Muhammad: Legacy of The Prophet
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His father died before he was born, and his mother died when he was only
six. But sheltered by a powerful uncle, he made a good start in life,
established himself in a profitable business and married well. And then,
at the age of 40, he was transformed.
A man who could not read or write, he announced that he was the prophet
of God.
His name was Muhammad, and in the next 23 years he would bring peace to
the warring pagan tribes of Arabia and establish the new religion of Islam,
which today has 1.2 billion followers.
Three years in the making, Muhammad: Legacy of a Prophet, which premieres
Wednesday, December 18 at 9:00 p.m. on PBS (check local listings), travels
in the footsteps of the prophet to the Arabian desert and the holy city
of Mecca where much of Muhammad's story unfolded. "There are six
to seven million Muslims here in American, where Islam is the country's
fasted growing religion, but many Americans are completely unfamiliar
with the life story of the remarkable man who founded this religion 1400
years ago," says producer/director Michael Schwarz.
This sweeping two-hour documentary goes well beyond the boundaries of
the past. "Muhammad is 'history in the present tense,'" says
co-creator/producer Michael Wolfe, a well-known Muslim author. "In
it, we reflect on this 7th century story through the experiences of 21st
century Americans who feel deeply connected to what Muhammad did, said
and believed." A presentation of KQED/San Francisco, the documentary
is produced by Kikim Media and Unity Productions Foundation. Noted actor
André Braugher is the narrator.
With some of the world's greatest scholars on Islam providing historical
context and critical perspective, Muhammad: Legacy of a Prophet tells
of intrigue and faith, revolutionary ideas and bitter persecution, brutal
war and brilliant diplomacy in an arid desert where tribal allegiance
was often the only protection. Muhammad was orphaned as a child, but he
was fortunate to be born into the powerful tribe of the Quraysh in the
city of Mecca, a regional pilgrimage site and commercial crossroads. He
became a successful trader based in this cosmopolitan center and married
a woman who was a wealthy merchant. Yet as Muhammad prospered with the
city, he saw that the poor were increasingly neglected and hedonism dominated
the culture.
One day in the desert, while meditating in a mountain cave, Muhammad was
struck by a revelation that changed his life and the world. Terrified
by the force of the experience, he began to recite words that came to
him, words he said were from God. These messages would continue throughout
the rest of his life. Unable to write them, he would repeat them to his
growing band of followers until they became part of their collective memory.
Slowly these revelations began to form the book we now know as the Qur'an
(or Koran). While people were shocked by these claims, "they acquired
credibility because of the very nature of the words spoken," says
M. Cherif Bassiouni, professor of law at DePaul University. How could
an illiterate man make up language of such poetry and wisdom?
The new faith and ideas that Muhammad proclaimed as the word of God, were
a threat to the Meccan establishment. Muhammad's pronouncement that there
was only one God, particularly threatened the very livelihood of the rich
Meccans who profited from Mecca's role as Arabia's most popular pilgrimage
center. Through years of harrassment and deprivation, and trading sanctions
imposed against his people, Muhammad continued to preach and share revelations
with his followers, calling on them to worship one God, to destroy idols
and to practice charity. As the community faced growing hostility, he
began to encourage Muslims to move across the desert and settle in the
oasis town of Yathrib, later called Medina. When word of an assassination
plot reached him, Muhammad barely escaped death and managed to join the
growing Islamic community in Medina.
"Unlike Jesus or the Buddha, who seem to have been purely spiritual
leaders with no temporal responsibilities whatever, Muhammad found himself
now head of state," author Karen Armstrong points out. "Having
transferred the Muslim families from Mecca to Medina, he now had to make
sure they could survive there." Muhammed proved to be a strategically
gifted military leader and a creative diplomat in the turbulent period
that followed. A series of bloody battles between the Meccans and Muhammad's
followers almost destroyed the nascent faith, but then the tide turned.
Ultimately Muhammad was able to lead 100,000 Muslims back to Mecca for
a Hajj, a pilgrimage that remains a cornerstone of the spiritual life
of Muslims.
While recounting the story of Muhammad, a tale that was carefully passed
down as oral history in the 7th century and subsequently recorded, the
documentary also conveys what many American Muslims believe Islam teaches,
and how their beliefs shape their lives. The documentary takes viewers
into the homes, mosques and work places of some of America's Muslims to
discover the many ways in which they follow Muhammad's example and interpret
his life and his message today. Through these inter-linked narratives,
the filmmakers connect past and present, prophet and follower, within
an innovative film structure." Co-creator/producer Alex Kronemer
says, "Many Muslims believe that if you want to understand who they
are, the best place to start is with this story of Muhammad, because he
established a model of behavior and values which Muslims strive to emulate
today."
The American Muslims that the documentary introduces include recent immigrants,
Muslims whose families have lived here for generations, and American converts
like Kevin James, a Brooklyn fire marshal, who has a Jewish mother and
a father who is Native American and African American.
"America is a racial nation," says James. "Either you're
Black, you're White, you're Italian, you're Jewish, you're this, you're
that. So coming from a mixed background, I've felt like, kind of in limbo."
After a period of spiritual seeking, James discovered a kinship with Islam,
in part because it shares religious roots with both Judaism and Christianity
and in part because it preaches racial equity. His faith inspired his
decision to become a firefighter he explains, "The Qur'an teaches
you that the saving of one life is as if you've saved all of humanity."
A critical care nurse, Najah Bazzy is a second generation Muslim American
who lives in Dearborn, Michigan. Her hometown has seen a massive influx
of Muslim immigration as a result of the Gulf War. As she helps her colleagues
understand and work effectively with their Muslim patients and her husband
negotiate life with a teenage daughter, Bazzy says that Muhammad is her
constant guide. "We live our lives through his examples, but he's
not God," she explains. "Our reverence is to God. And our reference
is to [Muhammad]. So how I walk, and how I speak, and how I carry myself,
and how I treat my husband, and how I treat my mother and my father, and
how I behave as a sister and a daughter and a nurse and a friend and a
neighbor, that's all prophet Muhammad in action."
Although this documentary was well into production prior to 9/11, some
of the American Muslim characters who help tell Muhammad's story were
filmed after the attack. These sequences portray their reaction to this
event, the aftermath they have experienced, and the controversial concept
of jihad. Through a combination of commentary from Islamic experts and
interviews with Muslim Americans, the program also addresses some of the
difficult issues at the matrix of religious faith, cultural customs and
Middle East politics, including women's rights and charges of anti-Semitism
rooted in the historical conflicts of the 7th century.
Funding for Muhammad: Legacy of a Prophet has been provided by the Corporation
for Public Broadcasting, The David and Lucile Packard Foundation, Arabian
Bulk Trade, Sabadia Family Foundation, Irfan Kathwari Foundation, El-Hibri
Foundation, Qureishi Family Trust, and many individual contributors.
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