For three years, Islam was shared in whispers. First believers in a living room: Khadijah, Abu Bakr (may Allah be pleased with him), Ali (may Allah be pleased with him), Zayd (may Allah be pleased with him). One by one, heart by heart. The religion that would span continents started with a handful of people praying in secret.
Then the public call. The cost became real. Bilal (may Allah be pleased with him) was dragged into the desert, a boulder on his chest under the midday sun. His only response, gasping: "Ahad, Ahad." One God. Sumayyah (may Allah be pleased with her) was killed by Abu Jahl with a spear, the first martyr in Islam. The Prophet ﷺ passed by the family of Yasir being tortured and said, with tears:[5]
Abu Bakr, a man respected and well-connected in Makkah, immediately began inviting others with his own gentle influence. Through him, some of the greatest companions came to Islam in those early, hidden days: Uthman ibn Affan, Abdur-Rahman ibn Awf, Sa'd ibn Abi Waqqas, Zubayr ibn al-Awwam, and Talhah ibn Ubaydullah (may Allah be pleased with them all).
If you have ever felt that your faith community is small, that your efforts are invisible, that no one is listening, look at where Islam began. The size of the seed tells you nothing about the size of the tree.
When the command came to go public, the Prophet ﷺ climbed the hill of Safa and called out to the tribes by name. He asked them: "If I told you there was an army behind this mountain about to attack you, would you believe me?" They answered, "Yes, you have never lied to us." Then he warned them.[6] Abu Lahab, his own uncle, cursed him publicly. The Quran responded with an entire surah.[Q3]
Abu Bakr eventually purchased Bilal's freedom, but the scars on Bilal's back never fully healed. Sumayyah, an elderly woman, chose death over denying what she knew to be true.
The Quraysh imposed a total boycott on the Prophet's ﷺ entire clan, Banu Hashim. For three years, no one could trade with them, marry them, or even sell them food. They survived by eating leaves and scraps. Children cried from hunger at night. The sounds could be heard outside the valley where they were confined. This was the cost of saying "La ilaaha illAllah" out loud.