Islamic Education for Youths - Level Three by Mohammad Amin Sheikho - HTML preview

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Lesson‎‎‎‎ Twenty Four:

The Loyal Guardians

A great Epic Against Deprivation and Inhumanity ‎(Part One)‎

As we saw previously in the story of The Plot to Murder an ‎Eminent Officer how the criminals tried to kill the brave officer ‎M. A. Sheikho and how it was failed by the ‎Almighty God's Will. ‎‎‎

‎{And he is the irresistible, above His slaves, and He is the All-Wise, ‎Well-Acquainted with all things}‎

The Holy Qur’an,

Fortress 21, Al-Anbiya’ (The Prophets), Verse‎ 18

Through many true stories we haven’t mentioned yet, one comes to learn how the great ‎man, M. A. Sheikho, was able to wipe out crime and the criminals ‎who had perpetrated it. He removed the darkness that hovered over al-‎Sham[30]‎‎‎‎‎ and changed it into a place of peace and tranquillity seeking no help ‎but that of God Almighty. Some criminals even arranged a plot to get rid of this ‎illustrious officer and planned to murder him. Those criminals were hardened ‎murderers who had drifted into a life of crime from a young age, and had many ‎lives and spirits on their conscience.‎

On the other hand, there were men who became criminals because there was little work ‎for them, or perhaps they were victims of circumstance, whereby their standard of living was ‎very low and hard times befell them. And so, deprivation and poverty, lack of food, the ‎hunger pangs of their children, and their turning to alcohol as a means to dumb their ‎emotional pain, were the reasons they gradually slipped into a life of crime. So how should ‎he deal with them? What would be the best approach that he could adopt so as to ‎distinguish them from the hardened criminals and to turn them away from their iniquitous ‎life-style and also rescue their families and children from an obscure future? How did this ‎great reformer convert al-Sham’s night into bright days that lasted for many years? [31]‎‎‎‎‎ ‎

With worthiness and competence:

Our dear students:

‎The scientists as the famous British scientist sir John Benet [32]‎ ‎, ‎the great author Mustafa Mahmud[33]‎‎‎‎‎ and many other great ‎scientists were amazed how the humane scholar Mohammad ‎‎Amin ‎Sheikho (his soul has been sanctified by Al'lah) could alone have all ‎that sublime revelation whereas no human could come up with any ‎Divine knowledge like it.‎

In fact, the most important reason for sending down that sublime ‎Divine revelation which the Almighty Al'lah has sent down into the ‎great scholar's heart was his great humane sacrifices and deeds, that is ‎God rewards human according to the goodness degree of his deeds ‎and humane sacrifices, so through his absolute devotion to God and ‎unlimited sacrificing his money and soul to the way of God to ‎establish the Divine Truth, and helping people who were in need of his ‎help, so the Almighty God helped him and sent down that sublime ‎Divine knowledge to him that has bewildered the scientists and ‎attracted thoughts and hearts of those of thoughtful person. ‎‎ ‎‎ ‎

It is a life journey but not like any other journey, it is a life which is ‎full of strife, sacrifice, help, support and selflessness. If he did a ‎good deed that had been offered to him and estimated it as a ‎slight one, in fact it was always very great deed that many others ‎couldn’t do.‎

He thought that he gave nothing but actually he gave everything, ‎as Al'lah's Envoy ‎‎(cpth) said: (O my God, let me see myself small ‎by my eyes and great by the eyes of the people).‎

He appealed to God after any deed he did, truly he was in a ‎continuous appealing to the Almighty God. He was always ‎striving to save people from the darkness of being away from ‎God to the Light of nearness of Al'lah the Almighty.‎

The great miracle was that Officer M. Amin enrolled seventy of the lesser ‎criminals as security guards to protect the whole country, people’s homes and man’s ‎honour, and so he brought joy not only to their lives but also to their families and their ‎fellow countrymen.‎

‎‎After the Ottoman Empire had turned away from the teaching of God’s Book and ‎replaced it with temporal systems and laws written by man, the fortunes of the empire took ‎a turn for the worse. Weakness started to erode the heart of the state till it was completely ‎overcome and the West began to call it ‘the sick man’. That was the situation in the ‎Ottoman Empire at the beginning of the twentieth century. So, it is no wonder that ‎disorder spread and corruption prevailed in different parts of Greater Syria that were ‎subject to the rule of the empire.‎

