The Nakhla Raid was the seventh Caravan Raid and the first successful raid against the Meccans. Abdullah ibn Jahsh was the Commander.
It took place in January 624 AD (Rajab 2 A.H.) Muhammad despatched ‘Abdullah bin Jahsh Asadi to Nakhlah, on the outskirts of Mecca, at the head of 8 Emigrants with six camels.
After his return from the first Badr encounter (Battle of Safwan), Muhammad sent Abdullah ibn Jahsh in Rajab with 12 men on a fact-finding operation. Abdullah ibn Jahsh was a maternal cousin of Muhammad. He took along with him Abu Haudhayfa, Abdullah ibn Jahsh, Ukkash ibn Mihsan, Utba b. Ghazwan, Sa’d ibn Abi Waqqas, Amir ibn Rabia, Waqid ibn Abdullah and Khalid ibn al-Bukayr.Muhammad gave Abdullah ibn Jahsh a letter, but not to be read until he had traveled for two days and then to do what he was instructed to do in the letter without putting pressure on his companions. Abdullah proceeded for two days, then he opened the letter; it told him to proceed until he reached at Nakhla, between Mecca and Taif, lie in wait for the Quraysh and observe what they were doing.
pour your little heart out on a six string,
and I'll tell you how much it's fucking worth to me.
come on, it's plain to see that these chords come to
easy,
they’re as easy to repeat, a photocopied replication.
another song for "our generation."
an imitation of an imitation of an imitation...
my mom asked me "where's the voice in this country,
i said everybody's got one, they're just garbled and
clumsy,
reared up to spit back referential newspeak...
in a postmodern fucking paradise.
KC's fear was her broken sprit. and that transmitter in
her yard?
she said "it's good for something, I know, but I don't
use it."
and "the politics of broadcast?" she said,
"come on! can't you tell me what the use is?"
i said, the truth is, i do this, mostly out of
boredom...
and on and on on on... i know you won't request this
song,
but this one's strictly for the good old boys in the
back of the truck,
singing "turn up the radio as long as they don't sing
about..."
the cracks in the mortar, they're tearing up the
borders,
and they're building us a brand new town.
and i've seen it in the animals in kennels,
they truly represent the alienation that goes all the
way down.
and then I hear about the "nuclearaniamercampaign,"
broadcasted vaguely from some passing TV,
“i’ll think this through more clearly”...
and the boys in the back sit and tune through all the
static,
and a voice flickers over the air.
and they don't understand the "this is not enough,"
oh no they don't pick up much past:
"turn the radio up, TURN THE RADIO UP!"
when she says "this life is trash," it's not that she's
being dramatic,
she's just telling it straight up like it is.