Ghazwa-e-Hind Clearly proves that Pakistan wants to conduct genocide on Hindus.
An expedition in which the Prophet Muhammed PBUH commanded is called a
ghazwah and an expedition that Prophet Muhammed PBUH ordered but didn't personally participate in it and rather appointed others to lead is called a
sariyyah.
All of the Prophet's
ghazwat,
bu'uth and
saraya occurred after the
hijrah, within a span of ten years. There were either twenty-seven
ghazwat, or twenty-five, or twenty-nine. The Prophet
sallallahu 'alayhi wa sallam had to fight in nine battles, Badr, 'Uhud, Al-Khandaq, Quraydhah, Al-Mustaliqh, Khaybar,
Al-Fath (the conquering of Makkah), 'Hunayn and Ta'if. It was said that the Prophet
sallallahu 'alayhi wa sallam also fought against
Bani An-Nadhir (a Jewish tribe) and at Al-Ghabah and Wadi al-Qura', which was a suburb of Khaybar.
As for the
saraya of the Prophet
sallallahu 'alayhi wa sallam and the armies he sent, they numbered close to sixty. There were seven major battles: Badr, 'Uhud, Al-Khandaq, Khaybar,
Al-Fath, Hunayn and Tabuk. Several parts of the
Qur'an mentioned these major
ghazwat. For instance,
Surah Al-Anfal (chapter 8) was revealed about
ghazwat Badr, while the last part of
Surah Ali-'Imran (chapter 3) was about
ghazwat 'Uhud, from Allah's statement:
"And (remember) when you [Muhammad
sallallahu 'alayhi wa sallam] left your household in the morning to post the believers at their stations for the battle."
Al-Qur'an 3:121
Until just before the end of the
Surah. The beginning of
Surah Al-Ahzab (chapter 33) was revealed about the battles of Al-Khandaq, Quraydhah and Khaybar.
Surah Al-Hashr (59) was revealed about
Bani An-Nadhir,
Al-Fath (48) about Al-Hudaybiyyah and the battle of Khaybar. The conquering of Makkah was mentioned indirectly in
Surah Al-Fath and directly in
Surah An-Nasr (110). He
sallallahu 'alayhi wa sallam was wounded during the battle of 'Uhud. The angels fought alongside the Prophet
sallallahu 'alayhi wa sallam during the battles of Badr and Hunayn. They also descended during the battle of Al-Khandaq, where they shook the
mushrikin [surrounding Madinah] and defeated them. During that battle, the Prophet
sallallahu 'alayhi wa sallam threw a handful of sand at the faces of the
mushrikin (polytheists) and they fled [without a fight].
The Prophet
sallallahu 'alayhi wa sallam won decisively in two battles, Badr and Hunayn. He used
al-manjaniq (mongonel, or catapult) during on battle, At-Ta'if, and took cover behind a trench during
Ghazwat Al-Khandaq, also known as
Ghazwat Al-Ahzab. Salman al-Farsi
radiallahu 'anhu suggested that the trench be dug in that battle.