Abu 'Afak (Arabic: أب٠عÙÙâ, died c. 624) was a Jewish poet who lived in the Hijaz region (today Saudi Arabia). Abu 'Afak did not convert to Islam and was vocal about his opposition to Muhammad. He became a significant political enemy of Muhammad.
As an elderly man, Abu 'Afak Arwan wrote a politically charged poem against Muhammad and his followers that is preserved in the Sira. Muhammad then called for Abu 'Afak's death, and Salim ibn Umayr killed him. The affair was recorded by Ibn Ishaq in "Sirat Rasul Allah" (The Life of the Prophet of God), the oldest biography of Muhammad.
Sources
Ibn Ishaq's account
The following is an excerpt from Alfred Guillaume's translation of Ibn Ishaq's prophetic biography, chapter "Salim b. Umayr's expedition to kill Abu Afak".
Abu Afak was one of the B. Amr b. Auf of the B. Ubayda clan. He showed his disaffection when the apostle [Muhammad] killed al-Harith b. Suwayd b. Samit and said:
- Long have I lived but never have I seen
- An assembly or collection of people
- More faithful to their undertaking
- And their allies when called upon
- Than the sons of Qayla when they assembled,
- Men who overthrew mountains and never submitted,
- A rider who came to them split them in two (saying)
- "Permitted", "Forbidden", of all sorts of things.
- Had you believed in glory or kingship
- You would have followed Tubba.
The apostle [Muhammad] said, "Who will deal with this rascal for me?" Whereupon Salim b. Umayr, brother of B. Amr b. Auf, one of the "weepers", went forth and killed him. Umama b. Muzayriya said concerning that:
- You gave the lie to God's religion and the man Ahmad [the prophet]!
- By him who was your father, evil is the son he produced!
- A hanif gave you a thrust in the night saying
- Take that, Abu Afak, in spite of your age!
- Though I knew whether it was man or jinn
- Who slew you in the dead of night (I would say naught).
Waqidiâs Account
The following is an excerpt from Rizwi Faizerâs translation of Waqidiâs military history, chapter âThe Expedition to Kill Abu âAfakâ.
Saâid b. Muhammad related to us from âUmara b. Ghaziyya, and Abu Musâab related to us from Ismaâil b. Musâab b. Ismaâil b. Zayd b. Thabit from his elders, who said: âThere was a sheikh of the Banu âAmr ibn âAwf called âAbu Afak. He was an old man who had reached one hundred and twenty years when the Prophet arrived in Medina. He provoked the enmity of the Prophet and did not enter Islam. When the Messenger of God went out to Badr and returned, and God granted him victory, Abu âAfak envited him and opposed him, saying:
Salim b. âUmayr said â" and he was one of the weepers of the Banu Najjar â" âI vowed that I would kill Abu Afak or die in the attempt. I waited for a heedless moment.â Then, one summerâs night, as Abu Afak slept in the courtyard with the Banu âAmr b. âAwf, Salim b. âUmayr approached, and pressed the sword upon his liver until it entered his bed. The enemy of God screamed. Those among the people who heard his words returned to him. They entered his place and buried him. They said, âWho killed him? By God, if we learn who killed him, we will surely kill him for it.â Al-Nahdiyya, a Muslim woman, said these verses about that.
Maâan b. âUmar related to me saying: âIbn Ruqaysh informed me that Abu âAfak was killed in Shawwal, the twentieth month AH.â
Ibn Sa'd's accounts
Another description of this story comes from The Major Classes by ibn Sa'd al-Baghdadi, although this work is based on Ibn Ishaq:
"Then occurred the "sariyyah" [raid] of Salim Ibn Umayr al-Amri against Abu Afak, the Jew, in [the month of] Shawwal in the beginning of the twentieth month from the hijra, of the Apostle of Allah. Abu Afak, was from Banu Amr Ibn Awf, and was an old man who had attained the age of one hundred and twenty years. He was a Jew, and used to instigate the people against the Apostle of Allah, and composed (satirical) verses [about Muhammad]. Salim Ibn Umayr who was one of the great weepers and who had participated in Badr, said, "I take a vow that I shall either kill Abu Afak or die before him. He waited for an opportunity until a hot night came, and Abu Afak slept in an open place. Salim Ibn Umayr knew it, so he placed the sword on his liver and pressed it till it reached his bed. The enemy of Allah screamed and the people who were his followers, rushed to him, took him to his house and interred him."
Ibn Sa'd gives a second account, which cites his sources.
Muhammad ibn âUmar [Waqidi] reported from Saâid ibn Muhammad az-Zuraqi from âUmara ibn Ghaziya that Abu Musâab Ismaâil ibn Musâab ibn Ismaâil ibn Zayd ibn Thabit related from his shaykhs that Abu âAfak was an old man of the Banu âAmr ibn Awf. He reached the age of one hundred and twenty and he heard about the Prophet but he did not enter Islam. Salim ibn âUmayr vowed to kill him and sought him until he killed him. That was at the command of the Prophet. Muhammad ibn âUmar [Waqidi] reported from Maân ibn âUmar from Ibn Ruqaysh of the Banu Asad ibn Khuzayma that Abu âAfak was killed in Shawwal at the beginning of the twentieth month of the Hijra [late March/early April 624].
Hadith scholars view
It is mentioned in ibn Ishaq's book, considered the first biography of Muhammad, and is recensed in ibn Hisham and Muhammad ibn Jarir al-Tabari.
See also
- Ka'b ibn al-Ashraf
- Asma bint Marwan