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1. The Encounters of Muhammad with Jews of the Ḥijāz 1. The Encounters of Muhammad with Jews of the Ḥijāz
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2. The Jewish Companions of Muhammad: ‘Abd Allāh ibn Salām, Prototype of a Leader 2. The Jewish Companions of Muhammad: ‘Abd Allāh ibn Salām, Prototype of a Leader
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3. A Collective Portrait of the Jewish Converts to Islam in the Sīra Literature 3. A Collective Portrait of the Jewish Converts to Islam in the Sīra Literature
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4. Rudiments of a Legend: From Arabia to Palestine and Byzantium 4. Rudiments of a Legend: From Arabia to Palestine and Byzantium
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5. Sa῾adya Gaon Tells the Story of Muhammad's Companions 5. Sa῾adya Gaon Tells the Story of Muhammad's Companions
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6. An Early Version of the Jewish Legend Encapsulated in a Late Seventeenth-Century Chronicle 6. An Early Version of the Jewish Legend Encapsulated in a Late Seventeenth-Century Chronicle
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Summary Summary
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Appendix: Additional Sources of the Medieval Story about the Jewish Companions of Muhammad Appendix: Additional Sources of the Medieval Story about the Jewish Companions of Muhammad
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Notes Notes
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16 Poverty and Charity in a Moroccan City: A Study of Jewish Communal Leadership in Meknes,1750–1912
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5 Present at the Dawn of Islam: Polemic and Reality in the Medieval Story of Muhammad's Jewish Companions
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Published:August 2011
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Abstract
This chapter grapples with major themes of early Islam pertaining to the relationship between the Prophet Muhammad and the Jewish elite who aligned themselves with him. These included Jewish tribes that converted to Islam in the last decade of Muhammad's life. It, however, is also a study of the Jewish tribes that clung to Judaism and were exiled from the Arabian Peninsula or died at the hands of Muslims. The component of the Jewish elite who allied themselves with Muhammad consisted of a tiny force. Thus, on one hand, there were Jews who refused to recognize Muhammad and who remained loyal to their faith and thus faced exile. On the other hand, a small elite collaborated with the Prophet in the early days of Islam.
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