Dec 27, 2019 14:16 UTC
  • This Day in History (05-10-1398)

Today is Thursday; 5th of the Iranian month of Dey 1398 solar hijri; corresponding to 29th of the Islamic month of Rabi as-Sani 1441 lunar hijri; and December 26, 2019, of the Christian Gregorian Calendar.

1420 lunar years ago, on this day in 21 AH, one of the most controversial figures in the early history of Islam and initially among Prophet Mohammad’s (SAWA) most avowed enemies, Khaled bin Waleed, died under mysterious circumstances at the age of 50 in Homs – said to be killed by genies, while living in exile in Syria after his dismissal from command of the neo-Muslim Arab army which he had led in rapaciously brutal conquests of parts of the Byzantine and Persian Empires that tarnished the peaceful image of Islam. His own cousin, Omar ibn Khattab had called for his punishment for his unprincipled acts including the cardinal sin of murdering the righteous Muslim, Malek bin Nuwairah, and marrying his widow the same night – an act that was a clear case of adultery. Khaled’s father Waleed, the head of the Makhzum Clan of Mecca and the most wealthiest of the Qoreish, has been denounced by God in ayahs 30 and 31 of Surah Zukhruf for his calling the holy Qur’an ‘sorcery’ and for his bitter enmity towards Prophet Mohammad (SAWA). In several other Surahs, such as 6, 15, 68, 74 and 109, the holy Qur’an has exposed Waleed as a pagan of dubious birth. In such a polytheist atmosphere Khalid grew up and shared his father’s animosity towards Islam and the Prophet. When the Prophet migrated to Medina in safety, frustrating the murderous plots of the likes of Khaled, he participated in the battles imposed by the pagan Arabs on Muslims. In the Battle of Ohad, he earned notoriety for his ambush of the unsuspecting Muslims, and his forces would have killed the Prophet if not for the heroic swordsmanship and valour of the Commander of the Faithful, Imam Ali ibn Abi Taleb (AS), in beating back Khaled’s forces. At Hodeibiyyya, where the Prophet signed the treaty with the Meccans in 7 AH, he plotted to kill the Prophet, but was frustrated in his murderous designs. The next year, realizing the futility of open enmity towards the rising power of Islam, Khaled, along with that other notorious hypocrite, Amr ibn Aas, resorted to a ruse and came to the Prophet in Medina, claiming to have accepted Islam. Soon he joined the Muslims in the march on Mecca and on the peaceful surrender of that city he disobeyed the Prophet’s explicit instructions against bloodshed by killing at least thirty Meccans to settle old scores. The Prophet openly disassociated himself from Khaled and his murderous act, and paid blood money as compensation to the bereaved families. At Ghadeer, Khaled gave oath of allegiance to Imam Ali (AS) on the latter’s declaration as vicegerent by the Prophet on divine commandment, but no sooner did the Prophet pass away, he joined the conspirators in depriving the Imam of his right of political leadership of the ummah. Appointed commander of the Arab armies in the brutal campaigns against the Byzantine and Persian Empires, his constant violation of the laws of Islam made Omar ibn Khattab dismiss him.

825 solar years ago, on this day in 1194 AD, Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor was born in Iesi, Marche, Italy. An ethnic German, residing in Sicily with his capital at Palermo, which still had Muslim culture and a sizeable Muslim population, at his coronation, he said to have worn the red silk mantle bearing an Arabic inscription that had been crafted during the reign of Roger II, indicating the year 528 AH of the Islamic calendar. It incorporated a generic benediction (du’a), wishing the wearer “vast prosperity, great generosity, high splendour, fame, magnificent endowments, and the fulfillment of wishes and hopes. This robe is housed in the Schatzkammer of the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna. During his 30-year reign, Fredrick who was a multilingual person, well versed in Arabic and interacting with learned Muslims, sent questions to the courts of Muslim rulers, on various issues including optical phenomena like the curving of objects in water. The Pope and the Church were hostile to him because of his religious tolerance, at times excommunicating him. On being crowned, he settled some 60,000 Sicilian Muslims in southern Italy – 20,000 in Lucera (Lugherah in Arabic), 30,000 in Apulia and its surroundings, and the rest in Stornara, Casal Monte Saraceno, Castel Saraceno and Campania. These included Iranians of Sicily as well, in particular, the Khwarezmi community of Palermo. The Muslim population of southern Italy, along with local converts from Christianity as well as descendants of Arabs and Berbers who had settled centuries earlier, thrived for another 80 years, till their towns and cities were sacked in 1300 by Charles II of Naples, who expelled many to Albania, forcibly converted to Christianity many others and sold into slavery the rest of the population, besides turning mosques into churches. Fredrick II also enlisted Muslims into his personal bodyguards, as they had the advantage of immunity from papal excommunication, and with their help he kept a menagerie which had not only monkeys and camels, but also a giraffe and an elephant. In February 1229, Fredrick II took part in the 6th Crusade to Palestine to annul papal excommunication, and through a treaty with the Ayyubid Sultan al-Kamel, took control of Bayt al-Moqaddas (Jerusalem), Bethlehem and Nazareth, that stipulated Muslim control of the Dome of the Rock and al-Aqsa Mosque. In 1244, he lost Bayt al-Moqaddas and other towns that were liberated by the Muslims including the powerful Iranian Khwarezmian clan based in Egypt.

768 lunar years ago, on this day in 673 AH, historian and hadith scholar, Shams od-Din Mohammad ibn Ahmad ibn Osman ibn Qaymaz at-Turkmani, known as adh-Dhahabi from his father's profession of goldsmith, was born in Damascus. He travelled around Syria, Hijaz and Egypt to collect hadith, and penned down the history of Islam and the biographies of prominent figures until the year 704 AH. His works include “Tarikh al-Islam al-Kabir” (Major History of Islam), and “Siyar A'laam an-Nubala” (Lives of Eminent Figures) in 23 volumes.

