or a DVD with additional features, call 888-786-0444. Major funding for this production [Muhammad: Legacy of a Prophet] has been provided by:

The Corporation for Public Broadcasting.

And by:
• The David and Lucile Packard Foundation
• Arabian Bulk Trade
• Sabadia Family Foundation
• The El-Hibri Foundation
• The Irfan Kathwari Foundation
• And Mir Imran

Additional funding has been provided by many other organizations and individuals.