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[[File:Banu qurayza massacre.jpg|175px|right|thumb|Detail from miniature painting: ''The Prophet, Ali, and the Companions at the Massacre of the Prisoners of the Jewish Tribe of Beni Qurayzah'', illustration of a 19th century text by Muhammad Rafi Bazil.]]
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{{QualityScore|Lead=4|Structure=4|Content=4|Language=4|References=4}}[[File:Banu qurayza massacre.jpg|175px|right|thumb|Detail from miniature painting: ''The Prophet, Ali, and the Companions at the Massacre of the Prisoners of the Jewish Tribe of Beni Qurayza'', illustration of a 19th century text by Muhammad Rafi Bazil.]]According to the traditional Islamic sources, in 627 AD as a result of the Battle of the Trench during which the Jewish tribe of Banu Qurayza had renounced their earlier pact with Muhammad and plotted with the besieging enemy, the Muslims under his direct military command laid siege to the Banu Qurayzah compound. After a siege of around 2 weeks, depending on the source, the Jews of Banu Qurayzah surrendered and entrusted their fate to a trusted intermediary from the Muslims of the tribe of 'Aws, Sa'd bin Mu'adh. Sa'd bin Mu'adh advised Muhammad to slaughter the men folk of the tribe and take the women and children as captives. Muhammad took this advice and as a consequence between 400 and 900 male prisoners of the tribe including any boys showing signs of puberty were beheaded, many in front of their families, and the rest of the tribe were taken as captives or sold into slavery. The event is thought to be mentioned in the Quran, is well attested to in the Islamic historical tradition, and has served as the basis for multiple rulings throughout history dealing with the treatment of captured non-Muslims by Muslim military forces. There is much uncertainty about the historic facts according to academic and modernist Muslim scholars.


According to the traditional Islamic sources, in 627 AD as a result of the [[Battle of the Trench]] and the betrayal of the Muslims by the Jewish tribe of Banu Qurayza, the Muslims under the direct military command of the prophet [[Muhammad]] laid siege to the Banu Qurayza compound. After a siege of around 2 weeks, depending on the source, the Jews of Banu Qurayza surrendered and entrusted their fate to a trusted intermediary from the Muslims of the tribe of 'Aws, Sa'ad bin Mu'adh. Sa'a'd bin Mu'adh, however, claiming to be following the law of the Torah itself, advised Muhammad to slaughter the men folk of the tribe and sell the women and children into slavery. Muhammad took this advice and as a consequence between 400 and 900 prisoners of the tribe were slaughtered, many in front of their families, and the rest of the tribe were sold into slavery. Although later Muslim historians such as Tabari and ibn Kathir attest to and provide details of this event, the lack of attestation to this event in any primary sources for over 100 years after the event and the lack of attestation of the existence of the Banu Qurayza in early documents such as the [[Constitution of Medina]], as well as evidence of continued Jewish-Arab (Muhaajir) cooperation well into the period of the early Arab conquests, has caused critical historians to call into question the historicity of the entire event; despite the doubts of these historians, though, most history books which accept the Islamic sources as reliable also accept the historicity of this event, including every major school of Sunni and Shi'i jurisprudence.  
==Earliest accounts==
===Surah al-Ahzab (The Confederates)===
The most well known version of these events is recorded in the [[Sirat_Rasul_Allah|Sira of Ibn ʾIsḥāq]] (d. 769 CE).<ref>Ibn Ishaq (rescension of his work by Ibn Hisham), Alfred Guillaume (translator), ''The life of Muhammad: a translation of Isḥāq's Sīrat rasūl Allāh Oxford University Press'', 2005, pp. 453, 458-9, 461-69, 479-81</ref> However, there is a brief description in the Quran itself according to the great majority of Islamic scholars, which is also the view of those academic historians who believe there is at least some historicity to the story.


==Background==
{{Quran-range|33|9|25}} recalls an attempted attack by the confederates on Medina (i.e. Yathrib, mentioned in verse 13). The next two verses (26-27) state that Jewish or Christian supporters of the failed offensive were brought down from their fortresses, then one group were killed and another taken captive:


According to ibn Ishaq, Muhammad's constant aggressive raids and warmongering against the Meccans had driven them, in alliance with the Jewish tribes he had expelled from Yathrib, to put an end to him and his movement once and for all. The three original Jewish tribes of Medina, the Banu Nadir, the Banu Qaynuqaa', and the Banu Qurayzah, had seen their number dwindle to one as Muhammad had expelled the Banu Nadir and the Banu Qaynuaqaa' from Medina for on different pretexts and their property including their precious palm trees had been seized. Together with the Meccans, they had formed an alliance and gathered an army whose numbers are given in the sira as being around 10,000 strong, including over 600 mounted horsemen against virtually no cavalry for the Muslims, and 7,000 stronger than the army which had defeated Muhammad at the Muslims at Uhud. Muhammad at this time could call on a force of only around 3,000 men. Muhammad received word of this advance and began to make preparations. A Persian companion of the prophet named Salman, an apparent veteran of the Sassanid's many wars against the Romans, advised that when facing a great number of enemy horseman such as the confederate Jews and Meccans possessed, a good stratagem was to dig a defensive trench. It was decided to pursue this strategy <ref>Muhammad: His Life Based on the Earliest Sources Martin Lings Inner Traditions 2006, pages 222-223 </ref>. The Banu Qurayzah did not provide men to help but did provide entrenching tools and the Muslims strategy relied on the Banu Qurayzah not breaking their alliance with Muhammad and joining with the confederates. The strategy of the trench worked to win the battle against, and the confederates were beaten back without many casualties for the Muslims, but this proved to be no end to the fighting.
{{Quote|{{Quran-range|33|26|27}}|And He brought down those who supported them among the People of the Scripture from their fortresses and cast terror into their hearts [so that] a party you killed, and you took captive a party.
And He caused you to inherit their land and their homes and their properties and a land which you have not trodden. And ever is Allah, over all things, competent.}}


==Narrative from the Sira==
Later in the same surah, {{Quran|33|50}} gives Muhammad certain rights over his share of female captives. {{Quran-range|33|55|58}} denounces disbelievers who break their treaties and describes how they should be dealt with. Some early commentators such as Mujahid and al-Tabari said this denunciation referred to or included the Banu Qurayza.<ref>M. J. Kister, [https://web.archive.org/web/20250118072808if_/http://www.kister.huji.ac.il/sites/default/files/banu_qurayza.pdf The Massacre of the Banū Qurayẓa: A Re-Examination of a Tradition (archive)], Jerusalem Studies in Arabic and Islam 8 (1986), pp. 61-96 (see p. 81)</ref>
According to traditional sources, in Hijra year 5 (627 AD), on the orders of the Islamic Prophet [[Muhammad]], almost between four hundred and nine hundred Jews of a Medinan tribe named Banu Qurayza were massacred by the muhaajiruun and their Medinese Muslim allies. The killing began early in the day, ending in torchlight. Those of the tribe who escaped death were taken captive and sold at [[Slavery|slave]] markets.
Muhammad’s problems with the Jews had not started here. Before the Banu Qurayza, the Jews of the tribes of the Banu Nadir and Banu Qaynuqaa’ had already been assaulted, stripped of their goods including their precious palm trees and exiled. The Banu Qurayzah had retained their position in Medinah through an alliance with the prophet. All was not well with them, though, as Muhammad continued to press on them to accept him as the messenger off [[Allah]]. As Muhammad had lost the battle of [[Uhud]] this had become difficult for him, and there was already doubt in the minds of some Muslims (mostly muhaajiruun) as to their loyalty to the prophet.


Compounding matters, the Meccans pagans under the leadership of Abu Sufyan had entered into an alliance with the banished Jewish tribes of Medinah, furthering the suspicion of the Jews of Qurayzah whose fortress lay in the rear of the Muslims’ positions vis-à-vis the attack route of the Meccans. When the Meccans and their Jewish allies advanced with a huge army upon Medinah, at the suggestion of the Persian Salman the prophet ordered his numerically inferior forces to dig a trench between two pools of lava and the mountains in front of the city to cut off the advance of the Meccans and their confederates. For this reason the battle is traditionally known as the “Battle of Trench” or (or alternatively the “Battle of the Confederates” thanks to the large confederacy of different tribes which advanced upon Madinah).
===Early sῑra-maghāzī material===
The story is widely reported with varying details in the sῑra (biographical) genre and the maghāzī (raids/expeditions) material therein. The earliest surviving complete work of this genre is Kitāb al-Maghāzī by Mūsā ibn ʿUqba (d. 725 to 737 CE), which was for a long time lost but rediscovered in 2021. It can be read in English translation online including the Banu Qurayza report.<ref>An English translation of Kitāb al-Maghāzī by Mūsā ibn ʿUqba is available for free download: [https://imamghazali.co.uk/products/maghazi-ebook?shpxid=615cb3f1-f756-48ea-8207-7aae5f4ee22c The Maghāzī of Sayyidunā Muhammad by Mūsā ibn ʿUqbah], Imam Ghazali Publishing, 2024. See pp. 104-9, and pp. 112-17 on the subsequent massacre and enslavement of the Banu Qurayza.</ref> Mūsā ibn ʿUqba was a student of Ibn Shihāb az-Zuhrī (d. 741 CE), who himself wrote the first maghāzī book. Al-Zuhrī's narrations feature heavily in the sῑra-maghāzī literature and are an important source of information about early Islamic history. Al-Zuhrī as well as several other sources are credited by Ibn ʾIsḥāq for each contributing parts of his account.<ref>Ibn Ishaq, Alfred Guillaume (translator), The Life of Muhammad p. 450</ref>
Unable to break the defenses of the Medinian Muslims, the Meccans sent an emissary, “the enemy of Allah, Huyayy bin Akhtab An-Nadri” <ref>Ibn Hisham, Ibn Ishaq, Alfred Guillaume (translator), The life of Muhammad: a translation of Isḥāq's Sīrat rasūl Allāh Oxford Universite Press p.453, 2005</ref>, to the Banu Qurayzah in an attempt to bring their aide and end the stalemate with the massacre of Muhammad and the Muslims. According to ibn Ishaq, initially the leader of the Banu Qurayzah Ka'b bin Asad al-Qurayzi did not even allow Huyayy bin Akhtab to enter the compound, but was goaded into doing so be Huyayy's accusation that bin Ka'b did not want to share his food. Ibn Ishaq does not make it clear how he knows this however he claims that the negotiation came to naught due to the Qurayzah’s insistence that the Meccans offer hostages in order to assure they would not leave the field of battle till Muhammad was defeated (though they did in fact end up leaving without defeating Muhammad). According to ibn Ishaq, the Banu Qurayzah after much "wheedling" agreed only to not aide the Muslims or to obstruct or fight the confederates. Ibn Ishaq offers as evidence of the Banu Qurayzah’s perfidy an Isnad chain from Yahya bin ‘Abbaad bin ‘Abdullah bin Az-Zubayr with a story that a Muslim woman, Safiyah bint ‘AbdulMuttalib saw a Jewish scout of the Banu Qurayzah reconnoitering a Muslim fort in preparation for an attack. She told the fort's commander Hassan of this and asked him to kill the scout, and when he refused she took a club and went out and beat the man to death<ref>ibid, 458</ref>. Other than this ibn Ishaq presents no evidence that the Jews of the Banu Qurayzah were in league with the confederates. He does, however, relate that Allah “sowed discord” between the confederates and the Banu Qurayzah, which resulted in the Meccans retreating without having defeated Muhammad or engaged in a coordinated attack upon the Muslims with the Banu Qurayzah <ref>ibid, 459</ref>  


The battle of the trench being won, Muhammad and his men put their entrenching tools and weapons down to head home. According to the sira, though, Allah had other plans. The angel [[Jibra'il]] appeared to Muhammad just as he had put down his weapon, and informed him that the battle was not yet over for the Jews of the Banu Qurayzah still needed to be dealt with due to their treachery, mentioned above. Muhammad informed his men that they were not to pray the 'asr prayer until they reached the Banu Qurayzah compound, meaning he wanted them to go there quickly. The Muslims lay siege to the compound for differing amounts of time depending on the source (ibn Ishaq claims 25 days before "Allah cast terror in their hearts"). The Banu Qurayzah were told to surrender and accept Islam, something they swore they would never do. Despairing of their position, according to ibn Ishaq, they discussed three options: accepting Islam, killing their wives and children and engaging in a banzai-style attack against the numerically superior Muslim forces (perhaps, modern commentators have added, in emulation of their religious forbearers as Masada in Palestine), or engaging in a sneak attack on the Jewish Sabbath. The Jews of the Banu Qurayzah found none of these options acceptable.  
There are some differences as described in the next section between Mūsā ibn ʿUqba's version of the Banu Qurayza incident and the slightly later and longer one by Ibn ʾIsḥāq, who served the 'Abbasid Caliphate.  


Unable to come to a decision and under siege for weeks, the Banu Qurayzah asked to speak with Abu Lubaba, a man of the tribe of 'Aws, their allies. Abu Lubaba, when asked what the Banu Qurayzah should do, advised them to surrender to the prophet, but at the same time raised his hand to his neck, indicating they would be slaughtered <ref>ibid, 462</ref>. After he left, he felt that his action in telling the Banu Qurayzah of their fate was a betrayal of the prophet, and he tied himself to a pillar to ask for Allah's forgiveness, an act that Muhammad approved of. Despite this warning, the Banu Qurayzah surrendered to the Muslims the following day <ref>ibid, 463</ref>.  
==Accounts in the sῑra==
===Background===
In an oft-cited academic article on the topic, Professor Meir J. Kister includes some background to the agreement which the Banu Qurayza are said to have later broken according to early sources, allowing the Banu Qurayza to stay after the Banu al-Nadir had been expelled from Medina.


