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Understanding OBL Through The Lenses Of The Past

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  • Understanding OBL Through The Lenses Of The Past

    UNDERSTANDING OBL THROUGH THE LENSES OF THE PAST
    By Habib Siddiqui

    Al-Jazeerah.info, GA
    April 25 2006

    For more than four years, America has been searching for Osama bin
    Laden (OBL), offering tens of millions of dollars in exchange for
    leads as to his whereabouts. But no one has claimed the reward and
    probably will never do.

    OBL and his organization Al-Qaeda remind me of the Hashishyyin
    (Assassins) or 'hashish smokers' of the Middle Ages and their
    charismatic leader. The grand master of the latter group was Hasan-e
    Sabbah, an Iranian who was born around 1048 CE in the city of Rayy
    (not too far from today's Tehran). He studied at Nishapur and in the
    Dar-ul-Hikmat in Cairo. He was a very cultured and gifted man who
    loved poetry. Legends of dubious origin claim that he was a companion
    of the young poet Omar Khayyam (1028-87 CE).

    In those days, the Isma'ili Shi'ite doctrine, to which Hasan Ibn
    al-Sabbah belonged, was a dominant power in many parts of Muslim Asia
    and Egypt. Iran was ruled by a Shi'ite dynasty of the Buwayhids who
    were strong enough to bully the Abbasid caliphate in Baghdad. Soon,
    however, when Sabbah was in his youth, the situation reversed
    dramatically. The Seljuks, upholders of Sunni orthodoxy, took control
    of the vast territories to which Shi'ism had once ruled unrivalled.

    With the changing political landscape, the Sabah family would pack up
    and move around 1071 to settle in Egypt, the last bastion of Shi'ism,
    ruled by the Fatimid Isma'ili (Batini) Shi'ites.

    There, however, the young Ibn al-Sabbah discovered the painful fact of
    impotency and vassal statehood of the Fatimid regime. The aged monarch
    al-Muntasir was nothing more than a Seljuk puppet who dared not to
    leave the palace without the permission of his Armenian vizier Badr
    al-Jamali. In Cairo, Ibn al-Sabbah befriended many radical Isma'ili
    Shi'ites who wanted to reform the Fatimid regime from its vassal
    status and take revenge on the Seljuks.

    With the active cooperation of the Fatimid Prince Nizar, in 1990 a
    movement took shape with the idea of reviving the Shi'ite glory. Ibn
    al-Sabbah, in essence, became its chief architect. With the intention
    of establishing a base, he and some of his trusted comrades returned
    to Iran and captured the hill fortress of Alamut, near Qazvin in
    northern Iran. After capturing this center, situated in a practically
    inaccessible region of the Elbruz Mountains near the Caspian Sea,
    he set about establishing a highly disciplined politico-religious
    organization, not hitherto seen in the history of the Near and
    Middle East. All members underwent intensive training from religious
    indoctrination to military training. They were ranked according to
    their loyalty, reliability, knowledge and courage. Assassination of
    people affiliated with the ruling Seljuk and Abbasid Empire became
    their primary tactic to sow terror among their foes.

    Their first assassination victim was Nizam-ul-Mulk (Order of the
    Realm), the grand vizier of the Seljuk Empire. [He was responsible for
    everything good and glorious with the Seljuk history, and conversely,
    the downfall of the Isma'ili Shi'ite power. He was essentially the
    pillar of the empire.] On October 14, 1092 he was killed with a stroke
    of a sword. [His murder was a death-blow to the Seljuk Empire which
    disintegrated soon.]

    Soon after the murder, Ibn al-Sabbah's comrades went underground.

    Al-Afdal, the new vizier in Egypt, who had succeeded his father Badr
    al-Jamali, mercilessly crushed the associates of Prince Nizar. The
    latter himself was also killed.

    Realizing that their goal to reviving a Fatimid empire would take time,
    Ibn al-Sabbah's surviving Nizari comrades revised their strategy,
    and returned to the hill fortress of Alamut. From this center Ibn
    al-Sabbah commanded a network of strongholds all over Iran and Iraq
    wherefrom his zealous followers carried out deadly assaults against
    the Abbasids and the Seljuks. Most of these activities were almost
    suicidal in the sense that the perpetrators, called the Fidayeen,
    carried the risk of being apprehended and executed. The 'suicide'
    squads comprised of 1 to 3 people, who disguised themselves mostly
    as local merchants or ascetics. They liked publicity. As such,
    their favorite venues were often mosques (especially on Fridays and
    religious festivities), generally in the afternoons.

    Marco Polo and other travelers related (a claim not confirmed by any
    known Isma'ili source) that before setting out with their suicidal
    attacks, the sect would take hashish, and hence the name Hashishyyin
    (which was distorted into 'assassin') to induce visions of paradise.

    I believe the calmness with which the sect carried out their deadly
    attacks earned them that ill repute.

    In the early 12th century, soon after the Crusaders had established
    their control over Jerusalem, the activities of the Hashishyyin
    extended to Syria and today's Lebanon. Syria was then divided into
    many city states. Ibn al-Sabbah sent a Batini preacher, an enigmatic
    'physician-astrologer' in Aleppo who managed to win the unwavering
    trust of its King Ridwan. The latter allowed Ibn al-Sabbah's
    adherents to converge on the city, to set up cells and preach their
    doctrine. After the death of this mysterious envoy in 1103, the sect
    immediately sent Abu Tahir, an Iranian goldsmith. His influence on
    Ridwan was overwhelming, which greatly benefited the sect putting
    it into prominence in public life. It was precisely because of such
    power-wielding that the sect was hated by most Aleppans.

