The Prophet Muhammad had no divine or supernatural protection. Because of increasing hostilities in Mecca, some 70 of Muhammad's followers migrated to the friendly protection of the Christian King of Abyssinia. Soon afterwards, Muhammad departed secretly to Yathrib (now Medina), under the cover of night, with his closets companion Abu Bakr. His cousin and son-in-law remained behind to sleep in his bed and foil a plot to kill Muhammad while he slept.
When in Yathrib, Muhammad made tribal alliances, many of them through marriage (he eventually had nine wives). With military success came respect and support from across the Arabian peninsula, and Muhammad was no longer vulnerable to attack by his opponents.
it is not only the Arabs that benefited from Muhammad pbuh's teaching but it is the whole mankind that has benefit
The Turks, mongols, Arabs, Persians, more Arabs and barbarians.
Muslims, including Muslim Arabs, call prophet Muhammad (PBUH) God's last prophet.
The prophet Muhammad peace be upon him treated valued people as equal no difference between blacks and whites, Arabs and non-Arabs, we had perfects morals and behavior even was treating his enemies with kindness
Arabs had lived in the Arabian Peninsula until Muhammad appear to their lifes.
they were very irritated by the fact that someone was telling them what to do
It depends on which "other Arabs" you are talking about; Pre-Islamic Arabia was a very religiously diverse place. However, the majority of Arabs were either henotheists or polytheists, so Muhammad's promotion of one God was unique for them. Conversely, Muhammad's revelation was different from those of the Jews and the Christians in citing a more universal prophetic tradition and creating a new set of edicts and organizations.
Prophet Muhammad's Belief of giving to the poor most disturbed the Arabs.
It depends on which "other Arabs" you are talking about; Pre-Islamic Arabia was a very religiously diverse place. However, the majority of Arabs were either henotheists or polytheists, so Muhammad's promotion of one God was unique for them. Conversely, Muhammad's revelation was different from those of the Jews and the Christians in citing a more universal prophetic tradition and creating a new set of edicts and organizations.
It depends on which "other Arabs" you are talking about; Pre-Islamic Arabia was a very religiously diverse place. However, the majority of Arabs were either henotheists or polytheists, so Muhammad's promotion of one God was unique for them. Conversely, Muhammad's revelation was different from those of the Jews and the Christians in citing a more universal prophetic tradition and creating a new set of edicts and organizations.
It depends on which "other Arabs" you are talking about; Pre-Islamic Arabia was a very religiously diverse place. However, the majority of Arabs were either henotheists or polytheists, so Muhammad's promotion of one God was unique for them. Conversely, Muhammad's revelation was different from those of the Jews and the Christians in citing a more universal prophetic tradition and creating a new set of edicts and organizations.
It depends on which "other Arabs" you are talking about; Pre-Islamic Arabia was a very religiously diverse place. However, the majority of Arabs were either henotheists or polytheists, so Muhammad's promotion of one God was unique for them. Conversely, Muhammad's revelation was different from those of the Jews and the Christians in citing a more universal prophetic tradition and creating a new set of edicts and organizations.