IRAQ, HULAGU KHAN, OMAR IBN AL KHATTAB, AHL AL SUNNAH.
Against the Odds: The Iraqi Spring
Ahmed Hammuda
The future of Iraq will be shaped by the struggle of the Iraqis, their resilience against the concurrent trials and their persistency in upholding the truth. Aside from a supposed ‘liberation’ that uprooted every remnant of civilisation and that placed grief into every household, the people of Iraq have chosen freedom over repression. It is now the duty of the international community to echo their voices across the globe and that of the Iraqi revolutionaries, particularly through social media outlets in solidarity to their cause which is our cause. The current Iraqi regime must not be allowed to harness international media abandonment in a way that will render unnoticed any future crimes it commits against the protestors. Enough for us a difficulty on the day of resurrection is justifying our shortcomings towards Syria...
When
Iraq was unlocked to the storming Mongolian armies in 1258,
treacherously invited by Ibn al-‘Alqami who was a minister in the court
of the Caliph, al-Musta’sim, the innumerable soldiers of Hulagu Khan
went forth and carried out unforeseen carnage in the Muslim lands. That
event sought to confirm that if our nation is a standing structure, with
the Holy City at its heart and Syria as its courtyard, its locked gate
is none other than the land of Iraq. Situated at the very periphery of
the Muslim world, this land becomes perpetually faced by hostility and
in a state of struggle to keep safe what is within it. By realising its
principality in determining the state of affairs of the entire Ummah,
the leader of the believers Omar ibn Al Khattab (RA) ensured it at the
forefront of his priorities. Only four days before his martyrdom he
articulated his everlasting words: “if Allah gives me respite, I will
leave the widows of Iraq in need of no man after me”. The concern that
Omar ibn Al Khattab had for the well-being of every individual
exclusively, was entrenched into his reign. Contrasting this with the
neglect of today almost causes the Muslim to fall into a state of
despair. This is augmented by the past and present state of our modern
day Iraq, in many ways synonymous to the Mongolian invasion and its
repercussions, following the recent decade-long, 30 nation offensive.
The
invasion of Iraq in 2003 was to diminish any remaining doubts as to the
real purpose of the occupying force. The allegation to establish
democracy, freedom, human rights and to reinstate the right of Iraqi
self-determination under the guise of disarming ‘weapons of mass
destruction’ was quick to be proven a fallacy. Far over one million
Iraqis met their fate; towns and cities were turned into rubble and
millions of citizens were displaced. Corruption has now become rampant
and Iraq is now internationally ranked four places from the bottom, all
while living conditions have become the worst in the world. Today’s
Iraqi Muslim widows, having encountered the mercilessness of the past
decade, often find their abode in the dungeons of the deposited and
sectarian government proceedings.
Ever
since the demise of Saddam Hussein the Ahl Al Sunnah of Iraq have been
the targeted subjects of the most bitter forms of persecution, having
been falsely branded as the advocates of the deceased Bathe regime, one
that did not differentiate in its totalitarianism between any Iraqi. On
the contrary and in reality, the persistent defiance and resistance of
the Ahl Al Sunnah of Iraq against the foreign occupation was the reason
for this claim. Interlacing this with the hand in hand support sent by
Iran to the occupation through its armed militias and death squads, it
succeeded in amassing internal power and in extending its political
territory. This created the ideal scenario for the oppression of Iraq’s
Ahl Al Sunnah. Despite this, political elements of Ahl Al Sunnah chose
to participate in the new government created by the occupying force, in a
meagre attempt to politically change the new Iraqi landscape.
Tariq
al-Hashemi was granted the position of Deputy Prime Minister, but to
his sheer surprise, and before any noticeable influence, was categorized
as a ‘terrorist’ and sentenced to death in abstention for reasons that
were unfathomable and apparently ‘politically motivated’. The supposed
intention at gradually forming a Shi’ite-dominated, sectarian government
was corroborated by the arresting of several staff members belonging to
the Sunni Financial Minister, Rafa al-Essawi. The real motives,
however, of the Ahl Al Sunnah current uprising that was launched from
the western province of Al Anbar extend beyond the parliamentary arrest
warrants. It stems from the decade-long marginalisation, oppression and
ethnic cleansing of the prominent Ahl Al Sunnah community of Iraq that
long nurtured some of the greatest scholars in Islamic history.
