Laylat al-mabit (
Arabic: لَـیْـلَـة ٱلْـمَـبِـیْـت,
lit. 'the overnight stay') refers to the night in 622
CE in which the
Islamic prophetMuhammad fled
Mecca for Yathrib, apparently to foil an assassination plan. His escape from Mecca followed the exodus of his persecuted followers to the safe haven of Yathrib, a city that was later renamed
Medina in his honor. Laylat al-mabit is often associated in Islamic literature with the reports that Muhammad's cousin
Ali ibn Abi Talib risked his life to facilitate Muhammad's safe escape from Mecca.
Event
As the harassment of early
Muslims in
Mecca continued, or perhaps with the hope of better prospects,[1]Muhammad asked his followers to emigrate to the city of Yathrib,[1] whose residents had pledged to protect him there.[2] To attract less attention, Muslims left Mecca in small groups,[3][4] throughout the summer of 622
CE,[5] while Muhammad remained behind in Mecca to organize and encourage the emigration efforts, or perhaps to ensure an independent position in Yathrib upon his arrival later.[3] Alarmed by the new developments,[3][6] the Meccan clan leaders decided to murder Muhammad. The plan was for a group of warriors, one from each Meccan clan, to kill Muhammad together to avoid any potential retribution from Muhammad's clan, the
Banu Hashim.[3][7]
An informant,[8] or perhaps the archangel
Gabriel,[9][10] disclosed the assassination plot to Muhammad. To foil their plans, his young cousin
Ali ibn Abi Talib risked his life and slept in Muhammad's bed that night instead of him.[11][12][13] Alternatively, the historian
Ibn Ishaq (
d. 767) writes that Muhammad reassured Ali of his safety in advance.[14] At any rate, Muhammad left Mecca in the meantime under cover of darkness, joined later by
Abu Bakr, another
companion.[14] In a last-minute change of plans, however, the assassins waited until the next morning to attack.[9] At dawn, they broke into the house and found Ali, whose life they spared.[9][15] He stayed behind in Mecca for a few days after Muhammad's departure to return the goods entrusted to him,[12][16] who was evidently known in Mecca as al-Amin (
lit.'the trustworthy').[17] Then Ali too escaped Mecca together with a few Muslim women, including his mother,
Fatima bint Asad, and Muhammad's daughter,
Fatima.[18][12] Muhammad is said to have waited outside of Yathrib in
Quba for Ali to join him before entering the city on 27 September 622.[19][20] Yathrib was later renamed Medinat al-Nabi (
lit.'city of the prophet'), or simply
Medina, in his honor.[15]
Mention in the Quran
That Ali reputedly risked his life to facilitate Muhammad's safe escape may have been the reason for the revelation of verse 2:207 in the
Quran,[21] "But there is also a kind of man who gives his life away to please God, and God is most compassionate to his servants."[22] This was the opinion
Ibn Abbas (
d. 687), an influential early exegete,[22] and such reports are also found in the works of the
Sunni authors
al-Tha'labi (
d. 1035-6),[21]al-Razi (
d. 1209),[23] and al-Haskani,[24] the
Shia authors
al-Tabarsi (
d. 1153),[23]al-Hilli (
d. 1325),[24]al-Balaghi (
d. 1933),[17] and the
Mu'tazilite scholar
Ibn Abi'l-Hadid (
d. 1258).[17]