Amr ibn Hishām
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‘Amr ibn Hishām (died March 17, 624) (Arabic: عمر بن هشام), better known as Abu Jahl, was one of the Meccan leaders, known for his hostility against the Muslims.
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[edit] Biography
[edit] Family
He was known as Abū l-Hakam lit. "Father of Wisdom", meaning a wise man,but he wasn't, the strong foeness against Muslims caused this and thus was later renamed Abū Jahl (أبو جهل lit. "Father Ignorance.)He was a member of the Banu Makhzum clan of the Quraysh and one of the leaders in Mecca[1] prior to the city's surrender to Muhammad's army. His son was Ikrimah ibn Abu Jahl and also had a daughter. He disliked Muhammad and would rebuke and humiliate him in public.
[edit] Islam
‘Amr was among the chieftains that in varying degrees kept a relentless hostility towards the Muslims[1].
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When a Muslim convert was discovered among the hierarchy of a tribe, ‘Amr would reprimand the convert and then ridicule him in front of his fellow tribesmen so that he lost their respect.
Traders who converted also suffered at ‘Amr's hands. When he discovered a trader had converted he gave orders that no one should engage in business with him. As a result, the convert trader was unable to sell his wares and became impoverished.
The freemen who suffered most were poor converts who, in the ‘Amr's eyes, were the least important on the social scale. He would beat the converted without mercy and urged others to follow his example.
As for convert slaves belonging to the polytheist Quraysh, they received the harshest punishment. Common punishments included brutal beatings followed by food and water deprivation, but perhaps the most severe punishment was that of being pinned down upon the scorching hot sands of Mecca, left to endure the blistering heat of the sun without relief.
‘Amr beat Harithah bint al-Muammil, one such slave, for her conversion to such an extent that she lost her eyesight. He also came to Sumayyah bint Khayyāṭ (mother of ‘Ammar ibn Yāsir, who later was one of the the Four Companions of ‘Alī) and inflicted on her mortal wounds by stabbing her with a spear in her genitals. Summayah was the first martyr for Islam.
Some of the physically weaker converts were unable to endure their prolonged punishment and recanted. However, their recantations were not authentic. Those who remained undetected would offer their prayers in secret, but there were many who did not have the privilege of privacy and their grief at not being able to offer their prayers was considerable.
[edit] Battle of Badr
Prior to the Battle of Badr, Sa’d ibn Mu'adh had visited Mecca once to perform his Umrah with his non-Muslim friend Umayyah ibn Khalaf, when they came across ’Amr. They had an argument, and as it became heated, Sa’d threatened him with stopping the Meccan trade route to Syria and ’Amr informed Umayyah that his life was threatened by Muhammad.[1].
’Amr was killed in the Battle of Badr by two youths, Muawwaz ibn Amr and Muaaz ibn Amr.