The tribe of 'Aws, allies of the Banu Qurayzah from the time of [[jahilliyah]], asked for mercy for them from the prophet. The prophet, not wanting to cause dissension in his ranks (oaths and alliances of loyalties were very important in tribal Arab society, as in the absence of courts and established governments the only guaranty of security and justice which could be obtained was the promise of protection from allies in the case of murder, family fueds or war), entrusted the fate of the Banu Qurayzah to a trusted elder shaykh of the 'Aws, Sa‘d bin Mu‘adh, who had been mortally wounded during the battle and would in fact die a few days after the slaughter of the Banu Qurayzah. Once Sa'd bin Mu'adth had ascertained that both the Banu Qurayzah and the prophet would abide by his judgement, whatever it be, he gave it without hesitation: the men of the Banu Qurayzah were to be executed to the last, while the women and children should be sold into slavery. Sa'dibn Mu‘adh justified this decision as being from the Torah of the Jews itself. Ibn Ishaq does not cite the verse and chapter from the Bible but this is usually taken as a reference to the book of Deuteronomy 20:12-14:
{{Quote|M. J. Kister, ''The Massacre of the Banū Qurayẓa: A Re-Examination of a Tradition'', 1986, pp. 82-3<ref name="Kister" />|How this kind of agreement was concluded can be learned from a report recorded by ʿAbd al-Razzaq on the authority of Mūsā b. ʿUqba: The Nadīr and Qurayẓa fought the Prophet; the Prophet expelled the Nadīr but agreed that Qurayẓa should stay. Later Qurayẓa fought the Prophet. They were defeated, the men were executed, the women, children and property were divided among the Muslims. Some of the Jews received the amān (safety) of the Prophet and converted to Islam. This account is corroborated and elucidated by a report traced back to al-Zuhrī: the Prophet, informed about the treacherous intentions of the Nadīr, marched out against them with troups (''bi-l-katā'ib'') and besieged them. He demanded that they conclude a compact with him; if they refused, he in turn would refuse to grant them an assurance of safety (...''innakum lā ta'manuna ʿindī illā bi-ʿahdin tu'āhidūnī ʿalayhi''). They refused and the forces of the Prophet fought them (i.e. the Nadīr) throughout the day. Next day the Prophet left the Nadīr, went out with horsemen and troops against the Qurayẓa and summoned them to conclude an agreement: they consented and concluded a treaty and the Prophet left them. He returned with his troops to the Nadir and fought them until they surrendered on condition that they would be expelled.}}
{{Quote|Deuteronomy 20:12-14|וְאִם  לֹ֤א  תַשְׁלִים֙  עִמָּ֔ךְ  וְעָשְׂתָ֥ה  עִמְּךָ֖  מִלְחָמָ֑ה  וְצַרְתָּ֖  עָלֶֽיהָ וּנְתָנָ֛הּ  יְהוָ֥ה  אֱלֹהֶ֖יךָ  בְּיָדֶ֑ךָ  וְהִכִּיתָ֥  אֶת  כָּל  זְכוּרָ֖הּ  לְפִי  חָֽרֶב  רַ֣ק  הַ֠נָּשִׁים  וְהַטַּ֨ף  וְהַבְּהֵמָ֜ה  וְכֹל֩  אֲשֶׁ֨ר  יִהְיֶ֥ה  בָעִ֛יר  כָּל־  שְׁלָלָ֖הּ  תָּבֹ֣ז  לָ֑ךְ  וְאָֽכַלְתָּ֙  אֶת  שְׁלַ֣ל  אֹיְבֶ֔יךָ  אֲשֶׁ֥ר  נָתַ֛ן  יְהוָ֥ה  אֱלֹהֶ֖יךָ  לָֽךְ


But if the city makes no peace with you, but makes war against you, then you shall besiege it; and when the Lord your God gives it into your hand you shall put all its males to the sword, but the women and the little ones, the cattle, and everything else in the city, all its spoil, you shall take as booty for yourselves; and you shall enjoy the spoil of your enemies, which the Lord your God has given you.}}
===Battle preparations===
According to Ibn Ishaq, Muhammad's constant aggressive raids and warmongering against the Meccans had driven them, in alliance with the Jewish tribes he had expelled from Yathrib and the north Arabian tribe of Ghatfan, to put an end to him and his movement once and for all. The three original Jewish tribes of Medina, the Banu Nadir, the Banu Qaynuqaa', and the Banu Qurayza, had seen their number dwindle to one as Muhammad had expelled the Banu Nadir and the Banu Qaynuaqaa' from Medina on different pretexts. Meanwhile their property, including their precious palm trees, had been seized by Muhammad and the Muslims. Together with the Meccans and the Ghatfan, the exiled Jewish tribes of Medina had formed an alliance and gathered an army whose numbers are given in the sira as being around 10,000 strong, including over 600 mounted horsemen against very few cavalry for the Muslims, and 7,000 stronger than the army which had defeated Muhammad and the Muslims at Uhud. Muhammad at this time could call on a force of only around 3,000 men. Muhammad received word of their advance and began to make preparations by digging a trench with his men.<ref>Ibn Ishaq, , Alfred Guillaume (translator), The life of Muhammad pp. 450-452</ref> In al Waqidi's version, the Banu Qurayzah lent the Muslims entrenching tools.<ref>Kister, p. 85</ref> The Muslim strategy relied on the Banu Qurayza, whose fort lay in the rear of the Muslim defenses, not breaking their agreement with Muhammad and joining with the confederates.


Although modern Muslims cite this verse in justification of Mu'adh's verdict, it should be noted that neither Jewish nor Christian tradition understands this verse as a blanket rule for warefare, but rather as a specific command to the Jews under the command of Joshua who were fighting the pagan peoples of the Holy Land. It has not, generally, been used by either religion to justify the sort of massacre that took place in Medina in other historical contexts.
===Battle of the Trench (al Khandaq) and the Banu Qurayza's role===
Ibn Ishaq records that the two sides pitched their camps either side of the trench. The leader of the Banu al-Nadir, Huyayy bin Akhtab An-Nadri, then went to the Banu Qurayza to ask them to abandon their agreement with Muhammad. According to Ibn Ishaq, initially the leader of the Banu Qurayzah, Ka'b bin Asad al-Qurayzi, refused to abandon his commitment to Muhammad, but after much wheedling from Huyayy agreed to do so.<ref>Ibn Ishaq, Alfred Guillaume (translator), The life of Muhammad, p. 453</ref> An additional detail in Mūsā ibn ʿUqba's account is that this had been a vow not to deceive Muhammad nor aid his enemies against him, and to assist him against anyone who attacked Yathrib (Medina). In this version they also promise to join the fight against him so long as hostages are provided by the confederates to guarantee they will both commit to the fight come what may. This is agreed by the Quraysh and so the Banu Qurayza declare war on Muhammad.<ref>Mūsā ibn ʿUqba, Kitāb al-Maghāzī translated by Imam Ghazali Publishing, pp. 105</ref>


The prisoners, thus condemned, were kept in the house or compound of a Muslim woman d. Al-Harith of the banu al-najjaar tribe. In the morning they were marched out to a trench which had been dug in the city's market, and executed by decapitation <ref>ibid, 465</ref> . According to the sira of ibn Ishaq, at least one woman was amongst them. The women were given as sexual and labor slaves to the Muslims, with only boys who had not yet reached puberty being allowed to live. According to the sira, the haul of weapons and plunder was substantial, but Muhammad still sent some of the women and children to be sold in the Najd for more horses and weapons <ref>ibid, 466</ref>.
Ibn Ishaq reports that Muhammad sent some men to the Banu Qurayza to find out whether they had really abandoned their agreement, which they confirmed and insults were exchanged. A siege by the confederates against Medina with little action besides the shooting of arrows then ensued for around 20 days.<ref>Ibn Ishaq, Alfred Guillaume (translator), The life of Muhammad, pp. 453-4</ref> In Mūsā ibn ʿUqba's version, it is after this siege period that Muhammad first sent his men to the Banu Qurayza, who explain their refusal to renew their alliance with him due to the way their kin, the Banu al-Nadir, had been treated.<ref>Mūsā ibn ʿUqba, Kitāb al-Maghāzī translated by Imam Ghazali Publishing, pp. 106-7</ref>


==Tafsir Accounts==
Ibn Ishaq offers as evidence of the Banu Qurayza’s perfidy a story with isnad chain from Yaḥyā b. ʿAbbād b. ʿAbd Allāh b. al-Zubayr that a Muslim woman, Ṣafīyya bint ʿAbd al-Muṭṭalib, saw a Jew walking around their fort. She feared that he was scouting for weaknesses as the Banu Qurayza had gone to war and cut the fort's communications with Muhammad. She told the fort's commander Hassan of this and asked him to kill the scout, and when he refused she took a club and went out and beat the man to death.<ref>Ibn Ishaq, Alfred Guillaume (translator), The life of Muhammad, p. 458</ref>


According to the traditional narrative the [[Qur'an]] refers to this incident in [[Surah]] 33:
The sequence of events that Ibn Ishaq goes on to describe differs considerably from Musa's narrative. While Muhammad and his men continued to endure the siege, Nuʿaym ibn Masʿūd, a member of the Ghatafan who had secretly become Muslim, came to Muhammad, who sends him to sow distrust among the enemy, "for war is deceit". In Ibn Ishaq's version, it is now that the confederate hostages idea is first raised, as a suggestion by Nuʿaym to the Banu Qurayza, which they embrace as a prerequisite to joining the fight against Muhammad (this contradicts the scout story in which they are already active).<ref>Ibid. pp. 458-9</ref> In Mūsā ibn ʿUqba's account, as mentioned above, this had been the Banu Qurayza's own proposal before the siege got underway.
{{Quote|{{Quran-range|33|26|27}}| And He brought those of the People of the Scripture who supported them down from their strongholds, and cast panic into their hearts. Some ye slew and ye made captive some.
And He caused you to inherit their land and their houses and their wealth, and land ye have not trodden. Allah is Able to do all things }}


{{Quote|1=[http://www.tafsir.com/default.asp?sid=33&tid=41359 Tafsir Ibn Kathir (Quran 33:10) - The Campaign of the Confederates (Al-Ahzab)]|2=Ibn Jarir said: "Some of those who were with the Messenger of Allah , had doubts and thought that the outcome would be against the believers, and that Allah would allow that to happen."}}
Ibn Ishaq reports that Nuʿaym then (or as his sole act in the version reported by Musa, having reported to Muhammad what he had learned of Banu Qurayza's offer) tricked the Quraysh leader Abu Sufyan that the Banu Qurayza had switched sides again and would request hostages only in order to betray them. According to Ibn Ishaq this led Abu Sufyan to send a message to the Banu Qurayza, who do indeed make the request as a condition of joining the fight. Thus Nuʿaym's trickery of them both plays out perfectly.  


Mūsā ibn ʿUqba had placed Abu Sufyan's message and the reply in an earlier context, following the initial siege period, and with another, more important difference. He reports from al-Zuhri that the Banu Qurayza make this offer on their own initiative after the same message to them from Abu Sufyan, and that the offer is only that they would not hold him back so long as hostages are provided, i.e. they do not offer to actively join the fight.<ref>Mūsā ibn Uqba, Kitāb al-Maghāzī translated by Imam Ghazali Publishing, p. 108</ref>


{{Quote|1=[http://www.tafsir.com/default.asp?sid=33&tid=41539 Tafsir Ibn Kathir - The Campaign against Banu Qurayzah]|2=...the Messenger of Allah returned to Al-Madinah in triumph and the people put down their weapons. While the Messenger of Allah was washing off the dust of battle in the house of Umm Salamah, may Allah be pleased with her, Jibril, upon him be peace, came to him wearing a turban of brocade, riding on a mule on which was a cloth of silk brocade. He said, "Have you put down your weapons, O Messenger of Allah" He said, "Yes" He said, "But the angels have not put down their weapons. I have just now come back from pursuing the people." Then he said: "Allah, may He be blessed and exalted, commands you to get up and go to Banu Quraiza. According to another report, "What a fighter you are! Have you put down your weapons" He said, "Yes". He said, "But we have not put down our weapons yet, get up and go to these people." He said: "Where?" He said, "Banu Quraiza, for Allah has commanded me to shake them." So the Messenger of Allah got up immediately, and commanded the people to march towards Banu Quraiza, who were a few miles from Al-Madinah. This was after Salat Az-Zuhr. He said, No one among you should pray `Asr except at Banu Quraiza.}}
In either version, Nuʿaym's efforts (whether he had tricked one or both parties) had successfully sown distrust between the confederates and the Banu Qurayza. A bitter wind had also overturned the tents and pots of the confederate camp (see {{Quran|33|9}}). All of this led Abu Sufyan to order the departure of his men, and their Ghatafan allies likewise abandoned the siege the next morning.<ref>Ibn Ishaq, Alfred Guillaume (translator), The life of Muhammad, pp. 459-60</ref><BR/><ref>Mūsā ibn Uqba, Kitāb al-Maghāzī translated by Imam Ghazali Publishing, p. 108-11</ref>


According to Ibn Kathir:
From the above it can be said that while both Ibn Ishaq and Musa's versions have the Banu Qurayza refusing to honour their agreement, the only evidence provided by Ibn Ishaq that they actively aided the confederates or plotted to do so is the scouting report and the story of Nuʿaym enticing them (which contradicts the former, as mentioned above). Musa's version reports a more active role, with the Banu Qurayza proposing before the siege begins to join the fight on receipt of confederate hostages as a guarantee, though he also includes the report from al-Zuhri in which the Banu Qurayza only offer not to hold Abu Sufyan back with the same hostage condition.


{{Quote|1=[http://www.tafsir.com/default.asp?sid=33&tid=41539 Tafsir Ibn Kathir - The Campaign against Banu Qurayzah]|2=Then the Messenger of Allah commanded that ditches should be dug, so they were dug in the earth, and they were brought tied by their shoulders, and were beheaded. There were between seven hundred and eight hundred of them. The children who had not yet reached adolescence and the women were taken prisoner, and their wealth was seized.}}
===Siege of the Banu Qurayza===
The battle of the trench being won, Muhammad and his men put their weapons down to head home. According to the sirah, though, Allah had other plans. The angel [[Jibreel]] appeared to Muhammad just as he had put down his weapon, and commanded him to march on the Jews of the Banu Qurayzah. The Muslims laid them under siege for differing amounts of time depending on the source (Ibn Ishaq claims 25 days before "Allah cast terror in their hearts"). The Banu Qurayzah were told to surrender and accept Islam, something they swore they would never do. Despairing of their position, they discussed three options according to Ibn Ishaq (though Musa b. Uqba omits this element): accepting Islam, killing their wives and children and engaging in a banzai-style attack against the numerically superior Muslim forces (perhaps, modern commentators have added, in emulation of their religious forbearers at Masada in Palestine), or engaging in a sneak attack on the Jewish Sabbath. The Jews of the Banu Qurayzah found none of these options acceptable.


==Accounts in Hadiths==
Unable to come to a decision and under siege for weeks, the Banu Qurayzah asked to speak with Abu Lubaba, a man of the tribe of 'Aws, their allies. Abu Lubaba, when asked what the Banu Qurayzah should do, advised them to surrender to the prophet, but at the same time raised his hand to his neck, indicating they would be slaughtered.<ref>ibid, 462</ref> After he left, he felt that his action in telling the Banu Qurayzah of their fate was a betrayal of the prophet, and he tied himself to a pillar to ask for Allah's forgiveness, an act that Muhammad approved of. Despite this warning, the Banu Qurayzah surrendered to the Muslims the following day.<ref>ibid, 463</ref>


===The decision on their fate===
Ibn Ishaq reports that the tribe of 'Aws, allies of the Banu Qurayzah from the time of jahilliyah, asked for mercy for them from the prophet. The prophet, not wanting to cause dissension in his ranks (oaths and alliances of loyalty were very important in tribal Arab society, as in the absence of courts and established governments the only guaranty of security and justice which could be obtained was the promise of protection from allies in the case of murder, family feuds or war), entrusted the fate of the Banu Qurayzah to a trusted elder shaykh of the 'Aws, Sa‘d bin Mu‘adh, who had been mortally wounded during the battle and would in fact die shortly after the slaughter of the Banu Qurayza.  In Musa b. Uqbah's version, it is the Banu Qurayza themselves who choose Sa'd to determine their fate.<ref>Mūsā ibn Uqba, Kitāb al-Maghāzī translated by Imam Ghazali Publishing, p. 114</ref>. Once Sa'd bin Mu'adh had ascertained that both the Banu Qurayzah and the prophet would abide by his judgement, whatever it be, he gave it without hesitation: the men of the Banu Qurayzah were to be executed to the last, their property divided, while the women and children should be taken as captives.