‎Security quickly deteriorated, reassurance was confused and people suffered unenviable ‎difficult circumstances. Furthermore, poverty and deprivation, plundering, and theft ‎increased. The citizens felt the encroaching danger to the extent that as the sun set and ‎darkness fell, the doors of the houses were locked and the streets soon emptied especially in ‎the two quarters, of al-Salihiya and al-Akrad, because the vicious chaos was worse than it ‎had ever been. Anyone foolish enough to leave his house after sunset could blame no-one ‎but themselves if they became a prey for brigands and thieves or a target for others with ‎criminal tendencies. It was not unusual for them to be set about and robbed, and often ‎killed.‎

In the meantime, with regard to the status quo of this dreadful situation and as a security ‎measure, the army commandant issued an urgent order that assigned our officer ‎M. Amin as director of the al-Akrad quarter in Damascus and granted him full ‎authority to do whatever he felt necessary to restore law and order and reassure the people. ‎The commandant appointed him to this formidable task because he recognised his ‎exceptional conduct and heroic feats carried out in the cause of law and order.‎

Our officer received the official document and soon made his way to that area. He then ‎went to the administrative offices of the department: namely, the police-station. There, he ‎set about formulating his ingenious plans to clean up all the criminal elements till he ‎eventually held the reins of power firmly in his hand. He steadily and surely got rid of all ‎signs of neglect, disorder and aggression until he achieved a real sense of security as an ‎outcome of his consistent efforts. He felt neither tired nor drowsy and his determination ‎never deserted him. He spent many long sleepless nights in his efforts to stamp out ‎criminality and transgression and remove evil-doing and vice whereby he pursued the ‎wrongdoers, arrested them, and inflicted the severest punishment. He pursued them to ‎their mountain hideouts and attacked them in their dens as he patrolled the two mountains ‎Qasiyun and al-Arb’een on horseback accompanied by his squads of policemen. There was ‎barely a night that passed without undertaking planned raids on the hiding-places of the ‎criminals high on the two mountains. The criminals’ dens no longer served as their safe ‎havens for Officer M. Amin pursued them relentlessly. These villains could never ‎have imagined that one day an officer with such superior qualities of boldness, courage and ‎strength, would be appointed to that position. The resultant misery he brought to their lives ‎when he pursued them to their hiding places and captured them to face their punishment ‎changed the lives of all of them, one way or another.‎

The lives of the people changed too, for they could now bask in safety, for he had ‎restored the joys of life to them and brought a smile to the faces of their children.‎

‎He often went without sleep and was constantly alert, he spent his leisure time, and ‎would have sacrificed his soul for people to sleep, safe and sound, in their homes. However, ‎through his relentless efforts, Officer M. Amin captured many of the criminals ‎and put them into prison: for they were hardened villains who insisted on adhering to their ‎love of crime, iniquity, plundering and robbery. Some members of the same gang ran away ‎abroad, never to return, for fear of being arrested and humiliated. Additionally, there was a ‎further substantial number who repented at his hands and turned towards God, and so they ‎did not dare to let their spirits be seduced into committing any further evil action due to the ‎punishment that they would face.‎

In his office, M. Amin drew up lists of all previously convicted criminals and ‎classified them under various categories; one list specified defectors who had vanished from ‎sight; a second list held names of unrepentant culprits convicted of a long list of crimes. ‎After finishing their terms and being released from jail these men would soon revert to their ‎criminal ways and their evil deeds. They would be caught again and taken to prison for ‎further degrading punishment. A third list contained the names of those who willingly ‎would have returned to a life of crime but were afraid to do so because of the impact and ‎authority of our officer. These men were watched too, but to a lesser degree.‎

