Sharing of the same spirit, and as fellow propagandists. Such as Drett's preposterous lies like "Islam introduces the concept of one God" in the 7th century, when what Muhammad and his boys in fact did, was slaughter innocent Jewish farm boys and their dads and grandpas and rape and press into sexual slavery their little sisters and moms and grandmoms (who had of course been monotheists for thousands of years before Muhammad), while selling the discards off into slavery to purchase camels and swords. BANU QURAYZA MASSACRE
The area of Medinah before the prophet pbuh arrived had a history of bloody civil wars between the different clans of Medina and the Jews.
At Prophet Muhammad’s (pbuh) insistence, Medina’s pagan, Muslim and Jewish clans signed a pact to protect each other.
Achieving this new social order was difficult. Certain individual pagans and recent Medinan converts to Islam tried to thwart the new arrangement in various ways, and some of the Jewish clans were uneasy with the threatened demise of their old alliances. At least three times in five years, Jewish leaders, uncomfortable with the changing political situation in Medina, went against Muhammad, hoping to restore the tense, sometimes bloody-but predictable-balance of power among the tribes.
The Jews of Banu Nadir and Banu Qaynuqa both broke the truce by attempting to kill the prophet. One by throwing a boulder on him and the other by poisoning him.
The danger was great. During this period, the Meccans were actively trying to dislodge Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) militarily, twice marching large armies to Medina. Muhammad was nearly killed in the first engagement, on the plains of Uhud just outside of Medina. In their second and final military push against Medina, now known as the Battle of the Trench, the Meccans recruited allies from northwestern Arabia to join the fight, including the assistance of the two exiled Jewish tribes. In addition, they sent envoys to the largest Jewish tribe still in Medina, the Banu Qurayza, hoping to win their support. The Banu Qurayza’s crucial location on the south side of Medina would allow the Meccans to attack Muhammad from two sides.
The Banu Qurayza were hesitant to join the Meccan alliance, but when a substantial Meccan army arrived, they agreed.
As a siege began, the Banu Qurayza nervously awaited further developments. Learning of their intention to defect and realizing the grave danger this posed, Muhammad initiated diplomatic efforts to keep the Banu Qurayza on his side. Little progress was made. In the third week of the siege, the Banu Qurayza signaled their readiness to act against Muhammad, although they demanded that the Meccans provide them with hostages first, to ensure that they wouldn’t be abandoned to face Muhammad alone. Yet that is exactly what happened. The Meccans, nearing exhaustion themselves, refused to give the Banu Qurayza any hostages. Not long after, cold, heavy rains set in, and the Meccans gave up the fight and marched home, to the horror and dismay of the Banu Qurayza.
The Muslims now commenced a 25-day siege against the Banu Qurazya’s fortress. Finally, both sides agreed to arbitration. A former ally of the Banu Qurayza, an Arab chief named Sa’d ibn Muadh, now a Muslim, was chosen as judge by both sides. The Banu Qurayza chose Sa’d because they thought that a former ally would show leniency. Sa’d, one of the few casualties of battle, would soon die of his wounds.
If the earlier tribal relations had been in force, he would have certainly spared the Banu Qurayza. His fellow chiefs urged him to pardon these former allies, but he refused. In his view, the Banu Qurayza had attacked the new social order and failed to honour their agreement to protect the town. Under the Charter of Medina, Jews had the rights of being judged according to their own scripture (rather than Quran). Saad bi Muad, punishment coincided with this verse of old testament:
When the Lord thy God hath delivered it unto thy hands, thou shalt smite every male therein with the edge of the sword: but the women, and the little ones and the cattle, and all that is in the city, even all the spoil thereof, shalt thou take unto thyself. (Deuteronomy 20:12)
Muhammad accepted his judgment, and the next day, according to Muslim sources, 700 men of the Banu Qurayza were executed.
Most scholars of this episode agree that neither party acted outside the bounds of normal relations in 7th century Arabia. The new order brought by Muhammad was viewed by many as a threat to the age-old system of tribal alliances, as it certainly proved to be. For the Banu Qurayza, the end of this system seemed to bring with it many risks. At the same time, the Muslims faced the threat of total extermination, and needed to send a message to all those groups in Medina that might try to betray their society in the future. It is doubtful that either party could have behaved differently under the circumstances.
The exiled Banu Nadir and the Banu Qaynuqa removed to the prosperous northern oasis of Khaybar, and later pledged political loyalty to Muhammad. Other Jewish clans honoured the pact they had signed and continued to live in peace in Medina long after it became the Muslim capital of Arabia.
My Sources Sirat-un-Nabi Vol 2 by Allama Shibli Naumani
No god but God by Reza Aslan
Muhammad: Legacy of a Prophet . Muhammad and Jews of Medina | PBS