Some authors assert that Sa'd bin Mu‘adh justified this decision as being from the Torah of the Jews itself. Some of them point to Deuteronomy 20:12-14 which reads as follows:{{Quote|Deuteronomy 20:12-14|וְאִם  לֹ֤א  תַשְׁלִים֙ עִמָּ֔ךְ  וְעָשְׂתָ֥ה  עִמְּךָ֖ מִלְחָמָ֑ה  וְצַרְתָּ֖  עָלֶֽיהָ וּנְתָנָ֛הּ  יְהוָ֥ה אֱלֹהֶ֖יךָ  בְּיָדֶ֑ךָ  וְהִכִּיתָ֥ אֶת  כָּל  זְכוּרָ֖הּ לְפִי  חָֽרֶב  רַ֣ק  הַ֠נָּשִׁים  וְהַטַּ֨ף וְהַבְּהֵמָ֜ה  וְכֹל֩  אֲשֶׁ֨ר יִהְיֶ֥ה  בָעִ֛יר  כָּל־  שְׁלָלָ֖הּ  תָּבֹ֣ז לָ֑ךְ  וְאָֽכַלְתָּ֙  אֶת  שְׁלַ֣ל  אֹיְבֶ֔יךָ אֲשֶׁ֥ר  נָתַ֛ן  יְהוָ֥ה אֱלֹהֶ֖יךָ  לָֽךְ


{{Quote| {{Bukhari|4|52|68}}| Narrated 'Aisha: When Allah's Apostle returned on the day (of the battle) of Al-Khandaq (i.e. Trench), he put down his arms and took a bath. Then Gabriel whose head was covered with dust, came to him saying, "You have put down your arms! By Allah, I have not put down my arms yet." Allah's Apostle said, "Where (to go now)?" Gabriel said, "This way," pointing towards the tribe of Banu Qurayza. So Allah's Apostle went out towards them.}}
But if the city makes no peace with you, but makes war against you, then you shall besiege it; and when the Lord your God gives it into your hand you shall put all its males to the sword, but the women and the little ones, the cattle, and everything else in the city, all its spoil, you shall take as booty for yourselves; and you shall enjoy the spoil of your enemies, which the Lord your God has given you.}}


It is evident from this account, that Muhammad and his followers were relaxed and reclining after the withdrawal of Meccan troops. The campaign against the Banu Qurayza was not on their agenda until the angel Jibreel ([[Gabriel]]) appeared with Allah's orders. It also reveal the fact that the tribe of Banu Qurayza did not do anything atrocious to Muslims during the siege at Khandaq while the Meccan army were stranded at the trenches. Sources say the siege lasted for almost a month, but ultimately the Meccans departed without a fight. It was not possible for them to engage in battle, as the trenches were a new tactic that they had never expected from Muhammad's side. Still they waited for a green light from the Banu Qurayza stronghold, as that was the only route to enter in which they could reach the Muslims, a green light which never appeared. Eventually losing all hope of crossing and engaging in a full-scale war which would have resulted in wiping all Muslims from the face of the earth, the Meccans retreated.
Although modern Muslims cite this verse in justification of Mu'adh's verdict, no primary source says explicitly that Sa'd based his verdict on the Torah. In addition, it should be noted that neither Jewish nor Christian tradition understands this verse as a blanket rule for warfare, but rather as a specific command to the Jews under the command of Joshua who were fighting the pagan peoples of the Holy Land. It has not, generally, been used by either religion to justify the sort of massacre that took place in Medina in other historical contexts.


Once the enemy had left, it was time for the Muslims to lay down their arms and relax, but not so for Muhammad. He felt it inadequate to regress without any gains. Whenever he fought a war prior to it, he and his followers emerged victorious and victory brought them booties in means of materials and human beings. Uhud was the only exception. This time, though they had survived, there was something still lacking; booty. The Meccan's resignation left them without any.
===The massacre and division of captives and property===
Musa b. Uqba is very brief on what happened next: "So, the Messenger of Allah had their fighters executed, and there were, they say, six hundred of them. They were killed at the house of Abū Jahm in Balāṭ – which was not [known as Balāṭ] at that time – and they say that their blood reached Aḥjār al-Zayt in the market. He took their women and children as prisoners of war and had their wealth divided amongst the Muslims who were present." He goes on to describe the beheading of Huyayy who had convinced the Banu Qurayza to abandon their agreement with Muhammad before the battle.<ref>Ibid. p. 114-5</ref>


It was time for Jibreel to show up. Muhammad needed war booty to satisfy himself and his followers. A small fraction stationed in a castle nearby would make an easy target to acquire these means of satisfaction. So Jibreel appears with orders from Allah. "No Muhammad, you laid arms without meeting the objective." And the prime objective here is slaughter, then the acquisition of booty through this means.
Ibn Ishaq's account of this incident has a little more detail, including the execution method.<ref>Ibn Ishaq, Alfred Guillaume (translator), The life of Muhammad, p. 464</ref> He additionally includes three poems attributed to Hassan b. Thabit which mention the slaying of the Banu Qurayza for treachery.<ref>Ibid. pp. 479-81</ref>. In this account, the prisoners, thus condemned, were kept in the house or compound of a Muslim woman d. Al-Hārith of the Banu al-Najjār tribe. In the morning the men were marched in batches to Muhammad and were executed by decapitation over trenches which had been dug in the city's market. He says there were 600 to 700 in all, though some said as high as 800 to 900. Ibn Ishaq includes a report from Aisha that one woman was amongst them. He includes various other narrations about individuals, including a survivor, Atiyyah al-Qurazi, who was spared because he was not yet an adult and only adults were killed.<ref>Ibid. pp. 465-6</ref> The other women, the children and property were divided among the Muslims, with a horseman receiving 3 times the spoils of a foot soldier. The haul of weapons and plunder was substantial, but Muhammad still sent some of the women and children to be sold in the Najd for more horses and weapons.<ref>Ibid, p. 466</ref> Muhammad as was custom received his fifth share of the loot including his pick of the females, a beautiful Jewish woman named Rayhana whose husband was decapitated, and the rest went to all the rest of the Muslims.<ref>Ibid, p. 466</ref>


If Banu Quraiza were in fact treacherous, Muhammad and the religion of Islam would have been buried in those trenches they had dug. That did not happen and Muhammad's fellow warriors did not feel any need to carry on. They were not aware of any alleged treachery, for this reason they reclined once the Meccans had left. All that changed, once Muhammad intervened with the aid of Jibreel and Allah. This proves the alleged treason is nothing but a made up excuse or a pretext Muslims use in our period to justify genocide.  
==Accounts in Hadiths==
Hadiths collected by al-Bukhari include many of the elements which feature in the sira literature. This includes a narration that the angels commanded Muhammad to take the war to the Banu Qurayza:{{Quote| {{Bukhari|||2813|darussalam}}| Narrated 'Aisha: When Allah's Apostle returned on the day (of the battle) of Al-Khandaq (i.e. Trench), he put down his arms and took a bath. Then Gabriel whose head was covered with dust, came to him saying, "You have put down your arms! By Allah, I have not put down my arms yet." Allah's Apostle said, "Where (to go now)?" Gabriel said, "This way," pointing towards the tribe of Banu Qurayza. So Allah's Apostle went out towards them.}}


Later, the warriors of Islam besieged a weak tribe for almost a month until they surrendered; ''Not'' fighting, but enduring. The siege ended with the unconditional surrender of Jews. Now the fate of the surrendered tribe lay in the hands of Muhammad.
Similiarly, the following narration has the account of Sa'd condemning them to their fate:{{Quote| {{Bukhari|||3804|darussalam}}| Narrated Abu Said Al-Khudri: Some people (i.e. the Jews of Bani bin Quraiza) agreed to accept the verdict of Sad bin Muadh so the Prophet sent for him (i.e. Sad bin Muadh). He came riding a donkey, and when he approached the Mosque, the Prophet ﷺ said, "Get up for the best amongst you." or said, "Get up for your chief." Then the Prophet ﷺ said, "O Sad! These people have agreed to accept your verdict." Sad said, "I judge that their warriors should be killed and their children and women should be taken as captives." The Prophet ﷺ said, "You have given a judgment similar to Allah's Judgment (or the King's judgment)."}}


To recount what happened to the then subjugated tribe who were on their knees to Muhammad and his fellow warriors, let us see the details as provided in Muhammad Husayn Haykal's ''The life of Muhammad'':
Incidentally, another hadith narrates, like in the sira accounts, that after Sa'd was called upon to provide a fair judgement to the Banu Qurayza as a former ally, he succumbed to mortal wounds suffered during the battle of the trench, wishing for death to the infidels:{{Quote| {{Bukhari|||4122|darussalam}}| Sa`d was wounded on the day of Khandaq (i.e. Trench) when a man from Quraish, called Hibban bin Al-`Araqa hit him (with an arrow). The man was Hibban bin Qais from (the tribe of) Bani Mais bin 'Amir bin Lu'ai who shot an arrow at Sa`d's medial arm vein (or main artery of the arm). The Prophet (ﷺ) pitched a tent (for Sa`d) in the Mosque so that he might be near to the Prophet (ﷺ) to visit. When the Prophet returned from the (battle) of Al-Khandaq (i.e. Trench) and laid down his arms and took a bath Gabriel came to him while he (i.e. Gabriel) was shaking the dust off his head, and said, "You have laid down the arms?" By Allah, I have not laid them down. Go out to them (to attack them)." The Prophet (ﷺ) said, "Where?" Gabriel pointed towards Bani Quraiza. So Allah's Messenger (ﷺ) went to them (i.e. Banu Quraiza) (i.e. besieged them). They then surrendered to the Prophet's judgment but he directed them to Sa`d to give his verdict concerning them. Sa`d said, "I give my judgment that their warriors should be killed, their women and children should be taken as captives, and their properties distributed." Narrated Hisham: My father informed me that `Aisha said, "Sa`d said, "O Allah! You know that there is nothing more beloved to me than to fight in Your Cause against those who disbelieved Your Apostle and turned him out (of Mecca). O Allah! I think you have put to an end the fight between us and them (i.e. Quraish infidels). And if there still remains any fight with the Quraish (infidels), then keep me alive till I fight against them for Your Sake. But if you have brought the war to an end, then let this wound burst and cause my death thereby.' So blood gushed from the wound. There was a tent in the Mosque belonging to Banu Ghifar who were surprised by the blood flowing towards them. They said, 'O people of the tent! What is this thing which is coming to us from your side?' Behold! Blood was flowing profusely out of Sa`d's wound. Sa`d then died because of that."}}


{{Quote|1=[http://books.google.com/books?id=fOyO-TSo5nEC&printsec=frontcover&source=gbs_navlinks_s#v=onepage&q=&f=false Muhammad Husayn Haykal - The Life of Muhammad. (p. 337)]|2=Banu Qurayzah sent word to Muhammad proposing to evacuate their territory and remove themselves to Adhri'at, but Muhammad rejected their proposal and insisted on their abiding by his judgment. They sent to al-Aws pleading that they should help them as al-Khazraj had helped their client Jews before them. A group of al-Aws tribesmen sought Muhammad and pleaded with him to accept from their allies a similar arrangement to that which he accepted from the allies of al-Khazraj. Muhammad asked, "O men of al-Aws, would you be happy if we allowed one of your men to arbitrate the case?" When they agreed, he asked them to nominate whomsoever they wished. This was communicated to the Jews, and the latter, unmindful of the fate that was lying in store for them, nominated Sa'd ibn Mu'adh. Sa'd was a reputable man of al-Aws tribe, respected for his sound judgment. Previously, Sa'd was the first one to approach the Jews, to warn them adequately, even to predict to them that they might have to face Muhammad one day. He had witnessed the Jews cursing Muhammad and the Muslims. After his nomination and acceptance as arbitrator, Sa'd sought guarantees from the two parties that they would abide by his judgment. After these guarantees were secured, he commanded that Banu Qurayzah come out of their fortress and surrender their armour. Sa'd then pronounced his verdict that the fighting men be put to the sword, that their wealth be confiscated as war booty, and that the women and the children be taken as captives. When Muhammad heard the verdict, he said: "By Him Who dominates my soul, God is pleased with your judgment, 0 Sa'd; and so are the believers. You have surely done your duty." He then proceeded to Madinah where he commanded a large grave to be dug for the Jewish fighters brought in to be killed and buried.<ref>Haykal, Muhammad Husayn (Author). Al-Faruqi, Ismail Raji (Translator). (2002). ''The Life of Muhammad''. (p. 337). Selangor, Malaysia: Islamic Book Trust.</ref>}}
Bukhari also has this narration on the fate of the Banu Qurayza, carried out in accordance with Sa'd's judgement:
{{Quote|{{Bukhari|||4028|darussalam}}, See Also: {{Muslim||1766a|reference}}|Narrated Abd-Allah ibn Umar: Banu Nadir and Banu Qurayza fought (against the Prophet violating their peace treaty), so the Prophet exiled Bani An-Nadir and allowed Bani Quraiza to remain at their places (in Medina) taking nothing from them till they fought against the Prophet again). He then killed their men and distributed their women, children and property among the Muslims, but some of them came to the Prophet and he granted them safety, and they embraced Islam. He exiled all the Jews from Medina. They were the Jews of Banu Qaynuqa, the tribe of Abdullah bin Salam and the Jews of Bani Haritha and all the other Jews of Medina. }}


Ibn Ishaq describes the killing of the Banu Qurayza men as follows:
A hadith in Sunan Abi Dawud tells us that signs of puberty determined whether or not a male youth would be spared. This narration from the same survivor is also reported in Ibn Ishaq as mentioned at the end of the Sira section above, though the translation there has the word "adult" instead of "had begun to grow hair":{{Quote| {{Abu Dawud||4404|darussalam}}| Narrated Atiyyah al-Qurazi:
{{quote|Ibn Ishaq|Then they surrendered, and the apostle confined them in Medina in the quarter of d. al-Harith, a woman of B. al-Najjar. Then the apostle went out to the market of Medina (which is still its market today) and dug trenches in it. Then he sent for them and struck off their heads in those trenches as they were brought out to him in batches. Among them was the enemy of Allah Huyayy b. Akhtab and Ka`b b. Asad their chief. There were 600 or 700 in all, though some put the figure as high as 800 or 900. As they were being taken out in batches to the apostle they asked Ka`b what he thought would be done with them. He replied, 'Will you never understand? Don't you see that the summoner never stops and those who are taken away do not return? By Allah it is death!' This went on until the apostle made an end of them. Huyayy was brought out wearing a flowered robe in which he had made holes about the size of the finger-tips in every part so that it should not be taken from him as spoil, with his hands bound to his neck by a rope. When he saw the apostle he said, 'By God, I do not blame myself for opposing you, but he who forsakes God will be forsaken.' Then he went to the men and said, 'God's command is right. A book and a decree, and massacre have been written against the Sons of Israel.' Then he sat down and his head was struck off.<ref name="Guillaume463">Guillaume, Alfred, ''The Life of Muhammad: A Translation of Ibn Ishaq's Sirat Rasul Allah''. Oxford University Press, 1955. ISBN 0-1963-6033-1; p. 461-464.</ref><ref name="Peters223">Peters, ''Muhammad and the Origins of Islam'', p. 222-224.</ref><ref>Norman Stillman, ''The Jews of Arab Lands: A History and Source Book''. Philadelphia: Jewish Publication Society of America, 1979. ISBN 0-8276-0198-0; p. 141f.</ref>}}


I was among the captives of Banu Qurayza. They (the Companions) examined us, and those who had begun to grow hair (pubes) were killed, and those who had not were not killed. I was among those who had not grown hair.}}