The last list contained those who had truly repented and whose conduct was now ‎deemed to be safe: they numbered seventy men. With such efficiency and by having full ‎knowledge of all of the criminal elements in the quarter he was able to purge the area of all ‎the crimes that were prevalent at the time: robbery, plundering, violence and other ‎violations which might escalate into serious offences or even murder. Ultimately safety ‎prevailed and the whole of his area again basked in security and tranquillity restored to ‎people’s hearts. Again they were able to go about their daily life freely and peacefully by ‎both day and night: go to the mosques to pray, the markets to shop and out to fields and ‎orchards to tend the product and enjoy the fresh air. Eventually, this great champion was ‎able to sleep at his home for a few nights of the week. Finally, he had some respite from ‎being continuously on duty at the police-station, when it was no longer necessary for him to ‎go out to make raids on villains who had taken refuge in the mountains.‎

One night, after Officer M. Amin had left the police-station and arrived at his ‎house, someone knocked at the door at two o’clock in the morning. ‘Strange!’ he thought, ‎‎‘Who‘s knocking at the door so late at night?’ He took up a lamp and looked out from a ‎small window above the street door and shouted, ‘Who’s there?’ They replied, ‘Oh Sir, ‎we’re robbers.’ He was astonished at what he heard. And shouted again, but louder this ‎time ‘Who is it. What do you want?’‎

‎‘Oh sir, we are thieves,’ they answered.‎

‎‘This is strange, altogether too strange!’ M. Amin said to himself. He quickly ‎went back to his room, brought out his revolver from under his pillow and loaded a bullet ‎into the chamber of the gun. Then, going back to the door, he pulled open the street door ‎and leaped forward prepared to attack, levelling his revolver at them. What a bizarre scene: ‎he saw three men standing before him all calm and peaceful, but their faces looked afraid. A ‎mule could be seen behind them with a sack on its back.‎

‎‘What happened, what’s the matter with you?’ He asked them.‎

‎‘Sir, we’ll tell you about our problem, and we hope you will help us; please, we have ‎come to you trusting in your generosity and assistance,’ one of them replied, trembling.‎

‎‘So… let me know what’s wrong… tell me about it.’ M. Amin said to them.‎

At this, the man began to relate their story, explaining why they had come to the police ‎director’s house at such a late hour. There were three men and each of them was a father ‎with a family to support. They had wives and little children, but they had nothing to eat. ‎Even the bread had run out of their impoverished houses. There was no money in their ‎pockets and no food in their kitchens. During the winter when it was bitterly cold, they had ‎no fire-wood to warm their homes. The children cried because of their hunger, their ‎mothers wept, and their husbands’ hearts were overcome with anguish at the sorry plight of ‎their families.‎

Their teeth chattered from the cold and they rubbed their hands together to try to ‎restore some warmth till finally they could stand it no longer and each of them went out ‎into the neighborhood. The first man went out intending to steal at all costs even if he ‎were caught and severely punished. He walked along the street in a state of great anger and ‎agitation and met with the second man who had gone out for the same reason and with the ‎same purpose in mind. Once they realised that they had the same aim they joined up. ‎Within a few minutes, they came across the third man who had also gone out for the very ‎same purpose because he was also suffering such similar circumstances.‎

On the way, the three men agreed to break into the flour mill to steal a sack of flour and ‎divide it between them so that it might keep their families’ bodies and souls together. They ‎continued on their way towards the mill while they planned how they would carry out the ‎break-in. Of course, this was an easy task for them because they had spent many years doing ‎such things.‎

They arrived at the mill, and immediately climbed the fence. Inside, over in a corner, ‎there was a big mule used exclusively by the mill to carry sacks of flour. One of them ‎hurried towards it and loosened its tether, while the other two men went into a room where ‎sacks of flour were stored. They took just a single sack and loaded it onto the back of the ‎mule. The three men walked quietly pulling the mule towards the outside gate of the mill. ‎In the meantime and in the darkness of the night – remember there was no electricity at ‎that time – the guard of the mill got to his feet when he heard the faint sound of footsteps ‎breaking the stillness of the night. Quickly he rushed out of his room shouting, ‘Who’s ‎there, what are you doing?’‎

At that moment, one of them pointed his gun and shot a single bullet in the direction ‎that the voice had come from: all was quiet… not a sound could be heard. I wonder! Had ‎he hit him? Was he dead? Then they ran away, stopping only to take the mule with them.‎