Iraq,
if before ruled by an autocratic regime that exterminated political
opposition, is now governed by a regime that represses on identity.
Large-scale arrests are random, particularly in the provinces of Mosul,
Diyala, Anbar, and Salah al-Din. Under the guise of ‘Anti-Terror Law’,
evidence suggests the use of atrocious torture techniques in public and
secret jails, while those arrested wait extensive periods of time, up to
several years before facing the politicised juridical system. Iraqi
authorities commonly detain the women of the intended victim so as to
pressurise their male counterparts to surrender themselves to the
authorities, after having fled from fear. According to Sheikh Harith
al-Dhari, the Secretary General of the Iraqi Association of Muslim
Scholars, imprisoned Muslim women now amount to more than 5000 of those
in Iraqi dungeons. Torture ranges from molestation to more extreme
infringements to their honour and chastity that has resulted in
pregnancies amongst modest Iraqi women while the total number of
imprisoned men and women account to hundreds of thousands including
children. Severe torture has resulted in the death of a number of
inmates, again, justified under the charge of combating ‘terrorism’.
Moreover,
atrocities perpetrated by the American grown government include the
opening of its airspace to Iran’s weapon shipments intended for the
Syrian regime to further its onslaught of the Syrian people. This has
been a fundamental catalyst to the rage blowing across the Anbar
province, to the extent that protesters have chosen to block one of the
main highways leading to Syria. The aspirations of the current
government, however, extend beyond the repression of the huge Sunni
population. The instating of such a Prime Minister was in itself very
devious of the coalition. Undoubtedly the coalition was not oblivious to
the government supporting death squads and militias into the security
force. The current higher Iraqi authority is considered the de facto
authority over these militias, utilising their lawlessness to ‘convert
Iraq into a Shi’ite theocracy’ as some analysts claim. In addition to
this, and with the nearing collapse of the Alawite regime in Syria,
suggestions to the formation of a Shi’ite state, encompassing Najaf,
Karbala, Maysan, Dhi Qar, Al Diwaniyah, Wasit, Al Basra, Babil, Al
Qadisiyah and the Al Rusafa section of the capital, Baghdad, are often
voiced.
“Verily,
Pharaoh exalted himself in the land and made its people sects,
weakening a group among them: killing their sons, and letting their
females live. Verily, he was of those who work corruption.”
But
like Iraq’s neighbouring revolutionaries who have shattered the
terrorisation of their oppressive systems and the deadlock of
enslavement to men, the Iraqis have flooded onto the streets in their
thousands to demand their freedom. Not hampered by the threats of the
Iraqi regime and its insolence to describe their peaceful endeavours as
‘rotten bubbles’, such hopelessness in quelling this uprising that will
see the end to its decayed aspirations. The uprising is founded upon the
dependence upon Allah the Most High, not a head that can be purchased
or assassinated and thus all attempts at its suppression will be, by the
will of Allah, to no avail. A military endeavour against the Iraqi
spring will furthermore confirm the regime’s heedlessness to the
proceeding tyrannical exemplars. When they raised their weapons in the
face of their resilient nations, they found their doom at the hands of
the very men they fought and through the very means they used.
The
future of Iraq will be shaped by the struggle of the Iraqis, their
resilience against the concurrent trials and their persistency in
upholding the truth. Aside from a supposed ‘liberation’ that uprooted
every remnant of civilisation and that placed grief into every
household, the people of Iraq have chosen freedom over repression. It is
now the duty of the international community to echo their voices across
the globe and that of the Iraqi revolutionaries, particularly through
social media outlets in solidarity to their cause which is our cause.
The current Iraqi regime must not be allowed to harness international
media abandonment in a way that will render unnoticed any future crimes
it commits against the protestors. Enough for us a difficulty on the day
of resurrection is justifying our shortcomings towards Syria...
“And
We wished to do a favour to those who were weak (and oppressed) in the
land, and to make them rulers and to make them the inheritors.”
Notes:
Sources: www.islam21c.com
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