It is worth mentioning here, not all were lucky enough to be beheaded among Banu Quraiza. Those whose lives were spared had a worse fate awaiting them. Again from Haykal:
==Tafsir commentary==
The famed [[tafsir|mufassir]] Ibn Kathir in his commentary on sura 33 Al-Ahzab الأحزاب  "The Confederates" draws on pertinent details from the narrative, particularly the anti-Jewish elements. Like other commentators, he reads into the Quran's denouncement of the people of the book the perfidious Jews of the tribe of Banu Qurayzah and their betrayal of the prophet:
{{Quote|Tafsir of Ibn Kathir Qur'an Surah 33


{{Quote|1=[http://books.google.com/books?id=fOyO-TSo5nEC&printsec=frontcover&source=gbs_navlinks_s#v=onepage&q=&f=false Muhammad Husayn Haykal - The Life of Muhammad. (p. 338)]|2=The Prophet divided the properties, women, and children of Banu Quraiza among the Muslims after he had separated one-fifth for public purposes. Each man of the cavalry received two shares, one for himself and one for his horse. On that day, the Muslim force included thirty-six cavalrymen. Sa'd ibn Zayd al Ansari sent a number of Banu Qurayza captives to Najd where he exchanged them for horses and armour in order to increase Muslim military power.<ref>Haykal, Muhammad Husayn (Author). Al-Faruqi, Ismail Raji (Translator). (2002). ''The Life of Muhammad''. (p. 338). Selangor, Malaysia: Islamic Book Trust.</ref>}}
|وَلِهَذَا قَالَ تَعَالَى: ﴿وَأَنزلَ الَّذِينَ ظَاهَرُوهُمْ﴾ أَيْ: عَاوَنُوا الْأَحْزَابَ وَسَاعَدُوهُمْ عَلَى حَرْبِ رَسُولِ اللَّهِ ﷺ ﴿مِنْ أَهْلِ الْكِتَابِ﴾ يَعْنِي: بَنِي قُرَيْظَةَ مِنَ الْيَهُودِ، مِنْ بَعْضِ أَسْبَاطِ بَنِي إِسْرَائِيلَ، كَانَ قَدْ نَزَلَ آبَاؤُهُمُ الْحِجَازَ قَدِيمًا، طَمَعًا فِي اتِّبَاعِ النَّبِيَّ الْأُمِّيَّ الذِي يَجِدُونَهُ مَكْتُوبًا عِنْدَهُمْ فِي التَّوْرَاةِ وَالْإِنْجِيلِ، ﴿فَلَمَّا جَاءَهُمْ مَا عَرَفُوا كَفَرُوا بِه﴾ [الْبَقَرَةِ: ٨٩] ، فَعَلَيْهِمْ لَعْنَةُ اللَّهِ.


For thus the most-High said "Those how had backed them (the confederates) came down" meaning: they assisted the confederates and helped them to make war on the Apostle of God (sala allah 'aleyhi wasallam). "From the people of the book" that is to say the Banu Qurayza of the Jews, descendants of the sons of Israel, who had come down to the Hijaz in olden times, doing so (aiding the Meccans) greedily against the followers of the illiterate prophet (Muhammad) whom they found written about in the Torah and the Gospel "when he came to them they did not know him and disbelieved in him" (surah al-baqarah 89) }}He refers here to [[Surah]] 33:{{Quote|{{Quran-range|33|26|27}}| And He brought those of the People of the Scripture who supported them down from their strongholds, and cast panic into their hearts. Some ye slew and ye made captive some.


==Modern Views and Perspectives==
And He caused you to inherit their land and their houses and their wealth, and land ye have not trodden. Allah is Able to do all things }}
 
The most common Muslim argument is that Muhammad was dealing with treachery and he had taken the maximum punitive actions against it. But this alleged treachery on Banu Qurayza’s part is very hard to accept for a rational mind. To be treacherous, Banu Qurayza must have joined the confederate army who had come to attack the Muslims. If that were the case (had Banu Qurayza joined the Meccan army) it would have ended in the total eradication of Muslims. But Abu Sufyan's (the Meccan chief’s) words before retreating, testifies Banu Qurayza did not ally with the Meccans in a war against the Muslims. To quote Ibn Ishaq:
 
{{Quote| Ibn Ishaq: 683 | Then Abu Sufyan said: “O Quraish, we are not in a permanent camp; the horses and camels are dying; the Banu Qurayza have broken their word to us and we have heard disquieting reports of them. You can see the violence of the wind which leaves us neither cooking-pots, or fire, nor tents to count on. Be off, for I am going” }}


Besides, Muhammad nor his followers accused the Banu Qurayza of being treasonous. After Meccans left, the prophet had to bring Jibreel down to 'testify' that any such thing had taken place, before they even considered besieging the tribe. This attests to the fact there was no treason from the tribe that warranted their total annihilation. The account given in the Qur'an of the Banu Qurayza siding with the Muslims’ enemy at Khandaq is ''after'' the incidents occurred, not during it. Muhammad would have felt it necessary to give a reason to justify the annihilation of an entire Jewish tribe, so he came up with holy verses later.
Ibn Kathir includes the narration that it was the angels themselves who implored Muhammad not to stop fighting. Thus Ibn Kathir emphasises that the fate of the Banu Qurayzah was the work of their own hand, a fate approved of and commanded by heaven itself. This is further underlined when he includes Muhammad's response to Sa'd's judgement upon them from the sira narratives:{{Quote| Tafsir Ibn Kathir on Surah 33|2=فَقَالَ: إِنِّي أَحْكُمُ أَنْ تُقْتَلَ مُقَاتلتهم، وتُسبْى ذُرِّيَّتُهُمْ وَأَمْوَالُهُمْ. فَقَالَ لَهُ رَسُولُ اللَّهِ ﷺ: "لَقَدْ حَكَمْتَ بِحُكْمِ اللَّهِ مِنْ فَوْقِ سَبْعَةِ أَرْقِعَةٍ"(٨) . وَفِي رِوَايَةٍ: "لَقَدْ حكمتَ بِحُكْمِ المَلك". ثُمَّ أَمْرَ رَسُولِ اللَّهِ ﷺ بِالْأَخَادِيدِ فَخُدّت فِي الْأَرْضِ، وَجِيءَ بِهِمْ مُكْتَفِينَ، فَضَرَبَ أَعْنَاقَهُمْ، وَكَانُوا مَا بَيْنَ السَّبْعِمِائَةِ إِلَى الثَّمَانِمِائَةِ، وَسَبَى مَنْ لَمْ يُنبت مِنْهُمْ مَعَ النِّسَاءِ وَأَمْوَالِهِمْ(٩)


Another argument often brought up by Muslims is “Banu Qurayza were given the choice of deciding their judge”. They argue Banu Qurayza were massacred because of Sad bin Muadh, the arbitrator they agreed to. So Muhammad is innocent of shedding their blood.
Then he (Sa'ad) said: My judgement is that their fighting-age men be killed, and their families and wealth be taken as booty. The prophet (sala allah 'aleyhi wasallam) said "You have judged with the judgement of Allah above the seven heavens." In another narration: "You have judged with the judgement of the King (Allah)." Then the Messenger of Allah commanded that ditches should be dug, so they were dug in the earth, and they were brought tied by their shoulders, and were beheaded. There were between seven hundred and eight hundred of them. The children who had not yet reached adolescence and the women were taken prisoner, and their wealth was seized.}}


This argument is not without its problems:


First of all, it is not clear from Islamic sources whether it were Banu Qurayza or their allies, the tribe of “Aws”, who agreed to Sad bin Muadh being the judge. The sahih hadith in Bukhari below points to this fact:
==Modern apologetic views and perspectives==
<center><youtube>UZE1N56fswY</youtube></center>In the clip above Muslim scholar Yasir Qadhi, well respected for his degrees from the Islamic University of Medina as well as from Yale, makes the argument that Muhammad was dealing with treachery and he had taken the maximum punitive actions against it. Qadhi argues that the prophet was justified in every step and showed as much restraint as necessary, being motivated purely by concerns on statecraft and practicality, not by malice. As he says, it is possible to accuse the prophet of being "harsh" but not of acting with malice towards the Banu Qurayza or the Jews in general, as this would not be "academically valid." Yasir Qadhi states that the punishment was "harsh" and yet it is sometimes necessary to be harsh. Yaqeen institute scholar Abu Amina Elias (Justin Parrott) makes the cases that killing the "fighting men" prisoners of the Banu Qurayzah was an "act of self-defense" on the part of the Muslim community and cites Deuteronomy 20:12-14 to justify the actions of the Muslims. He also claims that the prophet only sent his men with their arms to "defend themselves" and that the women and children of the Banu Qurayzah were taken "into captivity" for their protection since all of their men folk had been slaughtered.<ref>"Did the Prophet commit genocide against Jews?" Faith in Allah There is no god but Allah and Muhammad is his messenger https://abuaminaelias.com/prophet-genocide-banu-qurayza/  April 8, 2013</ref> Karen Armstrong, in her book A Short History of Islam, likewise claims  "The struggle did not indicate any hostility towards Jews in general, but only towards the three rebel tribes. The Quran continued to revere Jewish prophets and to urge Muslims to respect the People of the Book."<ref>Islam:A Short History Karen Armstrong Modern Library 2002</ref>


{{Quote| {{Bukhari|5|58|148}}| Narrated Abu Said Al-Khudri: Some people (i.e. the Jews of Bani bin quraiza) agreed to accept the verdict of Sad bin Muadh so the Prophet sent for him (i.e. Sad bin Muadh). He came riding a donkey, and when he approached the Mosque, the Prophet said, "Get up for the best amongst you." or said, "Get up for your chief." Then the Prophet said, "O Sad! These people have agreed to accept your verdict." Sad said, "I judge that their warriors should be killed and their children and women should be taken as captives." The Prophet said, "You have given a judgment similar to Allah's Judgment (or the King's judgment)."}}
These arguments echo the motivations of much of the source material above. Ibn Ishaq implies that the Jews of Banu Qurayzah posed a threat to the Muslims via their betrayal and does portray Muhammad as hesitating to decide their fate (even though Abu Lubaba seems to already know of it before Sa'd was appointed to judge them). Ibn Ishaq recounts how "harsh" the punishment was:{{Quote|{{citation|page=462 (paragraph: 686)|trans_title=The Life of Muhammad|title=Sirat Rasul Allah|author1=Ibn Ishaq|author2=Ibn Hisham|author3=al-Tabari|editor=A. Guillaume|year=1955|publisher=Oxford UP|ISBN=0196360331|location=Karachi|url=https://archive.org/details/GuillaumeATheLifeOfMuhammad/page/n381/mode/2up}}|Apostle sent him (Abu Lubaba) to them (Banu Quraiza), and when they saw him they got up to meet him. The women and children went up to him weeping in his face, and he felt sorry for them. They said, ‘Oh Abu Lubaba, do you think that we should submit to Muhammad's judgement? He said ‘yes' and pointed with his hand to his throat signifying slaughter.}}Yet critics of these pro-Islam viewpoints have pointed out that Sa'd did not explicitly say he based his verdict on the Torah and the verse cited by modern Muslims from Deuteronomy to justify the extermination of the Banu Qurayzah was not viewed in this way by traditional Christian or especially Jewish scholarship. According to Jewish doctrine, these verses were revealed to Moses before the Israelites entered the Holy Land, specifically instructing them on how to deal with the people living there.<ref>"Muhammad’s atrocity against the Qurayza Jews" James M. Arlandson Answering Islam https://www.answering-islam.org/Authors/Arlandson/qurayza_jews.htm</ref> Morever, the claim that there was no apparent animus towards the Jews of Banu Qurayza on the part of Muhammad is contradicted by Ibn Ishaq's account:{{Quote|Ibn Ishaq's ''Sira'' (english translation by Guillaume) p. 461; see also Musa b. Uqbah, ''Kitab al-Maghazi'' (english translation by Imam Ghazali publishing) p. 113| "When the apostle approached their forts he [Muhammad] said: "You brothers of monkeys, has God disgraced you and brought his vengeance upon you?"


In the USC translation, "Jews of Banu Qurayza" has been given in brackets when mentioning the people agreed to accept Sad bin Muadh’s verdict. But the original Sahih Bukhari hadith in Arabic does not have this. So, it is most probably the tribe of Aus were who agreed to accept the verdict of Sa’d, not the Banu Qurayza. It does not make any sense for a subjugated people like the Banu Qurayza who were on their knees at the time to be given a choice in selecting their judge. So, the evidence we have available is against the Muslims claim that the surrendered Banu Qurayza tribe were given a choice in the case of adjudicator.
Banu Qurayza replied: "O Abu'l-Qasim [Muhammad], you are not a barbarous person" }}


Moreover, even if one accepts the Muslim arguments that the Banu Qurayza were given a choice in selecting their judge, it does not let Muhammad off the hook. A careful analysis of the sahih hadiths on this account reveals Saad bin Muadh was just echoing Muhammad’s intention as his verdict. Soon after Saad bin Muad gave his verdict, Muhammad rushed to applaud him stating Saad's judged was in accordance with the judgement of Allah. Again from Sahih Bukhari:
In mocking them as apes, Muhammad is here echoing the Qur'an, which claims that (some) Jews were turned into apes for violating the sabbath ({{Quran|50|60}}).
Ibn Ishaq also records that Muhammad took one of the Jewish women of the Banu Qurayza, Rayhanah, for himself.<ref>"The Apostle had chosen one of the women for himself, Rayḥāna d. ʿAmr b. Khunāfa, one of the women of B. ʿAmr b. Qurayẓa, and she remained with him until she died, in his power."<BR />Ibn Hisham, Ibn Ishaq, Alfred Guillaume (translator), The life of Muhammad: a translation of Isḥāq's Sīrat rasūl Allāh Oxford Universite Press 2005, p.466</ref> Indeed, according to this account the destruction of this tribe allowed Muhammad to reward his fighters handsomely (and Muhammad himself took a fifth of the booty). Abu Amina Elias's view that the Muslims took such women and children as Rayhana captive simply for their protection is also inconsistent with the reports, as Ibn Ishaq also recounts that some of them were taken to the far-off region of the Najd to be sold for weapons and horses. Yasir Qadhi himself points out that the Banu Qurayzah were offered freedom to live on were they to accept Islam, and according to the sirah only their hard, petulant hearts which rejected Muhammad despite knowing he was a prophet prevented them from allowing themselves to be saved by conversion to Islam. In this way the sirah portrays their Jewish religion as leading to the pitilessness way with which Muhammad dealt with them, which in addition to the apes insult, critics may argue goes against Qadhi's point that the prophet acted without malice or religious animus according to the sources we have. Bukhari also collected a hadith that the prophet commanded his men to abuse the Banu Qurayzah with poetry, which was in ancient Arab times one of the premier ways of promoting enmity with an enemy (Muhammad ordered poets who did this to him to be killed):{{Quote| {{Bukhari|||4123|darussalam}}|Narrated Al-Bara: "On the day of Qurayza’s (besiege), Allah's Apostle said to Hassan bin Thabit, 'Abuse them (with your poems), and Gabriel is with you"}}


{{Quote|{{Bukhari|5|59|447}}|Narrated Abu Said Al-Khudri: The people of (Banu) quraiza agreed to accept the verdict of Sad bin Muadh. So the Prophet sent for Saad, and the latter came (riding) a donkey and when he approached the Mosque, the Prophet said to the Ansar, "Get up for your chief or for the best among you." Then the Prophet said (to Sad)." These have agreed to accept your verdict." Sad said, "Kill their (men) warriors and take their offspring as captives, "On that the Prophet said, "You have judged according to Allah's Judgment," or said, "according to the King's judgment."}}
==Academic views on historicity==
The narrative of the Banu Qurayzah is an accepted part of Islamic law, and early Islamic jurists closely studied and analyzed every detail when ruling on the conduct of war, such as how to conduct arbitration and executions.<ref>M. J. Kister, [https://web.archive.org/web/20250118072808if_/http://www.kister.huji.ac.il/sites/default/files/banu_qurayza.pdf The Massacre of the Banū Qurayẓa: A Re-Examination of a Tradition (archive)], Jerusalem Studies in Arabic and Islam 8 (1986), see pp. 66-74</ref> As such there is no question amongst orthodox Muslims that it happened (Islamic modernist scholars commonly doubt it). Yet the historiography of the subject is not without its own problems.


