Authors: Kanan Makiya
A
bdallah found his match in Marwan’s son, Abd al-Malik, he who had witnessed the murder of Uthman as a boy of ten. Abd al-Malik had been driven out of Medina a second time by Abdallah at the start of his revolt, becoming governor of Jerusalem at the time of his father’s death. He had been groomed for leadership by Mu’awiya, who recognized the young man’s prodigious talent from when he tended to his father’s affairs. “This man will one day rule the Arabs,” Mu’awiya said, by which he meant unite them. Abd al-Malik happened to be seated with the Holy Book in his lap when he heard of his father’s ignominious demise and was pressed, for his House’s sake, into accepting the mantle of leadership. He closed the Book and said, “This is our last time together.” He was thirty-nine.
In the son of Marwan, the Arabs found an embodiment of the saying, “He who takes revenge after forty years is in a hurry.” Abd al-Malik was as flexible and patient as Zubayr’s son was intractable and stubborn. He understood that the success of Muhammad—the fact that his followers now ruled half the world—meant that they could no longer be ruled from Arabia. Believers had to be at the center of things; the locus of authority had to change. But it would take time for Mecca to give way to Jerusalem. And so Abd al-Malik first secured Egypt and its revenues. Then he amassed his forces to attack Abdallah’s allies in nearby Iraq, leaving his nemesis to grit his teeth in the desert.
The only man in Syria who had no qualms about laying siege to the Holy City was Hajjaj. Lean as a gray wolf who breakfasts poorly, he was put in command of an army of Syrians and dispatched to Mecca. Hajjaj did what no man had done before; he set up giant catapults on the slopes of Mount Qubays and shot stones and flaming torches into the sacred sanctuary where Abdallah and his men had taken refuge.
The Meccans had never thought to build a wall around their city. The depth of the desert was more secure than the highest wall. When the city became overcrowded, however, Umar had walled in the sacred enclosure of the Ka’ba for the first time. The ends of the alleyways, which used to open onto a large open central space, were turned into gates. From inside this wall, the son of Zubayr waged his defense.
Abdallah repulsed the Umayyads at first, but not before severe damage had been inflicted on the building of the Ka’ba. A passing traveler, eyewitness to the destruction, described the scene to us in Jerusalem:
“I saw a dog hurled by a catapault, its corpse toppling a pot in which Abdallah’s men were cooking bulgar. Half-starved by the siege, they ate the dog instead of the bulgar. I saw stones as big as boulders rain on the Ka’ba until its clothes of black brocade became rent like the cleavage of a woman’s blouse.”
Abd al-Malik was distressed when news reached him of the damage. He was, after all, a son of the Hijaz, born there eight years after the conquest of Jerusalem. No one could have held its holy cities in greater esteem. So he wrote to Hajjaj:
“Do not bombard the Black Stone or tear asunder the veils of the Ka’ba, or even startle its birds. Rather, corner that scorpion in Mecca’s ravines and tunnels. And wait until he dies there of hunger.”
But the knife had cut through to the bone, and Hajjaj would have none of it. This was no ordinary city on whose conquest he had staked his honor. His family’s name was at stake. “Permit me to do battle with this man as I see fit,” he dared to write back. “For if you do not, his numbers will grow, and he will become impossible to dislodge.”
Abd al-Malik rescinded his order and let Hajjaj have his way. Whereupon he arranged a deception, ordering his men to prepare to make the pilgrimage to the sacred precinct. As keeper of the House, Abdallah was unable to refuse this request. The siege was lifted so that both sides might perform the sacred obligation. Hajjaj
led the pilgrimage, wearing his helmet and a coat of chain mail, while his reinforcements secretly infiltrated the city. When the fighting resumed, the stones of the catapults on Mount Qubays rained down on the Ka’ba even heavier than before.