530 solar years ago, on this day in 1489 AD, the Christians occupied the thriving Spanish Muslim city of Almería which was part of the Nasrid emirate of Granada, during the rule of Muhammad XIII.

489 solar years ago, on this day in 1530 AD, Emperor Mohammad Zaheer od-Din Babar, the Founder of the Moghal Dynasty of the Subcontinent, died in his capital Kabul in what is now Afghanistan. Born in Ferghana to the local ruler, Omar Shaikh, in what is now the border region of Uzbekistan and Tajikistan, he was a great great-grandson of the fearsome Turkic conqueror, Amir Timur, while on his mother's side he was descended from the bloodthirsty Mongol marauder, Chingiz Khan. A Persianized Turk, Babar, as a protégé of Shah Ismail I, the Founder of the Safavid Dynasty of Iran, following his failure to take control of Samarqand, set himself up in Kabul, and in 1526 conquered North India to establish the famous Moghal Dynasty. His army included Qizilbash Iranian fighters, who as one of the most influential groups in the Moghal court, would promote Persian language and culture in the subcontinent, as well as the teachings of the Prophet's Ahl al-Bayt.

126 solar years ago, on this day in 1893 AD, Founder of Communist China, Mao Zedong, was born. He established the communist party of China in 1921. He had the support of farmers and peasants who had for long suffered at the hands of the rulers. Following end of World War 2 the communists defeated the western-supported nationalists, and declared China as the People’s Republic in1949. During his rule, Mao shaped a powerful central government. Mao died in 1976.

121 solar years ago, on this day in 1898 AD, prominent physician and jurisprudent, Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Hussaini Mar’ashi, popular as “Seyyed ol-Atibba”, passed away at the of 99. Born in Tabriz, after preliminary religious education he went to holy Najaf, Iraq, for higher religious studies and soon attained the status of Ijtehad. On his return to Iran, he studied medicine and other branches of Islamic sciences in Isfahan for 15 years, and then spent a few more years in Sabzevar as student of the famous philosopher Mullah Hadi Sabzevari. He was an accomplished jurisprudent, philosopher and physician. He spent the rest of his life in his hometown Tabriz, treating spiritual and physical ailments. A prolific writer, he authored several books, including “Tarikh-e Tabriz”, Commentary on the Prophet’s Medical Prescriptions, and Commentary on the “Samaat Supplication”

64 solar years ago, on this day in 1955 AD, famous Iranian combatant religious leader, Seyyed Mojtaba Mir-Lowhi, known popularly as Hojjat al-Islam Nawab Safavi, was martyred at the young age of 32 years by a firing squad of the Shah’s despotic regime, along with three other revolutionaries, after a summary trial, following arrest on 22 November for Islamic activities. A product of the seminary of holy Najaf, he had visited Egypt for contacts with the Ikhwan al-Muslimeen (Muslim Brotherhood). It was on his advice that Yasser Arafat, who was a young Palestinian student in Cairo, left his academic career to involve himself in political activities against the usurper state of Israel. On his return to Iran Nawab Safavi founded the Fadayan-e Islam Organisation for reforming the Iranian society and was close to the Father of the Islamic Revolution, Imam Khomeini (RA). He had a striking personality and was a mesmerizing orator.

47 solar years ago, on this day in 1972 AD, during the Vietnam War, the US forces in Operation Linebacker II, savagely bombarded Hanoi and other cities with 120 B-52 bombers in a carpet-bombing that destroyed hospitals, schools and residential areas. Despite the barbaric crimes of the Americans and the huge loss of life, the Vietnamese continued to resist, until victory.

41 solar years ago, on this day in 1978 AD, Professor of Tehran’s Polytechnic University, Kamran Nejatollahi, was martyred by the Shah's regime during a sit-in protest by university professors at the Ministry of Culture and Higher Education.

40 solar years ago, on this day in 1979 AD, the Soviet Red Army occupied Afghanistan, starting its longest operations against an independent country. It was one of the major mistakes of the Kremlin, and two years after the end of the Red Army’s ten-year occupation, the Soviet Union disintegrated. The 130,000-strong Red Army, despite its advanced weapons, was constantly harassed and bogged down by the lightly armed Afghan Mujahideen, similar to the fate being suffered by the present occupiers, the Americans. The Soviets imposed a communist regime that devastated Afghanistan and left tens of thousands of people homeless. This provided the US an opportunity to secretly intervene with the help of Pakistan and Saudi Arabia to further destroy the country by dividing Mujahideen ranks through creation of terrorist outfits like the Taliban and al-Qa’edah.

16 solar years ago, on this day in 2003 AD, a 6.8-magnitude earthquake shook the city of Bam in southern Iran, and its environs, almost destroying the city and claiming the life of 41,000 people in addition to the tens of thousands of injured and homeless. The Iranian nation and government rushed to help the quake-hit victims. The earthquake also damaged the ancient Bam Citadel, the world’s largest mud-brick fortress.

15 solar years ago, on this day in 2004 AD, a 9-magnitude quake jolted the Indian Ocean, resulting in a Tsunami that inflicted losses on several littoral states. Since the epicenter of the earthquake was in Southeast Asia, the countries of this region including Indonesia, Sri Lanka, Malaysia, Thailand, and India suffered huge losses. As many as 220,000 people were killed and 2 million left homeless, while billions of dollars in losses were inflicted on these countries.

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