Muhammad always intended to massacre the tribe, ever before Saad bin Muadh had come into the picture. He had this plan in mind when besieging the tribe. He sent an envoy (Abu Lubaba) to the Banu Quraiza fort during the siege. Below is the account of this incident as mentioned in Sirah Ibn Ishaq:
As mentioned above, at the outline level, most academic scholars accept the tradition that {{Quran-range|33|26|27}} refers to the Banu Qurayza (with context about a confederate siege on Yathrib in verses 9-25 of the same surah). The details of the sira narratives are generally treated with greater doubt, particularly the number of men executed.


{{Quote| Ibn Ishaq: 686|Apostle sent him (Abu Lubaba) to them (Banu Quraiza), and when they saw him they got up to meet him. The women and children went up to him weeping in his face, and he felt sorry for them. They said, ‘Oh Abu Lubaba, do you think that we should submit to Muhammad's judgement? He said ‘yes' and pointed with his hand to his throat signifying slaughter.}}
A tribe of that name seems to have existed given that many al-Qurayzi names later appear as Muslim narrators or transmitters of hadiths on other topics (including Muhammad ibn Ka'b al-Qurazi, Uthman ibn Ka'b al-Qurazi, Tha'laba bin Abi Malik al-Qurazi; there is also a hadith about Rifa'ah Al-Qurazi's wife, and there is the report mentioned above from Atiyya al-Qurazi about the massacre).  


Remember, this incident occurred during the siege and Saad bin Muadh became involved in this affair after the siege. Here we see Muhammad's envoy revealing Muhammad's intentions to the Banu Quraiza. Again, we see a remorseful Abu Lubaba who later felt contrite for revealing Muhammad's plan to the besieged tribe. This man soon left the place and tied himself to one of the pillars in the mosque. Again, it is recorded in Ibn Ishaq:
===Constitution of Medina===
Nevertheless, modern academia has cast serious doubts on the scholarship of Islamic scholars working in the 8th century (2nd Islamic century) such as Ibn Ishaq. An enduring puzzle in this context is the ''Constitution of Medina''  صحيفة مدينة also known as the Ummah Document or صحيفة الأمة. As Fred Donner points, this is one of the earliest documents we have from the nascent proto-Islamic movement. This remarkable document, preserved by the Islamic historian [[Al-Tabari]], lays out a compact for the "believers" of Medina, an "ummah" or national community that includes the Jews as "believers" on the same level as the Arab believers. Fred Donner believes this document actually points to an early, occulted history of Islam in which Arab monotheists joined with Jews into one "ummah" under the command of Muhammad. Troublingly for the historical narrative, this document makes mention of many different Jewish tribes, but the main 3 tribes of the sira, the Banu Qurayza, the Banu Qaynuqaa', and the Banu Nadir are conspicuously absent. It is in fact the absence of these tribes which convinces scholars that the document must be very old despite being preserved only in the 9th-century works of Tabari, since a younger document would presumably would have been changed to agree with the established historical narrative. Donner mentions that many early 7th century mosques do not include the qibla facing towards Mecca, and concludes that this story of the massacre of the Banu Qurayzah may have been invented or embellished in order to explain a much later break between the Jewish and Muslim communities.<ref>Muhammad and the Believers: At the Orgins of Islam, Fred Donner, Harvard University Press 2010, p. 72-73</ref>


{{Quote| Ibn Ishaq: 686 | Then he (Abu Lubaba) left them and did not go to the apostle but bound himself to one of the pillars in the mosque saying ‘I will not leave this place until god forgives me for what I have done' and he promised god that he would never go to Banu Quraiza and would never be seen in a town in which he had betrayed god and his apostle }}
Patricia Crone and Michael Cook in their groundbreaking work ''Hagarism'' likewise report on an Armenian historian writing in the 7th century known as pseudo-Sebeos. This historian imputes the Arab invasions to a confederation of Jews and Arabs led by Muhammad himself, contradicting the Islamic narrative that Muhammad died before the invasion of Palestine and the Middle East. Pseudo-Sebeos likewise imputes to the Arabs and Jews a shared monotheism and brotherhood through their ancestry to Abraham and his wife Hagar.<ref>Hagarism: Making of the Islamic World, Patricia Crone and Michael Cook, Cambridge University Press 1977, p. 6-8</ref> If this account is to be believed, there could not have been any great massacre of the Jews by Muhammad as we has working with them when he invaded Palestine. Stephen Shoemaker in his work ''The Death of a Prophet'' adds further evidence to thesis of Crone and Cook, marshaling evidence from a wide variety of sources, almost all of which predate the first Islamic sources, that Muhammad himself was actually the leader of the believers when they entered Palestine and he died only after its conquest. In particular he calls attention to a Jewish apocalypse from the 7th century, the Secrets of Rabbi ben Shim'on, which seems to paint Muhammad as the redeemer of the Jews from the oppression of the Romans in the Holy Land. If this is to be believed, and this source predates every Islamic source we have, the massacre of the Banu Qurayzah could not have taken place, since Muhammad, the leader of the invasion of Palestine, was seen as a savior of the Jewish people.<ref>The Death of a Prophet, Stephen Shoemaker, University of Pennsylvania Press 2012, p. 27-33</ref> This would seem to indicate that the break between the Muslims and the Jews took place after his death, and would indicate that stories such as the massacre of the Banu Qurayzah were fabricated in order to "back date" the break with the Jews to the prophet's own lifetime.


If all that befell the Banu Qurayza were solely the fault of Saad bin Muaad, how does one deal with the account given by Ibn Ishaq? It reveals Muhammad besieged the Banu Qurayza with the intention of ethnically cleansing them.
Academic scholars who have been less skeptical of the tradition such as Michael Lecker tend to posit that the Constitution of Medina was written after the three tribes had lost their places in Medina, or that the separate agreement made by the Banu Qurayza (which they later broke according to the traditional account) is the reason why they are not named in the document. Donner similarly mentions the possiblity that there were separate agreements with the three tribes, or that their names were later removed.


Another favorite argument is the Jews of Banu Qurayza were put to death according to "their own laws" within the [[Taurat|Torah]]. Saad bin Muadh's verdict matches that which is found in [http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Deuteronomy%2020:10-18&version=KJV Deuteronomy 20:10-18] thus, Islam nor the Muslims can be blamed for it.
===Detailed analyses===
W. N. Arafat is known for giving the first academic arguments rejecting the tradition in its entirety beyond the brief statements in surah al-Azhab of the Quran, and his paper remains popular among modernist Muslims today.<ref>W. N. Arafat (1976) ''New Light on the Story of the Banu Qurayza and the Jews of Medina'', Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland 2 (1976):101</ref> It is, however, considered deeply flawed academically, due to the response from Meir J. Kister which pointed out numerous inaccuracies and false assumptions.<ref name="Kister">M. J. Kister, [https://web.archive.org/web/20250118072808if_/http://www.kister.huji.ac.il/sites/default/files/banu_qurayza.pdf The Massacre of the Banū Qurayẓa: A Re-Examination of a Tradition (archive)] ''- M. J. Kister, Jerusalem Studies in Arabic and Islam 8 (1986): 61-96</ref>


In reality, Deuteronomy 20:10-18 is not the "law of the Torah." It is a specific direction from the Judeo-Christian God for a specific program of conquest. No longer relevant, as the Promised land mentioned in the Torah had been settled. It has nothing to do with "treason," or the treatment of treasonous allies. So if Muhammad or Saad bin Muaad had indeed applied these laws to the tribe, it was the wrong application of the wrong law to the wrong situation. Being the prophet of Allah, Muhammad could have easily annulled such a faulty application of the wrong laws.  
One of Arafat's better points, and which Kister only attempts to refute with post-Quranic evidence, is that the massacre would go against Quranic principles found in other verses, particularly {{Quran|47|4}} (ransom or release prisoners) and {{Quran|35|18}} (no soul will bear another's burdens).<ref>"New Light on the Story of Banu Qurayza and the Jews of Medina", W.N Arafat 2001 p. 100-107</ref> Similar Quranic or hadith arguments of principle remain popular today among modernist Muslims who reject the tradition. This assumes that principles of war were consistently applied throughout Muhammad's career and ignores the collective condemnation the Quran throws at the Jews for their past sins.


Besides, this argument of Muslims begs the questions:
Another of Arafat's arguments is that within the Islamic tradition, Ibn Ishaq was frequently criticized for giving too much weight to Jewish stories and being biased in general in his retellings of certain events. Malik ibn Anas accusses Ibn Ishaq of being a "liar" for listening to "Jewish stories". Kister in turn observes that this reflects a later attitude of suspicion towards such sources. He also points out that the tradition about Banu Qurayza is widely reported in other early sira compilations besides Ibn Ishaq, in early tafsirs, and later in fiqh and hadith collections. He also shows that Arafat failed to present the background of the (mutual) emnity between Malik and Ibn Ishaq.<ref>Kister, pp. 76-80</ref> Professor Sean Anthony in some comments recommending Kister's response to Arafat, further points out that Malik extolled the maghazi book of Musa b. Uqba, who includes the Banu Qurayza tradition as detailed above. He also shows that Arafat falsely claimed that Ibn Hajjar rejected the tradition.<ref>[https://x.com/shahanSean/status/1739028895930736876 X.com post by Sean Anthony] - 24 December 2023. An X.com account (following him if his profile remains protected) is needed to view his chain of comments.</ref>


#Why are the Muslims now accepting the judgment of Deuteronomy [scripture which they allege is corrupt] as righteous and just when on other occasions they attack this as being a cruel and harsh command, and a clear example of genocide?
Countering some of Arafat's other claims, Kister provides many examples of jurists drawing rulings from detailed analyses of the Banu Qurayza precedent. He also points out that the treatment of the Banu Qurayza was not entirely exceptional in the tradition. Sons of Abu al Huqayq (who had become leader of the Banu Nadir in Khaybar) were tortured and killed and their women and property taken when they broke an agreement (in this case, a surrender agreement which included a requirement to disclose any hidden treasure).<ref>Kister, pp. 66-74 </ref>
#The Islamic sources say that Muhammad did not only have the fighting men killed, such as the leaders of Banu Quraiza, but also their young men who had nothing whatsoever to do with the decisions of their leaders/elders, were massacred. Why the unnecessary slaughter of innocents?


Some Muslims claim only those who were able to fight among the tribe of Banu Quraiza were killed.  According to their own sources, this is not true. How did Muhammad determine who from among the Jews were capable of fighting? See it in their sources:
Perhaps less convincingly, Kister also counters Arafat's point (which is commonly made) about the "house" where the captives were taken being too small for hundreds of prisoners. The word here in Arabic is "dar" which Kister points out often means not just a house but a compound building, which could be of considerable size including stores, workshops and even markets.<ref>Kister, p. 74, ftn 39</ref> In any case, as mentioned above, the number of men (or 'muqatil', fighting-men in some versions) killed in the execution vary widely in the sources<ref>See the list provided by Kister on p. 89, ftn 100</ref> and are not generally considered reliable.
 
{{Quote|Al-Tabari: Vol 8. (p. 38)|The Messenger of God had commanded that all of them who had reached puberty should be killed.<ref>The History of Al-Tabari: The Victory of Islam, translated by Michael. F. State University of New York Press, Albany 1997, Volume 8. page. 38 </ref>}}
 
Another source tells us exactly how it was determined, whether a person had reached puberty or not:
 
{{Quote| {{Abudawud|38|4390}}| Narrated Atiyyah al-Qurazi:
 
I was among the captives of Banu Qurayzah. They (the Companions) examined us, and those who had begun to grow hair (pubes) were killed, and those who had not were not killed. I was among those who had not grown hair.}}
 
As has been shown, Muhammad testified that Saad's verdict was in proportion to the laws of Allah. Therefore Muslims should stop attacking the Torah and instead focus on Muhammad who attested the verdict of Saad with applause.
 
As a final point, it would be interesting to learn how Muhammad dealt with the Jews of Banu Qurayza prior to besieging them. Let the sources speak for themselves:
 
{{Quote|Ibn Ishaq: 684 | "When the apostle approached their forts he (Muhammad) said: "You brothers of monkeys.., has god disgraced you and brought his vengeance upon you?"
 
Banu Qurayza replied: "O Abul Qasim (Muhammad), you are not a barbarous person" }}
 
Again from the sahih collections:
 
{{Quote| {{Bukhari|5|59|449}}|Narrated Al-Bara: "On the day of Qurayza’s (besiege), Allah's Apostle said to Hassan bin Thabit, 'Abuse them (with your poems), and Gabriel is with you" }}
 
How appropriate is it for a religious leader to abuse helpless people with words like "brothers of monkeys" and to incite his followers to do as he did? Not to mention, he traded these insults prior to besieging them.
 
Muslims propose many apologetic arguments to excuse this crime. The most favored argument they use is the alleged treachery of Banu Quraiza. Its flaws are evident when considering any act of treachery from this tribe would have put an end to Islam at Khandaq, and as a result, Islam would never have existed outside of Arabia.
 
The excuses they forward using Deuteronomy (contained within religious scripture they themselves consider to have been altered since the incident in question), and a man who came into the picture much later, do not stand up to scrutiny, for the very reason that Muhammad had planned to slaughter the tribe before Saad bin Muadh, the arbitrator, had been invited.
 
Moreover, when the latter pronounced his verdict, it was Muhammad who rushed in favor of it, proclaiming it to be Allah's judgment. Taking all of these issues into account, there is no valid argument that can be used in its defense. After this incident, there remained not a tribe named Banu Qurayza in Arabia.


