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In the name of Allaah the most Merciful, the
Bestower of Mercy.
Sheikh-ul Islam Ahmad Ibn Taymiyah was not an
ordinary Sheikh like those of today, or a scholar who centred a
study circle, nor was he just a Friday khateeb or a mere teacher in
a mosque. He was also not contented with instituting a school to
educate his students the sciences of Shari'ah. For he took the role
of the General Imam or the deputy of the rightly-guided Khaleefa in
his absence. He fought innovations in the religion and established
the truth with the force of the sword, without detaching from the
teachings of his religion. He was not a hypocrite in the presence of
rulers, nor did he fear the authority of a sultan or a prince.
Ibn Taymiyah's most significant achievement in his life was his
Jihad against the Tatars after he unmasked the corruptions in their
beliefs and their deceptive claims of embracing Islam. At that time,
the Tatars were the greatest danger facing the whole Muslim nation.
They had the largest military power and the most terrible warfare.
Their pretence as Muslims was a big danger to the Muslim nation,
exactly like the dangers posed by the Muslim leaders of today who
falsely claim to belong to Islam and at the same time they butcher
its faithful people.
He was not satisfied with addressing the princes and leaders
only, but he also addressed the public and gave fatwas (religious
verdict) necessitating the defending of Islam against its enemy, the
Tatars. He held that the protection of Islam should be the primary
objective of all Muslims and the condition to complete their faith.
His first letter of jihad that was addressed to the public stated
the following:
"After Bismillah ar-Rahman ar-Raheem , To whom ever this reaches
from the faithful and the Muslims, may Allah have mercy upon them in
this life and the Hereafter. May He grant them perceived and
concealed blessings, and may He grant them the dignified victory and
great triumphs.
Peace and blessing of Allah be with you all. We praise Allah
Almighty on your behalf, the One and Only God, the All-Capable".
He then started his letter by classifying the kuffar into a
number of categories. He said that the first group of kuffar are the
original kuffars , e.g. the Christians, Armenians, and the like.
With this group, it is permissible to hold peace agreements with,
eat from their food and slaughtering, marry from their women, can be
released if they fell as fell as prisoners of war, and their women
are not to be killed unless they were fighting.
The second group consists of apostates (murtaddun) who return to
their infidel ways, like some Arab tribes, Persians, and Romans.
These murtaddun are worse than the original kuffar. Therefore,
fighting them is obligatory if they do not return to Islam and no
peace agreement nor a covenant of security can be given to them.
Their prisoners are not to be released, their food is not to be
eaten, the Muslim man can not marry their women, and they are all to
be fought and killed whether they have engaged in fighting or not,
even their elderly and women.
The third group consists of those who claim to belong to Islam,
but do not perform the Islamic rituals and practices, such as salat,
zakat, hajj, nor do they carry out Jihad or take tributes (jizia)
from the people of the book and the Sabbists, nor do they cease from
killing Muslims and taking their money. This group, under the
consensus opinion of Muslims, must be fought in the same way that
Abu Bakr as-Sideeq (r.a.a.) fought the people who refused to pay
zakat. Some of them are worse than kuffar, even if they prayed and
fasted like the khawarij who Ali (r.a.a.) fought and the Prophet
(s.a.w.) foretold about them: "they are the most evil of people
amongst Allah's creation". And non of the companions or their
successors disagree about the necessity to fighting them.
As for the fourth group, they are the most evil of all the
groups. They are a group that rejected Islam while still claiming to
belong to it. They are infidels, who reverted from Islam because
they entered Islam without following its Shari'a . It is agreed
upon, that they should be fought totally until they return to
practice the fundamentals of Islam and to prevent affliction (fitna)
so that the religion (worship) will all be for Allah Alone.
All these conditions are to be applied to them in their
homelands. How about if they invaded the lands of Muslims and attack
them for no other reason than to inflict injustice and injury upon
the Muslim nation?. "Will you not fight a people who have violated
their oaths (pagans of Makkah) and intended to expel the Messenger,
while they did attack you first? Do you fear them? Allah has more
right that you should fear Him, if you are believers" (s9:v13). This
verse clearly shows the truth about the Tatars and their
contemporary sect, the Batiniah, and others who tried to corrupt the
creed of Islam.
Following these words, Ibn Taymiyah began to show the merits of
the Mujahideen, and the virtues of Jihad fo r Allah's sake. He
explained that jihad will be ongoing till the day of judgment, by
using the following authentic hadeeth as a proof: " There will
always remain a group of people from my nation who establish the
truth. They will never be agonised by those who let them down nor by
those who disagree with them till the day of judgement" . And Ibn
Taymiyah sees those people to be the people of Sham.
Ibn Taymiyah then narrated the different Ahadeeth and Ayat
showing the importance of Jihad and the inevitable victory of the
Muslims. He then started mentioning those faithful groups (mu'minoon
), and their role at his time. There is the victorious group
(at-tai'fa al-mansourah), the Mujahideen warriors. There are those
who disagree with them and think that the time for Jihad has not
come yet, and that now at the preparation stage and organisation.