Eyewitnesses say the Ka’ba was hit so often that it became fragile. At some point a thunderstorm appeared, and a bolt of lightning hit one of the catapults, burning it and killing twelve operators. That terrified Hajjaj’s men. They stopped fighting until he said:
“Generations before you made offerings, and always a fire was sent down to consume them. This happened to the prophet David when he took Jerusalem; it happened to Abraham when he offered his son and God took a ram in his place. God has given you a sign that your offering has been accepted. So finish what He has ordained.”
Tucking the skirt of his tunic into his belt, Hajjaj then rolled up another catapult with his own hands. He loaded it with stone. “Shoot!” he commanded. The bombardment continued more ferociously than before. When the Syrians finally rushed down from the mountains, they trapped the son of Zubayr inside the hollow of Mecca’s valley where the holy sanctuary lay. He fought like a lion, even after he was abandoned by two of his sons.
Those who finally got to shake their swords in Abdallah’s ribcage swear that he met his fate laughing; they say they saw his back teeth as they pulled out their swords. Hajjaj hung Abdallah’s headless body from the same gibbet that Abdallah had hung his brother’s. Tariq, the son of Amr, who had led the final assault into the sanctuary, was outraged. “Women have borne none manlier than he,” he said.
“Will you praise one who disobeyed the Commander of the Faithful?” Hajjaj retorted angrily.
“Yes,” replied Tariq. “He freed us from blame. Were it not for this man’s valor, we would have no excuse for what we have done to God’s House. He had no trench, knee-high walls, no stronghold. Yet he held his own against us for seven months.”
Abd al-Malik declared Tariq right. Still, he allowed Hajjaj to
treat the people of the holy cities harshly. Companions of the Messenger of God who had supported the claims of the House of Hashim against Umayya had to wear lead seals around their necks. Those who had not stood by Uthman during the siege of his house in Medina thirty-five years earlier were executed. Criers went through the streets of Mecca singing songs of praise to Abd al-Malik, rubbing his victory in the faces of all of the city’s residents.
The red-white camels, snorting through their nose-rings,
Brought you a noble man from Umayya, impeccable,
Like a great white hawk,
His countenance gleaming like a polished sword.
Abd al-Malik ordered the demolition of what remained of the Ka’ba. He flattened God’s most ancient house, and then he rebuilt it. But he did not rebuild the Ka’ba as it was when Abdallah was lord and master of Mecca. The Temple was rebuilt “according to the dimensions of Muhammad’s day,” the crafty Caliph ordered.
The construction took but two weeks. The Ka’ba was, after all, a simple building, four straight sides of a square. In Muhammad’s day, the walls had been built of loose stones and were low enough for nimble goats to jump over. There was no roof. Abd al-Malik used mortared stone for the walls and put on a timber roof. The Ka’ba was in accordance with its original dimensions in name only. In the southeastern corner, the one farthest from Jerusalem, he had the broken pieces of the Black Stone framed and fitted into the wall chest-high above ground, as first Abraham, and then Muhammad, had done before him.
The war of the holy cities had at last ended. The Black Stone was in Syrian hands. The son of Zubayr was dead. But it was the new Ka’ba that marked the real end of Abd al-Malik’s struggle against Abdallah. Old memories had been erased by the new construction, and like a grave that men have abandoned and ceased to cherish, Abdallah’s spirit was lost in the rubble.
A
bd al-Malik had been Caliph for less than a month when his soldiers, a group of fierce-looking Syrian Bedouins in full battle gear, appeared before my house amidst a gawking crowd of onlookers to escort me to Damascus. I was given a day to get my things together and settle my affairs.
Abd al-Malik and I had met once before, briefly, while he was serving as deputy to his father in Palestine. For a while, he was based in Jerusalem, and when I went to pay my respects, he spoke highly of Ka’b.
Iraq was in open rebellion over the excesses of Mu’awiya’s son, Yazid. The emperor in Constantinople was retaking Syrian towns from which he had been evicted four decades earlier. Christians and Jews were at loggerheads in Jerusalem yet again. Abdallah’s fortunes were at their peak; he was gaining adherents in Syria and crowing over his victory in the Hijaz. On the streets, men were saying that the desert had swallowed up Yazid’s army because of God’s displeasure with a House that dared to denigrate His holy cities. The talk of Damascus was of how Marwan had died at the hands of his wife. The stench of defeat lay like a heavy blanket over the House of Umayya.