In his 2025 academic book, ''Muhammad's military expeditions'', Ayman Ibrahim argues that the story elements serve to vilify the Jews and legitimise various practices of interest to medieval Muslims, noting that it is instigated as the will of Allah through Jibreel's command to march on the Banu Qurayza. He also notes the many contradictory details in the varying accounts of the incident. These variations in the accounts include whether or not the Banu Qurayza assisted the Muslims in their battle preparations, the length of the siege against them, and reports in which the Jews acknowledge the truth of Muhammad's insult that their sinful ancestors were turned into apes, or one of their number telling the rest that is now clear Muhammad is a prophet mentioned in their scriptures. In some reports it is Muhammad rather than the Jews who chose Sa'd to judge them, and in some reports Muhammad commands 'Ali and al-Zubayr to do the beheading. In Ibrahim's view, the entire tradition suffers from disunity and competing claims and it is impossible to reconstruct what actually occurred. Rather, he says these reports are authored for sectarian, religious and political goals.<ref>Ayman Ibrahim (2025), "Muhammad's military expeditions", pp. 225-238</ref>


==See Also==
==See Also==
Line 149: Line 141:
*[[List of Killings Ordered or Supported by Muhammad]]
*[[List of Killings Ordered or Supported by Muhammad]]


{{Translation-links-english|[[Beni Kureyza Qətliamı|Azerbaijani]], [[Геноцидът_на_Бану_Курайза|Bulgarian]]}}
==External Links==


==External Links==
*[http://www.answering-islam.org/Muhammad/Jews/BQurayza/index.html What really happened to the Banu Qurayza] ''- Collection of articles from Answering Islam''
 
*[https://www.call-to-monotheism.com/rebuttal_to_answering_islam_s_article__the_bani_quraytha_jews__traitors_or_betrayed_ Rebuttal to Answering Islam's Article "The Bani Quraytha Jews: Traitors or Betrayed?] - ''Muslim Rebuttal to Answering Islam's Article "The Bani Quraytha Jews: Traitors or Betrayed?"''


*[http://www.answering-islam.org/Muhammad/Jews/BQurayza/index.html What really happened to the Banu Qurayza] ''- Collection of articles from [[Answering Islam]]''
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20250118072808if_/http://www.kister.huji.ac.il/sites/default/files/banu_qurayza.pdf The Massacre of the Banū Qurayẓa: A Re-Examination of a Tradition (archive)] ''- M. J. Kister, Jerusalem Studies in Arabic and Islam 8 (1986): 61-96''
*[{{Reference archive|1=http://www.andrewbostom.org/loj//content/view/38/27/|2=2012-06-10}} Muhammad, the Qurayza Massacre, and PBS] ''- Andrew G. Bostom, FrontPageMagazine''
*[{{Reference archive|1=http://www.americanthinker.com/2006/02/muhammad_and_massacre_of_the_q.html|2=2012-06-10}} Muhammad and Massacre of the Qurayza Jews] ''- James Arlandson, American Thinker''
*[{{Reference archive|1=http://www.kister.huji.ac.il/sites/default/files/banu_qurayza.pdf|2=2012-06-10}} Massacre of the Banū Qurayẓa: A Re-Examination of a Tradition] ''- M. J. Kister, Jerusalem Studies in Arabic and Islam 8 (1986): 61-96''


==References==
==References==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}
[[Category:Muhammad]]
[[Category:Muhammad]]
[[Category:People of the Book]]
[[Category:People of the Book]]
[[Category:Jihad]]
[[Category:Jihad]]
[[ru:Геноцид_Бану_Курайза]]
[[Category:Islamic History]]
[[bg:Геноцидът на Бану Курайза]]
[[Category:Sirah]]
[[Category:Sacred history]]
[[ar:مجزرة_بنو_قريظة]]

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Detail from miniature painting: The Prophet, Ali, and the Companions at the Massacre of the Prisoners of the Jewish Tribe of Beni Qurayza, illustration of a 19th century text by Muhammad Rafi Bazil.

According to the traditional Islamic sources, in 627 AD as a result of the Battle of the Trench during which the Jewish tribe of Banu Qurayza had renounced their earlier pact with Muhammad and plotted with the besieging enemy, the Muslims under his direct military command laid siege to the Banu Qurayzah compound. After a siege of around 2 weeks, depending on the source, the Jews of Banu Qurayzah surrendered and entrusted their fate to a trusted intermediary from the Muslims of the tribe of 'Aws, Sa'd bin Mu'adh. Sa'd bin Mu'adh advised Muhammad to slaughter the men folk of the tribe and take the women and children as captives. Muhammad took this advice and as a consequence between 400 and 900 male prisoners of the tribe including any boys showing signs of puberty were beheaded, many in front of their families, and the rest of the tribe were taken as captives or sold into slavery. The event is thought to be mentioned in the Quran, is well attested to in the Islamic historical tradition, and has served as the basis for multiple rulings throughout history dealing with the treatment of captured non-Muslims by Muslim military forces. There is much uncertainty about the historic facts according to academic and modernist Muslim scholars.

Earliest accounts

Surah al-Ahzab (The Confederates)

The most well known version of these events is recorded in the Sira of Ibn ʾIsḥāq (d. 769 CE).[1] However, there is a brief description in the Quran itself according to the great majority of Islamic scholars, which is also the view of those academic historians who believe there is at least some historicity to the story.

Quran 33:9-25 recalls an attempted attack by the confederates on Medina (i.e. Yathrib, mentioned in verse 13). The next two verses (26-27) state that Jewish or Christian supporters of the failed offensive were brought down from their fortresses, then one group were killed and another taken captive:

And He brought down those who supported them among the People of the Scripture from their fortresses and cast terror into their hearts [so that] a party you killed, and you took captive a party. And He caused you to inherit their land and their homes and their properties and a land which you have not trodden. And ever is Allah, over all things, competent.

Later in the same surah, Quran 33:50 gives Muhammad certain rights over his share of female captives. Quran 33:55-58 denounces disbelievers who break their treaties and describes how they should be dealt with. Some early commentators such as Mujahid and al-Tabari said this denunciation referred to or included the Banu Qurayza.[2]

Early sῑra-maghāzī material

The story is widely reported with varying details in the sῑra (biographical) genre and the maghāzī (raids/expeditions) material therein. The earliest surviving complete work of this genre is Kitāb al-Maghāzī by Mūsā ibn ʿUqba (d. 725 to 737 CE), which was for a long time lost but rediscovered in 2021. It can be read in English translation online including the Banu Qurayza report.[3] Mūsā ibn ʿUqba was a student of Ibn Shihāb az-Zuhrī (d. 741 CE), who himself wrote the first maghāzī book. Al-Zuhrī's narrations feature heavily in the sῑra-maghāzī literature and are an important source of information about early Islamic history. Al-Zuhrī as well as several other sources are credited by Ibn ʾIsḥāq for each contributing parts of his account.[4]

There are some differences as described in the next section between Mūsā ibn ʿUqba's version of the Banu Qurayza incident and the slightly later and longer one by Ibn ʾIsḥāq, who served the 'Abbasid Caliphate.

Accounts in the sῑra

Background

In an oft-cited academic article on the topic, Professor Meir J. Kister includes some background to the agreement which the Banu Qurayza are said to have later broken according to early sources, allowing the Banu Qurayza to stay after the Banu al-Nadir had been expelled from Medina.

How this kind of agreement was concluded can be learned from a report recorded by ʿAbd al-Razzaq on the authority of Mūsā b. ʿUqba: The Nadīr and Qurayẓa fought the Prophet; the Prophet expelled the Nadīr but agreed that Qurayẓa should stay. Later Qurayẓa fought the Prophet. They were defeated, the men were executed, the women, children and property were divided among the Muslims. Some of the Jews received the amān (safety) of the Prophet and converted to Islam. This account is corroborated and elucidated by a report traced back to al-Zuhrī: the Prophet, informed about the treacherous intentions of the Nadīr, marched out against them with troups (bi-l-katā'ib) and besieged them. He demanded that they conclude a compact with him; if they refused, he in turn would refuse to grant them an assurance of safety (...innakum lā ta'manuna ʿindī illā bi-ʿahdin tu'āhidūnī ʿalayhi). They refused and the forces of the Prophet fought them (i.e. the Nadīr) throughout the day. Next day the Prophet left the Nadīr, went out with horsemen and troops against the Qurayẓa and summoned them to conclude an agreement: they consented and concluded a treaty and the Prophet left them. He returned with his troops to the Nadir and fought them until they surrendered on condition that they would be expelled.
M. J. Kister, The Massacre of the Banū Qurayẓa: A Re-Examination of a Tradition, 1986, pp. 82-3[5]

Battle preparations

According to Ibn Ishaq, Muhammad's constant aggressive raids and warmongering against the Meccans had driven them, in alliance with the Jewish tribes he had expelled from Yathrib and the north Arabian tribe of Ghatfan, to put an end to him and his movement once and for all. The three original Jewish tribes of Medina, the Banu Nadir, the Banu Qaynuqaa', and the Banu Qurayza, had seen their number dwindle to one as Muhammad had expelled the Banu Nadir and the Banu Qaynuaqaa' from Medina on different pretexts. Meanwhile their property, including their precious palm trees, had been seized by Muhammad and the Muslims. Together with the Meccans and the Ghatfan, the exiled Jewish tribes of Medina had formed an alliance and gathered an army whose numbers are given in the sira as being around 10,000 strong, including over 600 mounted horsemen against very few cavalry for the Muslims, and 7,000 stronger than the army which had defeated Muhammad and the Muslims at Uhud. Muhammad at this time could call on a force of only around 3,000 men. Muhammad received word of their advance and began to make preparations by digging a trench with his men.[6] In al Waqidi's version, the Banu Qurayzah lent the Muslims entrenching tools.[7] The Muslim strategy relied on the Banu Qurayza, whose fort lay in the rear of the Muslim defenses, not breaking their agreement with Muhammad and joining with the confederates.

Battle of the Trench (al Khandaq) and the Banu Qurayza's role

Ibn Ishaq records that the two sides pitched their camps either side of the trench. The leader of the Banu al-Nadir, Huyayy bin Akhtab An-Nadri, then went to the Banu Qurayza to ask them to abandon their agreement with Muhammad. According to Ibn Ishaq, initially the leader of the Banu Qurayzah, Ka'b bin Asad al-Qurayzi, refused to abandon his commitment to Muhammad, but after much wheedling from Huyayy agreed to do so.[8] An additional detail in Mūsā ibn ʿUqba's account is that this had been a vow not to deceive Muhammad nor aid his enemies against him, and to assist him against anyone who attacked Yathrib (Medina). In this version they also promise to join the fight against him so long as hostages are provided by the confederates to guarantee they will both commit to the fight come what may. This is agreed by the Quraysh and so the Banu Qurayza declare war on Muhammad.[9]

Ibn Ishaq reports that Muhammad sent some men to the Banu Qurayza to find out whether they had really abandoned their agreement, which they confirmed and insults were exchanged. A siege by the confederates against Medina with little action besides the shooting of arrows then ensued for around 20 days.[10] In Mūsā ibn ʿUqba's version, it is after this siege period that Muhammad first sent his men to the Banu Qurayza, who explain their refusal to renew their alliance with him due to the way their kin, the Banu al-Nadir, had been treated.[11]

Ibn Ishaq offers as evidence of the Banu Qurayza’s perfidy a story with isnad chain from Yaḥyā b. ʿAbbād b. ʿAbd Allāh b. al-Zubayr that a Muslim woman, Ṣafīyya bint ʿAbd al-Muṭṭalib, saw a Jew walking around their fort. She feared that he was scouting for weaknesses as the Banu Qurayza had gone to war and cut the fort's communications with Muhammad. She told the fort's commander Hassan of this and asked him to kill the scout, and when he refused she took a club and went out and beat the man to death.[12]

The sequence of events that Ibn Ishaq goes on to describe differs considerably from Musa's narrative. While Muhammad and his men continued to endure the siege, Nuʿaym ibn Masʿūd, a member of the Ghatafan who had secretly become Muslim, came to Muhammad, who sends him to sow distrust among the enemy, "for war is deceit". In Ibn Ishaq's version, it is now that the confederate hostages idea is first raised, as a suggestion by Nuʿaym to the Banu Qurayza, which they embrace as a prerequisite to joining the fight against Muhammad (this contradicts the scout story in which they are already active).[13] In Mūsā ibn ʿUqba's account, as mentioned above, this had been the Banu Qurayza's own proposal before the siege got underway.

Ibn Ishaq reports that Nuʿaym then (or as his sole act in the version reported by Musa, having reported to Muhammad what he had learned of Banu Qurayza's offer) tricked the Quraysh leader Abu Sufyan that the Banu Qurayza had switched sides again and would request hostages only in order to betray them. According to Ibn Ishaq this led Abu Sufyan to send a message to the Banu Qurayza, who do indeed make the request as a condition of joining the fight. Thus Nuʿaym's trickery of them both plays out perfectly.

Mūsā ibn ʿUqba had placed Abu Sufyan's message and the reply in an earlier context, following the initial siege period, and with another, more important difference. He reports from al-Zuhri that the Banu Qurayza make this offer on their own initiative after the same message to them from Abu Sufyan, and that the offer is only that they would not hold him back so long as hostages are provided, i.e. they do not offer to actively join the fight.[14]

In either version, Nuʿaym's efforts (whether he had tricked one or both parties) had successfully sown distrust between the confederates and the Banu Qurayza. A bitter wind had also overturned the tents and pots of the confederate camp (see Quran 33:9). All of this led Abu Sufyan to order the departure of his men, and their Ghatafan allies likewise abandoned the siege the next morning.[15]
[16]

From the above it can be said that while both Ibn Ishaq and Musa's versions have the Banu Qurayza refusing to honour their agreement, the only evidence provided by Ibn Ishaq that they actively aided the confederates or plotted to do so is the scouting report and the story of Nuʿaym enticing them (which contradicts the former, as mentioned above). Musa's version reports a more active role, with the Banu Qurayza proposing before the siege begins to join the fight on receipt of confederate hostages as a guarantee, though he also includes the report from al-Zuhri in which the Banu Qurayza only offer not to hold Abu Sufyan back with the same hostage condition.

Siege of the Banu Qurayza

The battle of the trench being won, Muhammad and his men put their weapons down to head home. According to the sirah, though, Allah had other plans. The angel Jibreel appeared to Muhammad just as he had put down his weapon, and commanded him to march on the Jews of the Banu Qurayzah. The Muslims laid them under siege for differing amounts of time depending on the source (Ibn Ishaq claims 25 days before "Allah cast terror in their hearts"). The Banu Qurayzah were told to surrender and accept Islam, something they swore they would never do. Despairing of their position, they discussed three options according to Ibn Ishaq (though Musa b. Uqba omits this element): accepting Islam, killing their wives and children and engaging in a banzai-style attack against the numerically superior Muslim forces (perhaps, modern commentators have added, in emulation of their religious forbearers at Masada in Palestine), or engaging in a sneak attack on the Jewish Sabbath. The Jews of the Banu Qurayzah found none of these options acceptable.

Unable to come to a decision and under siege for weeks, the Banu Qurayzah asked to speak with Abu Lubaba, a man of the tribe of 'Aws, their allies. Abu Lubaba, when asked what the Banu Qurayzah should do, advised them to surrender to the prophet, but at the same time raised his hand to his neck, indicating they would be slaughtered.[17] After he left, he felt that his action in telling the Banu Qurayzah of their fate was a betrayal of the prophet, and he tied himself to a pillar to ask for Allah's forgiveness, an act that Muhammad approved of. Despite this warning, the Banu Qurayzah surrendered to the Muslims the following day.[18]

The decision on their fate

Ibn Ishaq reports that the tribe of 'Aws, allies of the Banu Qurayzah from the time of jahilliyah, asked for mercy for them from the prophet. The prophet, not wanting to cause dissension in his ranks (oaths and alliances of loyalty were very important in tribal Arab society, as in the absence of courts and established governments the only guaranty of security and justice which could be obtained was the promise of protection from allies in the case of murder, family feuds or war), entrusted the fate of the Banu Qurayzah to a trusted elder shaykh of the 'Aws, Sa‘d bin Mu‘adh, who had been mortally wounded during the battle and would in fact die shortly after the slaughter of the Banu Qurayza. In Musa b. Uqbah's version, it is the Banu Qurayza themselves who choose Sa'd to determine their fate.[19]. Once Sa'd bin Mu'adh had ascertained that both the Banu Qurayzah and the prophet would abide by his judgement, whatever it be, he gave it without hesitation: the men of the Banu Qurayzah were to be executed to the last, their property divided, while the women and children should be taken as captives.