But he proved that there is nothing higher in status than Jihad and
no rank can rise above the level of Mujahideen for Allah's cause.
He concluded his message and soon after that, he took the
responsibility to training the armies and to organise the Mujahideen
groups. He was responsible for the raids against the Tatars military
camps. He also attacked the region where the Batiniah people in the
mountains of Sham abode, because they betrayed the Muslims and
secretly cooperated with the enemies of Islam, the Tatars and the
Crusaders. Although the Batini sect succeeded in deceiving Ibn
Taymiyah when they pretended to repent and abandon their crooked
creed and beliefs. But it was proven to him that they played a trick
using taqqya (calculated deception), and that they remained on their
strong animosity to Islam and Muslims. He did not hesitate to fight
them and hound them, and gave fatwas (religious verdict) exposing
their hidden beliefs and crooked creed and called for the necessity
to fight them.
On the other hand, he never compromised the truth when accounting
princes and the kings for their negligence in defending the land of
Islam against internal and external enemies. This is clearly
depicted through his letter to Sultan an-Nasser Muhammad Ibn
Qalawoon. In the letter he threatened to develop a separate state
from the Sultan authority, and give his loyalty to another leader
who will not hesitate to defend and to stand agains t the invading
Tatars.
When the city of Damascus fell for the second time to the Tatars,
he refused to stand by idly, for he agreed with the leaders of the
country to take an important step for the well being of all Muslims
by meeting the Tatars leader. Alt hough they had no power to defend
themselves with, nevertheless he took the necessary step of
organising to meet the Sultan of the Tartar Qazaan, asking him for
security for the people of Damascus without the handing over of the
fortress. He was not a faint hearted coward like the other Sufi
sheikhs who met Qazaan asking for his forgiveness and his approval
of them. But he confronted Qazaan face to face and explained to him
that their occupation of Damascus will no be long since the Muslims
are revolting. The security was granted to the Muslims of Damascus
owing to Ibn Taymiyah boldness and courageousness.
Ibn Taymiyah also partnered Sultan An-Nasser Ibn Qalawoon in his
war against Qazaan who claimed to be Muslim and named him self
Mahmood. It was proven to Ibn Taymiyah other wise, because Qazaan
refused to completely uphold Islamic Shari' ah and He disrespected
Allah's laws. He governed the Islamic country by the book of
al-Yasiq which was a mixture of laws from Christianity, Judaism,
Islam and the laws of Jinkeeze Khan himself. He discarded the laws
that was sent down to the Muslims in the Qur'an and the Sunnah.
All these conditions are to be applied to them in their
homelands. How about if they invaded the lands of Muslims and attack
them for no other reason than to inflict injustice and injury upon
the Muslim nation?. "Will you not fight a people who have violated
their oaths (pagans of Makkah) and intended to expel the Messenger,
while they did attack you first? Do you fear them? Allah has more
right that you should fear Him, if you are believers" (s9:v13). This
verse clearly shows the truth about the Tatars and their
contemporary sect, the Batiniah, and others who tried to corrupt the
creed of Islam.
Following these words, Ibn Taymiyah began to show the merits of
the Mujahideen, and the virtues of Jihad fo r Allah's sake. He
explained that jihad will be ongoing till the day of judgment, by
using the following authentic hadeeth as a proof: " There will
always remain a group of people from my nation who establish the
truth. They will never be agonised by those who let them down nor by
those who disagree with them till the day of judgement" . And Ibn
Taymiyah sees those people to be the people of Sham.
Ibn Taymiyah then narrated the different Ahadeeth and Ayat
showing the importance of Jihad and the inevitable victory of the
Muslims. He then started mentioning those faithful groups (mu'minoon
), and their role at his time. There is the victorious group
(at-tai'fa al-mansourah), the Mujahideen warriors. There are those
who disagree with them and think that the time for Jihad has not
come yet, and that now at the preparation stage and organisation.
But he proved that there is nothing higher in status than Jihad and
no rank can rise above the level of Mujahideen for Allah's cause.
He concluded his message and soon after that, he took the
responsibility to training the armies and to organise the Mujahideen
groups. He was responsible for the raids against the Tatars military
camps. He also attacked the region where the Batiniah people in the
mountains of Sham abode, because they betrayed the Muslims and
secretly cooperated with the enemies of Islam, the Tatars and the
Crusaders. Although the Batini sect succeeded in deceiving Ibn
Taymiyah when they pretended to repent and abandon their crooked
creed and beliefs. But it was proven to him that they played a trick
using taqqya (calculated deception), and that they remained on their
strong animosity to Islam and Muslims. He did not hesitate to fight
them and hound them, and gave fatwas (religious verdict) exposing
their hidden beliefs and crooked creed and called for the necessity
to fight them.
On the other hand, he never compromised the truth when accounting
princes and the kings for their negligence in defending the land of
Islam against internal and external enemies. This is clearly
depicted through his letter to Sultan an-Nasser Muhammad Ibn
Qalawoon. In the letter he threatened to develop a separate state
from the Sultan authority, and give his loyalty to another leader
who will not hesitate to defend and to stand agains t the invading
Tatars.