    Ibn al-Khashab, the Shi'ite Qadi (judge) of Aleppo, became their
    greatest critic and demanded an end to their meddling in official
    matters. He also hated them for their sympathy for the Crusaders. [It
    seems that the sect took the age-old doctrine of 'the enemy of my enemy
    is my friend' to its heart. Since the Seljuks were their enemies,
    the Crusaders became their friends. Ridwan was despicably appeasing
    to the Crusaders at the behest of his Hashishyyin advisors.

    To Ibn al-Khashab, such support amounted to treason.]

    When Ridwan died in 1113, the Aleppans had enough of the Batini sect,
    and killed nearly 200 members, including Abu Tahir. Other sect members
    managed to flee and took shelter among the Crusaders or dispersed
    in countryside.

    Drawing lessons from their failure, the sect altered its tactics.

    Under Ibn al-Sabbah's new envoy to Syria - an Iranian propagandist by
    the name of Bahram - the sect decided to halt all external spectacular
    actions and become a secret organization. They lived in the greatest
    secrecy and seclusion, changing dress and appearance so cleverly that
    no one suspected their identity.

    One of the sect members killed Qadi Ibn al-Khashab in the summer of
    1125 when he was leaving the great mosque of Aleppo after Zuhr (midday)
    prayer. It is worth noting that the Qadi not only had saved the city
    from the Christian Crusaders but also prepared the way for leaders
    like Salahuddin Ayyubi (R) to emerge later against the invaders.[1]
    He had been the most intransigent opponents of the sect.

    The next year, the sect killed Imam Abu Sa'ad al-Harawi, the splendor
    of Islam, the qadi of qadis of Baghdad. As one of the leading Imams of
    the Muslim world, he led the first manifestation of popular outrage
    against the Crusaders in August of 1099. The Hashishyyin had stabbed
    him to death in the great mosque of Hamadan and fled immediately,
    leaving no clue behind.

    On 26 November 1126 al-Borsoki, the powerful master of Aleppo and
    Mosul, was killed by the Hashishyyin. He had gone to the great mosque
    in Mosul to say his Friday prayers. The assassins, dressed up as
    ascetics, were waiting in a corner without arousing any suspicion.

    Suddenly they leapt upon him and struck him in the throat with knife
    thrusts. His murderers were soon arrested and put to death. A few
    months later, they killed al-Borsoki's son, who had succeeded him.

    The situation turned so bad that the city became insecure and
    eventually fell to the Crusaders.

    The situation in Damascus was no better. The Atabeg Thugtigin was
    weak, aging and sick. He could not control the Hashishyyin, who had
    their own armed militia. Even the city administration was in their
    hands and the vizier their client. The latter was in close contact
    with the Crusaders.

    Hasan-e Sabbah died in Alamut retreat in 1142. Unfortunately, his
    death did not stop the sect's criminal activities. They assassinated
    any notable authority who opposed their doctrine. The terror they
    inflicted was so overwhelming that no one dared to criticize them
    publicly, neither Amir, nor vizier, not Sultan, not even Imams.

    >>From Masyaf, Rashid ad-Din as-Sinan, the Syrian grand master of
    the Hashishyyin, more commonly known as the shaykh al-jabal, ruled
    virtually independently of the sect's headquarters at Alamut. His
    commandos terrorized the entire territory.

    The terrorism of the Hashishyyin sect continued until 1256 when
    the Mongols under Hulagu Khan captured their fortresses in Iran
    one by another, including their headquarters in Alamut. The Syrian
    fortresses were gradually subjugated by the Mamluk Sultan Baybars
    I and put under Mamluk governors. From then on, the sect ceased to
    exist as a terrorist group and languished as a minor Shi'ite heresy.[2]

    ----

    The Muslim world is in a dire state of its existence because of
    a plethora of reasons - some foreign and some home-grown. It is,
    therefore, not difficult to understand the broad appeal of OBL who
    reminds Muslims of the neo-Crusaders who are waging war against
    Islam. "His most important ally is American foreign policy," says
    Michael Scheuer, former chief of the Central Intelligence Agency's
    bin Laden unit.[3]

    As long as the West continues to prove him right through its illegal
    interventions in Muslim countries, its criminal blockading of the
    Muslim world through alliances, its vicious attack on the Prophet
    of Islam, its threats of attacking Iran and its double-standards
    in matters of democracy, freedom, equality and human rights, OBL's
    appeal would resonate loud and clear. His crowd becomes Spartacus -
    each clamoring: "I am Spartacus."

    As Richard Rodriguez, one of the best essayists in America, once
    said, "A historical figure ascends to myth when his life matches
    some common pride or grievance or sorrow. Then history is subsumed
    into myth. Spartacus, Joaquin, Che, Gandhi, Osama. America's search
    for Osama bin Laden in these mountain passes and crowded bazaars may
    be necessary militarily and for reasons of vengeance and justice and
    national pride, but it may also be beside the point. Dead or alive,
    Osama bin Laden already is mythic. The grievances of millions of people
    in the Middle East are joined to his name, and his name surely will
    outlast his death."[4]

    How can an Empire that has no clothes fight someone like OBL when his
    life is sung, and matches some common pride, grievance and sorrow of
    hundreds of millions of people in the Muslim world?

    NOTES
    ------------------------------------ --------------------------------------------

    [1] Amin Maalouf, The Crusades through Arab eyes, pp. 98-105, al-Saqi
    Books. [Most of the information on Hasan-e Sabbah's sect in this
    essay is based on this book, which is gratefully acknowledged here.]

    [2] The New Encyclopaedia Britannica, volume 1 (1989).

    [3] Ben Laden Says West is Waging War Against Islam, NY Times, April
    24, 2006.

    [4] Villains or Heroes: Essay by Richard Rodriguez, PBS TV, January
    14, 2003.

    Dr. Habib Siddiqui, ([email protected]).

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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