Some authors assert that Sa'd bin Mu‘adh justified this decision as being from the Torah of the Jews itself. Some of them point to Deuteronomy 20:12-14 which reads as follows:

וְאִם  לֹ֤א  תַשְׁלִים֙ עִמָּ֔ךְ  וְעָשְׂתָ֥ה  עִמְּךָ֖ מִלְחָמָ֑ה  וְצַרְתָּ֖  עָלֶֽיהָ וּנְתָנָ֛הּ  יְהוָ֥ה אֱלֹהֶ֖יךָ  בְּיָדֶ֑ךָ  וְהִכִּיתָ֥ אֶת  כָּל  זְכוּרָ֖הּ לְפִי  חָֽרֶב  רַ֣ק  הַ֠נָּשִׁים  וְהַטַּ֨ף וְהַבְּהֵמָ֜ה  וְכֹל֩  אֲשֶׁ֨ר יִהְיֶ֥ה  בָעִ֛יר  כָּל־  שְׁלָלָ֖הּ  תָּבֹ֣ז לָ֑ךְ  וְאָֽכַלְתָּ֙  אֶת  שְׁלַ֣ל  אֹיְבֶ֔יךָ אֲשֶׁ֥ר  נָתַ֛ן  יְהוָ֥ה אֱלֹהֶ֖יךָ  לָֽךְ


But if the city makes no peace with you, but makes war against you, then you shall besiege it; and when the Lord your God gives it into your hand you shall put all its males to the sword, but the women and the little ones, the cattle, and everything else in the city, all its spoil, you shall take as booty for yourselves; and you shall enjoy the spoil of your enemies, which the Lord your God has given you.
Deuteronomy 20:12-14

Although modern Muslims cite this verse in justification of Mu'adh's verdict, no primary source says explicitly that Sa'd based his verdict on the Torah. In addition, it should be noted that neither Jewish nor Christian tradition understands this verse as a blanket rule for warfare, but rather as a specific command to the Jews under the command of Joshua who were fighting the pagan peoples of the Holy Land. It has not, generally, been used by either religion to justify the sort of massacre that took place in Medina in other historical contexts.

The massacre and division of captives and property

Musa b. Uqba is very brief on what happened next: "So, the Messenger of Allah had their fighters executed, and there were, they say, six hundred of them. They were killed at the house of Abū Jahm in Balāṭ – which was not [known as Balāṭ] at that time – and they say that their blood reached Aḥjār al-Zayt in the market. He took their women and children as prisoners of war and had their wealth divided amongst the Muslims who were present." He goes on to describe the beheading of Huyayy who had convinced the Banu Qurayza to abandon their agreement with Muhammad before the battle.[20]

Ibn Ishaq's account of this incident has a little more detail, including the execution method.[21] He additionally includes three poems attributed to Hassan b. Thabit which mention the slaying of the Banu Qurayza for treachery.[22]. In this account, the prisoners, thus condemned, were kept in the house or compound of a Muslim woman d. Al-Hārith of the Banu al-Najjār tribe. In the morning the men were marched in batches to Muhammad and were executed by decapitation over trenches which had been dug in the city's market. He says there were 600 to 700 in all, though some said as high as 800 to 900. Ibn Ishaq includes a report from Aisha that one woman was amongst them. He includes various other narrations about individuals, including a survivor, Atiyyah al-Qurazi, who was spared because he was not yet an adult and only adults were killed.[23] The other women, the children and property were divided among the Muslims, with a horseman receiving 3 times the spoils of a foot soldier. The haul of weapons and plunder was substantial, but Muhammad still sent some of the women and children to be sold in the Najd for more horses and weapons.[24] Muhammad as was custom received his fifth share of the loot including his pick of the females, a beautiful Jewish woman named Rayhana whose husband was decapitated, and the rest went to all the rest of the Muslims.[25]

Accounts in Hadiths

Hadiths collected by al-Bukhari include many of the elements which feature in the sira literature. This includes a narration that the angels commanded Muhammad to take the war to the Banu Qurayza:

Narrated 'Aisha: When Allah's Apostle returned on the day (of the battle) of Al-Khandaq (i.e. Trench), he put down his arms and took a bath. Then Gabriel whose head was covered with dust, came to him saying, "You have put down your arms! By Allah, I have not put down my arms yet." Allah's Apostle said, "Where (to go now)?" Gabriel said, "This way," pointing towards the tribe of Banu Qurayza. So Allah's Apostle went out towards them.

Similiarly, the following narration has the account of Sa'd condemning them to their fate:

Narrated Abu Said Al-Khudri: Some people (i.e. the Jews of Bani bin Quraiza) agreed to accept the verdict of Sad bin Muadh so the Prophet sent for him (i.e. Sad bin Muadh). He came riding a donkey, and when he approached the Mosque, the Prophet ﷺ said, "Get up for the best amongst you." or said, "Get up for your chief." Then the Prophet ﷺ said, "O Sad! These people have agreed to accept your verdict." Sad said, "I judge that their warriors should be killed and their children and women should be taken as captives." The Prophet ﷺ said, "You have given a judgment similar to Allah's Judgment (or the King's judgment)."

Incidentally, another hadith narrates, like in the sira accounts, that after Sa'd was called upon to provide a fair judgement to the Banu Qurayza as a former ally, he succumbed to mortal wounds suffered during the battle of the trench, wishing for death to the infidels:

Sa`d was wounded on the day of Khandaq (i.e. Trench) when a man from Quraish, called Hibban bin Al-`Araqa hit him (with an arrow). The man was Hibban bin Qais from (the tribe of) Bani Mais bin 'Amir bin Lu'ai who shot an arrow at Sa`d's medial arm vein (or main artery of the arm). The Prophet (ﷺ) pitched a tent (for Sa`d) in the Mosque so that he might be near to the Prophet (ﷺ) to visit. When the Prophet returned from the (battle) of Al-Khandaq (i.e. Trench) and laid down his arms and took a bath Gabriel came to him while he (i.e. Gabriel) was shaking the dust off his head, and said, "You have laid down the arms?" By Allah, I have not laid them down. Go out to them (to attack them)." The Prophet (ﷺ) said, "Where?" Gabriel pointed towards Bani Quraiza. So Allah's Messenger (ﷺ) went to them (i.e. Banu Quraiza) (i.e. besieged them). They then surrendered to the Prophet's judgment but he directed them to Sa`d to give his verdict concerning them. Sa`d said, "I give my judgment that their warriors should be killed, their women and children should be taken as captives, and their properties distributed." Narrated Hisham: My father informed me that `Aisha said, "Sa`d said, "O Allah! You know that there is nothing more beloved to me than to fight in Your Cause against those who disbelieved Your Apostle and turned him out (of Mecca). O Allah! I think you have put to an end the fight between us and them (i.e. Quraish infidels). And if there still remains any fight with the Quraish (infidels), then keep me alive till I fight against them for Your Sake. But if you have brought the war to an end, then let this wound burst and cause my death thereby.' So blood gushed from the wound. There was a tent in the Mosque belonging to Banu Ghifar who were surprised by the blood flowing towards them. They said, 'O people of the tent! What is this thing which is coming to us from your side?' Behold! Blood was flowing profusely out of Sa`d's wound. Sa`d then died because of that."

Bukhari also has this narration on the fate of the Banu Qurayza, carried out in accordance with Sa'd's judgement:

Narrated Abd-Allah ibn Umar: Banu Nadir and Banu Qurayza fought (against the Prophet violating their peace treaty), so the Prophet exiled Bani An-Nadir and allowed Bani Quraiza to remain at their places (in Medina) taking nothing from them till they fought against the Prophet again). He then killed their men and distributed their women, children and property among the Muslims, but some of them came to the Prophet and he granted them safety, and they embraced Islam. He exiled all the Jews from Medina. They were the Jews of Banu Qaynuqa, the tribe of Abdullah bin Salam and the Jews of Bani Haritha and all the other Jews of Medina.

A hadith in Sunan Abi Dawud tells us that signs of puberty determined whether or not a male youth would be spared. This narration from the same survivor is also reported in Ibn Ishaq as mentioned at the end of the Sira section above, though the translation there has the word "adult" instead of "had begun to grow hair":

Narrated Atiyyah al-Qurazi: I was among the captives of Banu Qurayza. They (the Companions) examined us, and those who had begun to grow hair (pubes) were killed, and those who had not were not killed. I was among those who had not grown hair.

Tafsir commentary

The famed mufassir Ibn Kathir in his commentary on sura 33 Al-Ahzab الأحزاب  "The Confederates" draws on pertinent details from the narrative, particularly the anti-Jewish elements. Like other commentators, he reads into the Quran's denouncement of the people of the book the perfidious Jews of the tribe of Banu Qurayzah and their betrayal of the prophet:

وَلِهَذَا قَالَ تَعَالَى: ﴿وَأَنزلَ الَّذِينَ ظَاهَرُوهُمْ﴾ أَيْ: عَاوَنُوا الْأَحْزَابَ وَسَاعَدُوهُمْ عَلَى حَرْبِ رَسُولِ اللَّهِ ﷺ ﴿مِنْ أَهْلِ الْكِتَابِ﴾ يَعْنِي: بَنِي قُرَيْظَةَ مِنَ الْيَهُودِ، مِنْ بَعْضِ أَسْبَاطِ بَنِي إِسْرَائِيلَ، كَانَ قَدْ نَزَلَ آبَاؤُهُمُ الْحِجَازَ قَدِيمًا، طَمَعًا فِي اتِّبَاعِ النَّبِيَّ الْأُمِّيَّ الذِي يَجِدُونَهُ مَكْتُوبًا عِنْدَهُمْ فِي التَّوْرَاةِ وَالْإِنْجِيلِ، ﴿فَلَمَّا جَاءَهُمْ مَا عَرَفُوا كَفَرُوا بِه﴾ [الْبَقَرَةِ: ٨٩] ، فَعَلَيْهِمْ لَعْنَةُ اللَّهِ.


For thus the most-High said "Those how had backed them (the confederates) came down" meaning: they assisted the confederates and helped them to make war on the Apostle of God (sala allah 'aleyhi wasallam). "From the people of the book" that is to say the Banu Qurayza of the Jews, descendants of the sons of Israel, who had come down to the Hijaz in olden times, doing so (aiding the Meccans) greedily against the followers of the illiterate prophet (Muhammad) whom they found written about in the Torah and the Gospel "when he came to them they did not know him and disbelieved in him" (surah al-baqarah 89)
Tafsir of Ibn Kathir Qur'an Surah 33

He refers here to Surah 33:

And He brought those of the People of the Scripture who supported them down from their strongholds, and cast panic into their hearts. Some ye slew and ye made captive some. And He caused you to inherit their land and their houses and their wealth, and land ye have not trodden. Allah is Able to do all things

Ibn Kathir includes the narration that it was the angels themselves who implored Muhammad not to stop fighting. Thus Ibn Kathir emphasises that the fate of the Banu Qurayzah was the work of their own hand, a fate approved of and commanded by heaven itself. This is further underlined when he includes Muhammad's response to Sa'd's judgement upon them from the sira narratives:

فَقَالَ: إِنِّي أَحْكُمُ أَنْ تُقْتَلَ مُقَاتلتهم، وتُسبْى ذُرِّيَّتُهُمْ وَأَمْوَالُهُمْ. فَقَالَ لَهُ رَسُولُ اللَّهِ ﷺ: "لَقَدْ حَكَمْتَ بِحُكْمِ اللَّهِ مِنْ فَوْقِ سَبْعَةِ أَرْقِعَةٍ"(٨) . وَفِي رِوَايَةٍ: "لَقَدْ حكمتَ بِحُكْمِ المَلك". ثُمَّ أَمْرَ رَسُولِ اللَّهِ ﷺ بِالْأَخَادِيدِ فَخُدّت فِي الْأَرْضِ، وَجِيءَ بِهِمْ مُكْتَفِينَ، فَضَرَبَ أَعْنَاقَهُمْ، وَكَانُوا مَا بَيْنَ السَّبْعِمِائَةِ إِلَى الثَّمَانِمِائَةِ، وَسَبَى مَنْ لَمْ يُنبت مِنْهُمْ مَعَ النِّسَاءِ وَأَمْوَالِهِمْ(٩) Then he (Sa'ad) said: My judgement is that their fighting-age men be killed, and their families and wealth be taken as booty. The prophet (sala allah 'aleyhi wasallam) said "You have judged with the judgement of Allah above the seven heavens." In another narration: "You have judged with the judgement of the King (Allah)." Then the Messenger of Allah commanded that ditches should be dug, so they were dug in the earth, and they were brought tied by their shoulders, and were beheaded. There were between seven hundred and eight hundred of them. The children who had not yet reached adolescence and the women were taken prisoner, and their wealth was seized.
Tafsir Ibn Kathir on Surah 33


Modern apologetic views and perspectives

In the clip above Muslim scholar Yasir Qadhi, well respected for his degrees from the Islamic University of Medina as well as from Yale, makes the argument that Muhammad was dealing with treachery and he had taken the maximum punitive actions against it. Qadhi argues that the prophet was justified in every step and showed as much restraint as necessary, being motivated purely by concerns on statecraft and practicality, not by malice. As he says, it is possible to accuse the prophet of being "harsh" but not of acting with malice towards the Banu Qurayza or the Jews in general, as this would not be "academically valid." Yasir Qadhi states that the punishment was "harsh" and yet it is sometimes necessary to be harsh. Yaqeen institute scholar Abu Amina Elias (Justin Parrott) makes the cases that killing the "fighting men" prisoners of the Banu Qurayzah was an "act of self-defense" on the part of the Muslim community and cites Deuteronomy 20:12-14 to justify the actions of the Muslims. He also claims that the prophet only sent his men with their arms to "defend themselves" and that the women and children of the Banu Qurayzah were taken "into captivity" for their protection since all of their men folk had been slaughtered.[26] Karen Armstrong, in her book A Short History of Islam, likewise claims  "The struggle did not indicate any hostility towards Jews in general, but only towards the three rebel tribes. The Quran continued to revere Jewish prophets and to urge Muslims to respect the People of the Book."[27] These arguments echo the motivations of much of the source material above. Ibn Ishaq implies that the Jews of Banu Qurayzah posed a threat to the Muslims via their betrayal and does portray Muhammad as hesitating to decide their fate (even though Abu Lubaba seems to already know of it before Sa'd was appointed to judge them). Ibn Ishaq recounts how "harsh" the punishment was:

Apostle sent him (Abu Lubaba) to them (Banu Quraiza), and when they saw him they got up to meet him. The women and children went up to him weeping in his face, and he felt sorry for them. They said, ‘Oh Abu Lubaba, do you think that we should submit to Muhammad's judgement? He said ‘yes' and pointed with his hand to his throat signifying slaughter.
Ibn Ishaq; Ibn Hisham; al-Tabari, A. Guillaume, ed, Sirat Rasul Allah [The Life of Muhammad], Karachi: Oxford UP, p. 462 (paragraph: 686), ISBN 0196360331, 1955, https://archive.org/details/GuillaumeATheLifeOfMuhammad/page/n381/mode/2up 

Yet critics of these pro-Islam viewpoints have pointed out that Sa'd did not explicitly say he based his verdict on the Torah and the verse cited by modern Muslims from Deuteronomy to justify the extermination of the Banu Qurayzah was not viewed in this way by traditional Christian or especially Jewish scholarship. According to Jewish doctrine, these verses were revealed to Moses before the Israelites entered the Holy Land, specifically instructing them on how to deal with the people living there.[28] Morever, the claim that there was no apparent animus towards the Jews of Banu Qurayza on the part of Muhammad is contradicted by Ibn Ishaq's account:

"When the apostle approached their forts he [Muhammad] said: "You brothers of monkeys, has God disgraced you and brought his vengeance upon you?" Banu Qurayza replied: "O Abu'l-Qasim [Muhammad], you are not a barbarous person"
Ibn Ishaq's Sira (english translation by Guillaume) p. 461; see also Musa b. Uqbah, Kitab al-Maghazi (english translation by Imam Ghazali publishing) p. 113

In mocking them as apes, Muhammad is here echoing the Qur'an, which claims that (some) Jews were turned into apes for violating the sabbath (Quran 50:60).