When the city of Damascus fell for the second time to the Tatars,
he refused to stand by idly, for he agreed with the leaders of the
country to take an important step for the well being of all Muslims
by meeting the Tatars leader. Alt hough they had no power to defend
themselves with, nevertheless he took the necessary step of
organising to meet the Sultan of the Tartar Qazaan, asking him for
security for the people of Damascus without the handing over of the
fortress. He was not a faint hearted coward like the other Sufi
sheikhs who met Qazaan asking for his forgiveness and his approval
of them. But he confronted Qazaan face to face and explained to him
that their occupation of Damascus will no be long since the Muslims
are revolting. The security was granted to the Muslims of Damascus
owing to Ibn Taymiyah boldness and courageousness.
Ibn Taymiyah also partnered Sultan An-Nasser Ibn Qalawoon in his
war against Qazaan who claimed to be Muslim and named him self
Mahmood. It was proven to Ibn Taymiyah other wise, because Qazaan
refused to completely uphold Islamic Shari' ah and He disrespected
Allah's laws. He governed the Islamic country by the book of
al-Yasiq which was a mixture of laws from Christianity, Judaism,
Islam and the laws of Jinkeeze Khan himself. He discarded the laws
that was sent down to the Muslims in the Qur'an and the Sunnah.
In the year 702 after hijrah , the news of the return of the
Tatars to Sham spread. Ibn Taymiyah made haste to the sultan in
Egypt seeking his help against the danger of the Tatars and their
monstrosities which they were so famous for, especially when the
rulers of Allepo and Hama a bandoned their cities and escaped to
Damascus. By the time the Tartars reached Homs and Ba'albek, Ibn
Taymiyah recruite d the remains of the army that left Hama and the
other cities. He united the army and started the march to Damascus
to be at the forefront of the ranks, until the armies of the
Khaleefah al-Mustakfi and Sultan an-Nasser Ibn Qalawoon reached
Damascus. On S aturday, the second of Ramadan, the Muslim army was
complete, and the organisation for the battle had begun outside
Damascus to safeguard the city from any damage. The site of the
battle was in Marj as-Safar.
When the Tatars heard of their massing, they ma de haste to meet
them outside Damascus. Hence the first plan of Ibn Taymiyah was
successful in that he distracted the Tatars from further damaging
the city. For the Tatar's first worry was to destroy the army of the
Muslims, leaving the city unmolested.
The course of the Great Battle
The two armies then met, each have in mind the destruction of the
other, and the battle started at once. It was Zuhur time and the
Muslims in that army were fasting that day, every one of them
wishing from Allah either Shahadah or victory. In their minds are
the prophet's companions (r.a.a.) and their righteous successors.
Their first worry was to defend Islam and to destroy the Tatarian
enemy once and for all, making sure they never return to the land of
Islam with their corruption, unlike the first time when the Tatars
regrouped themselves after their defeat in the battle of A'een
Jaloot and returned to attack the land of the Muslims.
Therefore, the main worry of the Khaleefah and the Sultan was to
destroy the Tatars and elimi nate their danger once and for all.
When the Tatars saw the Muslims apparent devotion and commitment to
war, all their numbers came down to the battle, displaying their
machinery and armour. They were the bounty of the Muslims by the end
of the day.
With this battle, the Khaleefaah once again re-established his
role as the Khaleefah of the Muslims, and so did the Sultan. While
Sheikh-ul Islam delivered his role as the advisor. He was at the
head of the army, sharpening the Muslims purpose, while on the other
hand he would fight the enemy courageously, sending them reeling
back to their homes. When the army saw their Khaleefah, Sultan and
Imam at the head of their ranks, they started to crush Tatars,
eliminating their danger and ridding the Muslims from their threat.
Consequently, they left the enemy no hope to ever return to the land
of Islam. The battle of Shaqhab was the last battle ever between the
Tatars and the Muslim.
This battle had a fundamental role in Ibn Taymiyah's reply to the
cowardly Murji' ah, Sufis, and others who tried to hinder and
discourage the resolution of the Muslims. They used either try to
scare the Muslims by exaggerating the might and strength of the
enemy, or used to proclaim that the Tatars were Muslims, and hence,
an excuse not to fight them. Ibn Taymiyah's response to the Muslims
who were deceived by what was said about the prohibition of fighting
the Tatars, was his statement: "If you find me in the ranks of the
Tatars then kill me!" . His response on the battlefield was clearer
in that he started fighting the Tatars, hence leaving no room for
the Muslims who were deceived or had a second thought about the
right decision in fighting their enemy.
Therefore Ibn Taymiyah's role, and his handling of the events is
a clear response to those who argue today that it is forbidden to
fight those who hinder Allah's deen and laws while they roam the
earth destroying and corrupting it, even if they claim to belong to
Islam.
By Br. Muhammad El-Halaby
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