“Our cousin Mu’awiya, God Rest His Soul, said you identified the footprint on the Foundation Stone of Solomon’s Temple.” These were the first words Abd al-Malik spoke to me.
“I did, O Commander of the Faithful.”
“And what do you say about that footprint today?”
“That it was left by the King of Absolute Sovereignty, who is the light of Heaven and Earth, and not by any of His Messengers.”
“How do you know He has a footprint, or for that matter any kind of a shape? The Holy Book says:
Naught is as His Likeness.”
“The source of all shape must Himself have a shape. The verse you have cited assumes it, even if that shape is like no other. Formlessness as an attribute of God is the refuge of lazy minds. He is the thing that He is named. What do we know about this thing? The Good Book says He has a throne, which encompasses the heavens and earth. God sits, in other words. And He moves. Did He not rise to Heaven after Creation? Does He not have two Houses, one in Mecca, the other in Jerusalem? Did He not travel to Mount Sinai and reveal Himself by voice to Moses? The Holy Book specifies that the Heavens shall be rolled up on the Day of Resurrection with His right hand. If He has a right hand, then why not a left? If He has a hand, then why not a foot?”
“Do you know what He looks like?”
“No, my Caliph. My examples are merely aspects of what God must look like just as His ninety-nine names are merely attributes of His nature.”
“Do these aspects and attributes encompass Him?”
“Nothing can do that. It is not given to us to know what He looks like. But it is given to us to aspire to know. In fact, it is demanded. Were we ever to cease striving to know Him, our faith would be of an ill-fated and lowly sort.”
“Yet you claimed to know that the mark on the Rock is God’s own footprint.”
“I made no such claim, O Caliph. I merely deduced the likelihood that it was His by way of argument from the lore of my father and the prophets.”
“You do your father credit, son of Ka’b,” Abd al-Malik replied. “I see that I have not wasted my time inviting you to Damascus.”
A
bd al-Malik used to give five audiences every morning after the Dawn Prayer. These began with the Reporter bringing him news from all over the empire, after which he would read a thirtieth part of the Holy Book in private before entering the audience hall. First to be admitted were his personal officers, with whom he would chat for a while, and then his ministers, who would talk over matters that had arisen during the course of the previous day. At this audience, a breakfast would be served made up of the remains of the previous evening’s supper—cold lamb, chicken, or some such dish.
“Page, set out the chair!” he would call out once he had finished. Then, he would proceed to the mosque, where, after ablution, he would take his seat on the chair that had been set for him, lean his back against the screen, and allow suitors to approach him as they would. I have met beggars on such occasions, wandering Arabs from the desert, women and children, destitute folk upon whose heads some calamity had fallen. After the customary “How is the Prince of True Believers this morning?” or “God prolong your days!” to which Abd al-Malik would always respond, “By the Grace of God,” they would unload upon him their tales of woe and misfortune.
Abd al-Malik had the talent of listening. This was a man with no intimates, and yet he was capable of paying attention to trivia and drivel for hours on the grounds that it would one day be useful to him. Occasionally, he would act upon a particular injustice—ordering redress, or sending guardsmen to put a stop to some encroachment, or, when no immediate course of action appeared feasible, initiating an inquiry.
When no more suitors remained, he would return to his palace paved in green marble and sit an hour by the great fountain in the court, which flows at all hours, watering a garden of flowers, trees, and birds. Occasionally I would be taken into this garden. But more often than not, we would meet in the audience hall, and I would speak before scores of nobles, secretaries, officers, and petitioners.
“Talk,” he said to me early on when he was setting down the rules of our relationship, “so long as I want to listen, but do not,
whatever else you say, give me flatteries or exhort me to righteousness.”