Ibn Ishaq also records that Muhammad took one of the Jewish women of the Banu Qurayza, Rayhanah, for himself.[29] Indeed, according to this account the destruction of this tribe allowed Muhammad to reward his fighters handsomely (and Muhammad himself took a fifth of the booty). Abu Amina Elias's view that the Muslims took such women and children as Rayhana captive simply for their protection is also inconsistent with the reports, as Ibn Ishaq also recounts that some of them were taken to the far-off region of the Najd to be sold for weapons and horses. Yasir Qadhi himself points out that the Banu Qurayzah were offered freedom to live on were they to accept Islam, and according to the sirah only their hard, petulant hearts which rejected Muhammad despite knowing he was a prophet prevented them from allowing themselves to be saved by conversion to Islam. In this way the sirah portrays their Jewish religion as leading to the pitilessness way with which Muhammad dealt with them, which in addition to the apes insult, critics may argue goes against Qadhi's point that the prophet acted without malice or religious animus according to the sources we have. Bukhari also collected a hadith that the prophet commanded his men to abuse the Banu Qurayzah with poetry, which was in ancient Arab times one of the premier ways of promoting enmity with an enemy (Muhammad ordered poets who did this to him to be killed):

Narrated Al-Bara: "On the day of Qurayza’s (besiege), Allah's Apostle said to Hassan bin Thabit, 'Abuse them (with your poems), and Gabriel is with you"

Academic views on historicity

The narrative of the Banu Qurayzah is an accepted part of Islamic law, and early Islamic jurists closely studied and analyzed every detail when ruling on the conduct of war, such as how to conduct arbitration and executions.[30] As such there is no question amongst orthodox Muslims that it happened (Islamic modernist scholars commonly doubt it). Yet the historiography of the subject is not without its own problems.

As mentioned above, at the outline level, most academic scholars accept the tradition that Quran 33:26-27 refers to the Banu Qurayza (with context about a confederate siege on Yathrib in verses 9-25 of the same surah). The details of the sira narratives are generally treated with greater doubt, particularly the number of men executed.

A tribe of that name seems to have existed given that many al-Qurayzi names later appear as Muslim narrators or transmitters of hadiths on other topics (including Muhammad ibn Ka'b al-Qurazi, Uthman ibn Ka'b al-Qurazi, Tha'laba bin Abi Malik al-Qurazi; there is also a hadith about Rifa'ah Al-Qurazi's wife, and there is the report mentioned above from Atiyya al-Qurazi about the massacre).

Constitution of Medina

Nevertheless, modern academia has cast serious doubts on the scholarship of Islamic scholars working in the 8th century (2nd Islamic century) such as Ibn Ishaq. An enduring puzzle in this context is the Constitution of Medina  صحيفة مدينة also known as the Ummah Document or صحيفة الأمة. As Fred Donner points, this is one of the earliest documents we have from the nascent proto-Islamic movement. This remarkable document, preserved by the Islamic historian Al-Tabari, lays out a compact for the "believers" of Medina, an "ummah" or national community that includes the Jews as "believers" on the same level as the Arab believers. Fred Donner believes this document actually points to an early, occulted history of Islam in which Arab monotheists joined with Jews into one "ummah" under the command of Muhammad. Troublingly for the historical narrative, this document makes mention of many different Jewish tribes, but the main 3 tribes of the sira, the Banu Qurayza, the Banu Qaynuqaa', and the Banu Nadir are conspicuously absent. It is in fact the absence of these tribes which convinces scholars that the document must be very old despite being preserved only in the 9th-century works of Tabari, since a younger document would presumably would have been changed to agree with the established historical narrative. Donner mentions that many early 7th century mosques do not include the qibla facing towards Mecca, and concludes that this story of the massacre of the Banu Qurayzah may have been invented or embellished in order to explain a much later break between the Jewish and Muslim communities.[31]

Patricia Crone and Michael Cook in their groundbreaking work Hagarism likewise report on an Armenian historian writing in the 7th century known as pseudo-Sebeos. This historian imputes the Arab invasions to a confederation of Jews and Arabs led by Muhammad himself, contradicting the Islamic narrative that Muhammad died before the invasion of Palestine and the Middle East. Pseudo-Sebeos likewise imputes to the Arabs and Jews a shared monotheism and brotherhood through their ancestry to Abraham and his wife Hagar.[32] If this account is to be believed, there could not have been any great massacre of the Jews by Muhammad as we has working with them when he invaded Palestine. Stephen Shoemaker in his work The Death of a Prophet adds further evidence to thesis of Crone and Cook, marshaling evidence from a wide variety of sources, almost all of which predate the first Islamic sources, that Muhammad himself was actually the leader of the believers when they entered Palestine and he died only after its conquest. In particular he calls attention to a Jewish apocalypse from the 7th century, the Secrets of Rabbi ben Shim'on, which seems to paint Muhammad as the redeemer of the Jews from the oppression of the Romans in the Holy Land. If this is to be believed, and this source predates every Islamic source we have, the massacre of the Banu Qurayzah could not have taken place, since Muhammad, the leader of the invasion of Palestine, was seen as a savior of the Jewish people.[33] This would seem to indicate that the break between the Muslims and the Jews took place after his death, and would indicate that stories such as the massacre of the Banu Qurayzah were fabricated in order to "back date" the break with the Jews to the prophet's own lifetime.

Academic scholars who have been less skeptical of the tradition such as Michael Lecker tend to posit that the Constitution of Medina was written after the three tribes had lost their places in Medina, or that the separate agreement made by the Banu Qurayza (which they later broke according to the traditional account) is the reason why they are not named in the document. Donner similarly mentions the possiblity that there were separate agreements with the three tribes, or that their names were later removed.

Detailed analyses

W. N. Arafat is known for giving the first academic arguments rejecting the tradition in its entirety beyond the brief statements in surah al-Azhab of the Quran, and his paper remains popular among modernist Muslims today.[34] It is, however, considered deeply flawed academically, due to the response from Meir J. Kister which pointed out numerous inaccuracies and false assumptions.[5]

One of Arafat's better points, and which Kister only attempts to refute with post-Quranic evidence, is that the massacre would go against Quranic principles found in other verses, particularly Quran 47:4 (ransom or release prisoners) and Quran 35:18 (no soul will bear another's burdens).[35] Similar Quranic or hadith arguments of principle remain popular today among modernist Muslims who reject the tradition. This assumes that principles of war were consistently applied throughout Muhammad's career and ignores the collective condemnation the Quran throws at the Jews for their past sins.

Another of Arafat's arguments is that within the Islamic tradition, Ibn Ishaq was frequently criticized for giving too much weight to Jewish stories and being biased in general in his retellings of certain events. Malik ibn Anas accusses Ibn Ishaq of being a "liar" for listening to "Jewish stories". Kister in turn observes that this reflects a later attitude of suspicion towards such sources. He also points out that the tradition about Banu Qurayza is widely reported in other early sira compilations besides Ibn Ishaq, in early tafsirs, and later in fiqh and hadith collections. He also shows that Arafat failed to present the background of the (mutual) emnity between Malik and Ibn Ishaq.[36] Professor Sean Anthony in some comments recommending Kister's response to Arafat, further points out that Malik extolled the maghazi book of Musa b. Uqba, who includes the Banu Qurayza tradition as detailed above. He also shows that Arafat falsely claimed that Ibn Hajjar rejected the tradition.[37]

Countering some of Arafat's other claims, Kister provides many examples of jurists drawing rulings from detailed analyses of the Banu Qurayza precedent. He also points out that the treatment of the Banu Qurayza was not entirely exceptional in the tradition. Sons of Abu al Huqayq (who had become leader of the Banu Nadir in Khaybar) were tortured and killed and their women and property taken when they broke an agreement (in this case, a surrender agreement which included a requirement to disclose any hidden treasure).[38]

Perhaps less convincingly, Kister also counters Arafat's point (which is commonly made) about the "house" where the captives were taken being too small for hundreds of prisoners. The word here in Arabic is "dar" which Kister points out often means not just a house but a compound building, which could be of considerable size including stores, workshops and even markets.[39] In any case, as mentioned above, the number of men (or 'muqatil', fighting-men in some versions) killed in the execution vary widely in the sources[40] and are not generally considered reliable.

In his 2025 academic book, Muhammad's military expeditions, Ayman Ibrahim argues that the story elements serve to vilify the Jews and legitimise various practices of interest to medieval Muslims, noting that it is instigated as the will of Allah through Jibreel's command to march on the Banu Qurayza. He also notes the many contradictory details in the varying accounts of the incident. These variations in the accounts include whether or not the Banu Qurayza assisted the Muslims in their battle preparations, the length of the siege against them, and reports in which the Jews acknowledge the truth of Muhammad's insult that their sinful ancestors were turned into apes, or one of their number telling the rest that is now clear Muhammad is a prophet mentioned in their scriptures. In some reports it is Muhammad rather than the Jews who chose Sa'd to judge them, and in some reports Muhammad commands 'Ali and al-Zubayr to do the beheading. In Ibrahim's view, the entire tradition suffers from disunity and competing claims and it is impossible to reconstruct what actually occurred. Rather, he says these reports are authored for sectarian, religious and political goals.[41]

See Also

External Links

References

  1. Ibn Ishaq (rescension of his work by Ibn Hisham), Alfred Guillaume (translator), The life of Muhammad: a translation of Isḥāq's Sīrat rasūl Allāh Oxford University Press, 2005, pp. 453, 458-9, 461-69, 479-81
  2. M. J. Kister, The Massacre of the Banū Qurayẓa: A Re-Examination of a Tradition (archive), Jerusalem Studies in Arabic and Islam 8 (1986), pp. 61-96 (see p. 81)
  3. An English translation of Kitāb al-Maghāzī by Mūsā ibn ʿUqba is available for free download: The Maghāzī of Sayyidunā Muhammad by Mūsā ibn ʿUqbah, Imam Ghazali Publishing, 2024. See pp. 104-9, and pp. 112-17 on the subsequent massacre and enslavement of the Banu Qurayza.
  4. Ibn Ishaq, Alfred Guillaume (translator), The Life of Muhammad p. 450
  5. 5.0 5.1 M. J. Kister, The Massacre of the Banū Qurayẓa: A Re-Examination of a Tradition (archive) - M. J. Kister, Jerusalem Studies in Arabic and Islam 8 (1986): 61-96
  6. Ibn Ishaq, , Alfred Guillaume (translator), The life of Muhammad pp. 450-452
  7. Kister, p. 85
  8. Ibn Ishaq, Alfred Guillaume (translator), The life of Muhammad, p. 453
  9. Mūsā ibn ʿUqba, Kitāb al-Maghāzī translated by Imam Ghazali Publishing, pp. 105
  10. Ibn Ishaq, Alfred Guillaume (translator), The life of Muhammad, pp. 453-4
  11. Mūsā ibn ʿUqba, Kitāb al-Maghāzī translated by Imam Ghazali Publishing, pp. 106-7
  12. Ibn Ishaq, Alfred Guillaume (translator), The life of Muhammad, p. 458
  13. Ibid. pp. 458-9
  14. Mūsā ibn Uqba, Kitāb al-Maghāzī translated by Imam Ghazali Publishing, p. 108
  15. Ibn Ishaq, Alfred Guillaume (translator), The life of Muhammad, pp. 459-60
  16. Mūsā ibn Uqba, Kitāb al-Maghāzī translated by Imam Ghazali Publishing, p. 108-11
  17. ibid, 462
  18. ibid, 463
  19. Mūsā ibn Uqba, Kitāb al-Maghāzī translated by Imam Ghazali Publishing, p. 114
  20. Ibid. p. 114-5
  21. Ibn Ishaq, Alfred Guillaume (translator), The life of Muhammad, p. 464
  22. Ibid. pp. 479-81
  23. Ibid. pp. 465-6
  24. Ibid, p. 466
  25. Ibid, p. 466
  26. "Did the Prophet commit genocide against Jews?" Faith in Allah There is no god but Allah and Muhammad is his messenger https://abuaminaelias.com/prophet-genocide-banu-qurayza/  April 8, 2013
  27. Islam:A Short History Karen Armstrong Modern Library 2002
  28. "Muhammad’s atrocity against the Qurayza Jews" James M. Arlandson Answering Islam https://www.answering-islam.org/Authors/Arlandson/qurayza_jews.htm
  29. "The Apostle had chosen one of the women for himself, Rayḥāna d. ʿAmr b. Khunāfa, one of the women of B. ʿAmr b. Qurayẓa, and she remained with him until she died, in his power."
    Ibn Hisham, Ibn Ishaq, Alfred Guillaume (translator), The life of Muhammad: a translation of Isḥāq's Sīrat rasūl Allāh Oxford Universite Press 2005, p.466
  30. M. J. Kister, The Massacre of the Banū Qurayẓa: A Re-Examination of a Tradition (archive), Jerusalem Studies in Arabic and Islam 8 (1986), see pp. 66-74
  31. Muhammad and the Believers: At the Orgins of Islam, Fred Donner, Harvard University Press 2010, p. 72-73
  32. Hagarism: Making of the Islamic World, Patricia Crone and Michael Cook, Cambridge University Press 1977, p. 6-8
  33. The Death of a Prophet, Stephen Shoemaker, University of Pennsylvania Press 2012, p. 27-33
  34. W. N. Arafat (1976) New Light on the Story of the Banu Qurayza and the Jews of Medina, Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland 2 (1976):101
  35. "New Light on the Story of Banu Qurayza and the Jews of Medina", W.N Arafat 2001 p. 100-107
  36. Kister, pp. 76-80
  37. X.com post by Sean Anthony - 24 December 2023. An X.com account (following him if his profile remains protected) is needed to view his chain of comments.
  38. Kister, pp. 66-74
  39. Kister, p. 74, ftn 39
  40. See the list provided by Kister on p. 89, ftn 100
  41. Ayman Ibrahim (2025), "Muhammad's military expeditions", pp. 225-238