Name and Background
The name “Al-Kaafiroon” (the disbelievers) has been taken from the first verse and
is not the topic of this small Soorah.
The Soorah teaches how the Prophet ŝall Allaahu ‘alayhi wa sallam and the Muslims
should let the disbelievers clearly and categorically know that there can be no
compromise or reconciliation between Islam and disbelief when it comes to the exclusive
submission, worship and slavery to Allaah Subhaanahu wa Ta’aala. They are two different
paradigms that cannot be patched together and that lead to totally different paths
and destinations.
When the Prophet ŝall Allaahu ‘alayhi wa sallam had started giving the message of
Islam to Makkans, they strongly opposed him thinking that their strong reaction
would stop him from his mission. When it did not work, they became violent and they
tried to stop his mission through aggression and through false propaganda against
him. When his mission kept growing despite their violence and false propaganda,
they increased the intensity of their brutality and persecution of the believers.
When their most vicious efforts, short of killing the Prophet himself, failed to
stop him from his mission and failed to stem the growth of his followers, they started
offering him compromises in different forms. Some of the offers they made were the
following:
According to ‘Abdullaah Ibn ‘Abbaas (as reported by Ibn Jareer, Ibn abee Ĥaatim
and Ŧabaraani), the Quraish offered to give him enough wealth to make him the richest
man in the city, marry him to any woman he wanted, and accept him as their leader
only if he stopped speaking against their gods. When he rejected these offers, they
suggested that he join them so that all Makkans would alternate worship of their
idols for one year and worship of Allaah as the Prophet ŝall Allaahu ‘alayhi wa
sallam was inviting them to do the next year. This was their compromise-solution
to establish unity and respect for everyone’s religion.
Another attempt was made by Waleed ibn Mugheerah, ‘Aaŝ ibn Waail, Aswad ibn Al-Muŧŧalib
and Umayyah ibn Khalaf, as reported by Ibn Jareer, Ibn abee Ĥaatim and Ibn Hishaam.
They proposed that the Prophet ŝall Allaahu ‘alayhi wa sallam join the Makkan leadership
team so that he could be involved and consulted on all important affairs and so
that they could jointly bring the whole Makkan community together to worship all
gods, including Allaah Subhaanahu wa Ta’aala the way suggested by the Prophet ŝall
Allaahu ‘alayhi wa sallam, until gradually the best ideas and practices naturally
emerge and were adopted.
There are other reports of suggestion from the Makkans along the same lines as noted
above indicating that there were multiple attempts made like these. This Soorah
is the response to all those proposals. As you can see, the subject matter of this
Soorah is not of compromise, reconciliation and tolerance in the sense that some
people interpret it nowadays. It is a categorical announcement of there being no
possibility of compromise with obstinate opponents who do not want to listen to
the Prophet ŝall Allaahu ‘alayhi wa sallam and a determined ongoing struggle until
Islam is established as it deserves to be established. It is an open defiance of
and challenge to the established order in the society at the height of the clash
between the two paradigms of life, without any willingness to compromise on the
matters of principle.
This dedication to the exclusive servitude to Allaah Subhaanahu wa Ta’aala without
any compromise and the instruction to convey it unequivocally to the disbelievers
was not only for the Prophet ŝall Allaahu ‘alayhi wa sallam, but also for the Muslims
of all times.
Looking at the order of the Soorahs, you can see that it is preceded by the prediction
of the success of the prophetic mission in Soorah Al-Kowthar. After predicting the
outcome, this Soorah challenges the diehard adversaries that because the mission
of the Prophet ŝall Allaahu ‘alayhi wa sallam will go ahead until the goals are
achieved, they can do what they want. Then, the next Soorah, An-Naŝr, describes
the eventual success of the mission and conquer of Makkah.