Say, I betake me for refuge to the Lord of men,
The King of men,
The God of men,
Against the mischief of the stealthily withdrawing whisperer,
Who whispereth in men's breast
Against jinn and men. Sura An-Nas (cxiv) 1-6.
These Suras are called the al-Ma'udhatain (المعوذتين
), or preservative chapters, and
are engraved on amulets as charms against evil.
Still, the promised allurements of Paradise and all the threatened terrors of
hell and all this alleged supernatural power over witchcraft failed to win over
the Quraish, and the Prophet, being then unable to protect his poorer followers1
and unwilling to run the risk of their perversion, recommended them to emigrate
to Abyssinia, a country at that time in close commercial relations with Arabia.
The emigrants were few in number, but it was an evidence to the Meccans that
their faith was real and that exile was preferable to possibly forced
recantation. Some of the exiles joined the Christian Church in Abyssinia, for
the antagonism of Islam to Christianity came at a much later period than