One incident
remains to be narrated before we come to the end of this account
of the Day of Lost Eyes. During a pause in the fighting in Sharhabeel's
sector, Khalid suddenly appeared deeply worried, and this surprised
his men who had never seen him so. But they understood when he ordered
the men to look for his red cap which he had dropped on the battlefield.
A search was at once carried out and the cap found, for which Khalid
was profuse in his thanks. There were some men who did not know
about this cap and asked Khalid what was so wonderful about it.
Thereupon Khalid told the story of the red cap:
When the Messenger of Allah had his head
shaved on the last pilgrimage, I picked up some of the hair of his
head. He asked me, "What will you do with this, O Khalid?"
I replied, "I shall gain strength from it while fighting
our enemies, O Messenger of Allah." Then he said, "You
will remain victorious as long as this is with you."
I had the hair woven into my cap, and I
have never met an enemy but he has been defeated by the blessing
of the Messenger of Allah, on whom be the blessings of Allah and
peace. 1
This is the story of Khalid's red cap -
the one possession with which he would not part.
Darkness had fallen when Khalid sat on the
blood-spattered earth at the left edge of Abu Ubaidah's sector.
On one knee rested the head of Ikrimah, his nephew and dear, dear
friend. On the other knee lay the head of Amr, son of Ikrimah. Life
was ebbing fast from the bodies of father and son. Khalid would
now and then dip his fingers into a bowl of water and let the water
drip into the half-open mouths; and he would say: "Does
the Son of Hantamah think we do not get martyred?" 2
Thus died Ikrimah and his son, in the dearly loved arms of the Sword
of Allah. The man who for years had been the most blood-thirsty
enemy of Islam earned final redemption in martyrdom. The greatest
glory on the Day of Lost Eyes, a day such as the Muslims would never
again see in Syria, went to Ikrimah bin Abi Jahl.
The night was spent in peace, if there could
be peace for exhausted, wounded men who had driven their bodies
to perform feats of strength and endurance which the human body
was never intended to perform. Normally Abu Ubaidah would nominate
a general as duty officer for the night, whose task it would be
to go round the guards and the outposts and check the vigilance
of the sentries. But on this night the generals themselves were
so tired that Abu Ubaidah, kind and considerate as ever, did not
have the heart to ask any of them to carry out this onerous task.
Although his own sword dripped with the blood of several Romans
and his need for rest was no less than that of the others, Abu Ubaidah
decided to act as duty officer himself. Along with a few selected
Companions of the Prophet he began his round. But he need not have
worried. Everywhere that he went he found the generals up and mounted,
going about and talking to the sentries and the wounded. Zubair
was doing the rounds accompanied by his wife, also on horseback!
1. Waqidi: p. 151.
2. Tabari: Vol.2, p. 597. The Son of Hantamah
was Umar, and by 'we' Khalid meant the Bani Makhzum.
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