The People of 'Ád and Thamúd; Húd; |
Lawh-i-Burhán |
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hollow palm-trees, and couldst thou have seen any of them remaining? 1According to tradition Húd is buried in Hadhramaut, in the south of the Arabian peninsula. The people of Thamúd were the successors to the culture and civilization of 'Ád. Tradition has it that they were a younger branch of the same tribe and lived in the same regions of the Arabian peninsula. Thamúd himself is also said to be a descendant of Noah. The people of Thamúd were skilful in carving stone. They are reputed to have made buildings out of solid rock. Like the people of 'Ád, they were idolators. According to the Qur'án, God had bestowed upon them skills: they had plenty of cornfields and date farms, but they were unholy, oppressive and unkind to the poor. Then God sent Sálih to them as a prophet. He was one of the people of Thamúd. Like Húd, he exhorted people to believe in God and stop worshipping idols. He argued with them for a long time, but they said that they could not find in him the signs of prophethood. Thereupon God brought forth a she-camel as a sign. Tradition has it that the she-camel came out of a rock. Sálih asked the people to take care of the she-camel and to drink of her milk, but they did not. And when she came to drink of their water, which was scarce in that land and therefore vital to their existence, they raised great objections and eventually they hamstrung the she-camel and killed her. Sálih repeatedly warned the people that if they did not respond to his message they would be struck by a calamity and would be seized by God with a grievous punishment. When the sign from God, the she-camel, had no effect on the people and the animal was killed, an earthquake wiped them out, all except Sálih and his followers, who were saved. The Qur'án describes this episode in this way:
Then they hamstrung the she-camel, and insolently defied the order of their Lord, saying: 'O Sálih I bring about thy threats, if thou art an apostle.' |
1. Qur'án, 69:6. |
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So the earthquake took them unawares, and they lay prostrate in their homes in the morning.2The versions we have given in these pages are based on the verses of the Qur'án.* However, there are further details derived from various traditions other than the Qur'án, but these seem to be unreal and pure fantasy. The stories of Húd and Sálih are somewhat similar to the story of Noah, the flood and the Ark. They are all symbolic. In the Bahá'í Writings we find explained the significance of such terms as Noah's Ark, the flood, the she-camel and other incidents. For example, 'Abdu'l-Bahá in a Tablet3 explains that the she-camel was symbolic of the holy spirit of Sálih, and the milk was symbolic of the spiritual food which his spirit offered to the people. The significance of the she-camel being hamstrung is the suffering inflicted by the wicked people on that holy soul, Sálih. The spring of water which the people denied to the she-camel signifies life on this earth. The people were so attached to earthly things that they could not recognize the gifts of God to them, and so they rose up in opposition to Sálih, and when he departed from their midst they became deprived of his spiritual influence. His absence was the calamity which caused them to be deprived of the bounties of God and consequently they perished spiritually. There is a chapter in the Qur'án known as the Súrah of Húd. It tells the story of all the Prophets including Húd and Sálih. It describes how they were all denied, opposed and persecuted by their own people. Bahá'u'lláh refers to this in the Kitáb-i-Íqán:
To them that are possessed of true understanding and insight the Súrah of Húd surely sufficeth. Ponder a while those holy words in your heart, and with utter detachment, strive to grasp their meaning. Examine the wondrous behaviour of the Prophets, and recall the defamations and denials uttered by the children of negation and falsehood, perchance you may cause the bird of the human heart to wing its flight away from the abodes of heedlessness and doubt unto the nest of faith and |
* For more information see Qur'án 7, 11, 17, 26, 29, 51, 69.
2. Qur'án, 7:77-8. 3. Má'idiy-i-Ásamání, vol. 2, pp. 99-100. |
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certainty, and drink deep from the pure waters of ancient wisdom, and partake of the fruit of the tree of divine knowledge.4He also dwells briefly upon the story of Húd and Sálih in these words:
And after Noah the light of the countenance of Húd shone forth above the horizon of creation. For well-nigh seven hundred years, according to the sayings of men, He exhorted the people to turn their faces and draw nearer unto the Ridván of the divine presence. What showers of afflictions rained upon Him, until at last His adjurations bore the fruit of increased rebelliousness, and His assiduous endeavours resulted in the wilful blindness of His people. 'And their unbelief shall only increase for the unbelievers their own perdition.'* |
* Qur'án 35:9.
4. Kitáb-i-Íqán, pp. 5-6. 5. ibid. pp. 9-10. |