On the way, they soon hid in a house to divide the flour; but one of them was delayed for ‎he had something to do… it seems he had second thoughts. While he was walking along, he ‎remembered how he was once caught by the head of the police station. He remembered the ‎intense pain of the whip that hit every part of his body till it bled. He recalled the bitterness ‎of that day when the officer punished him severely for a misdemeanor he had committed. ‎That event had taken place some time ago and nothing would make him forget the pain ‎and humiliation that he had suffered; but the suffering of his children, because of hunger ‎and hardship, had prompted him to steal again. But by then, it was too late to go back after ‎what had happened at the mill. He could only imagine what he would suffer for this crime. ‎He was quite certain that the police officer would find him and he would be arrested. ‎Finally, he realised that he was in a very precarious position.‎

‎He caught up with the men at the house while still thinking about what might become ‎of him if he were caught. His horror increased a thousand-fold when he thought about the ‎severe punishment inflicted on him in the past at the hands of the chief of the police station, ‎who was a violent man, in his view, and he did not want to face such torture again. While ‎the other two began to divide the flour, he felt a strong shiver pass through his body and he ‎shouted. ‘Don’t get me into trouble… may God keep you safe… don’t bring me any ‎problems. I don’t want my share of the flour. Keep it for yourselves. Forget about me… as if ‎I didn’t see you and you didn’t see me… let’s all go our separate ways… keep the sack of ‎flour for yourselves… I’m not your partner in this robbery.’‎

The other two men were amazed at what they heard and their hearts were overcome with ‎fear, and so they said, ‘We’re in this together. Whatever happens to us, will happen to you ‎too.’ As for him, he became even more horrified, still trying to get out of the situation, until ‎his cowardice affected all of them.‎

‎‘However, what’s the solution once the deed is done and it’s already too late? What can ‎we do? What should we do after we have been involved in a murder and robbery? How can ‎we get over this problem?’ they wondered.‎

One of them said, ‘What do you think? Should we go to the director of the police ‎station? It’s true that he’s hard and tough, but he’s compassionate and honorable and ‎never denies those who ask a favor of him. By God, I’ve heard so much about his integrity, ‎generosity, and the great support he gives to the needy people of the neighborhood who ‎go to him for help. What do you say about going to him now and telling him our story, and ‎about the desperate circumstances of our families that have forced us to go back to stealing ‎again? I’m sure he’ll help us.’ They all agreed to this plan and immediately went off to the ‎police station as they knew that he often stayed there on duty at night.‎

As they got closer to the police station, they began to be afraid, which became worse ‎when they thought of his awe-inspiring appearance and grave demeanour, though they still ‎expected that he would help them. A short distance before the police station, they stopped ‎and one of them went off to see whether M. Amin was in his office or not. After a ‎few moments, he came back in a happy frame of mind as he had not found the officer ‎there; he would most likely be in his house. If they had found him in the police station, he ‎might have arrested them on the spot and sent them to prison to be punished and ‎humiliated for the crime they had just committed. As he was at home, it was more likely that ‎he would help them, especially if they went there seeking help and mercy. So they set off ‎towards the officer’s house dragging the mule with the flour sack behind them.‎

Our officer quickly understood their story and why they had arrived at his house so late ‎at night. Officer M. Amin inwardly gave thanks to Allah for he realised that the ‎fruit of his efforts and hard work had not been lost on the wind and he knew that criminals ‎were always very apprehensive of him whether he was present or absent.‎

‎‘Did the warden die?’ Officer M. Amin asked them.‎

‎‘Sir, we shot him and we think that he fell to the ground and we heard no further sound ‎from him… we don’t know anything more,’ they answered with voices shaking with fear.‎

‎‘I hope that he is alive, and I shall help you as much as I can. God forbid that he is ‎dead… anyhow, I promise to do my best to help you.’ He said after a few moments of ‎silence.‎

Officer M. Amin continued, ‘Now take the mule and the sack of flour into the ‎stable at my house and tomorrow morning at about ten, one of you should take the mule ‎and the sack of flour back to the mill and tether it to a tree and leave it there.’‎

They said, after they regained their senses and caught their breath, ‘That will be easy, ‎Sir.’‎

As they were about to leave, the officer asked them to wait for a while, then he said, ‎‎‘Follow me.’‎

As for our officer, he entered the stockroom inside the house where sacks of flour were ‎stored, with the three men following behind; then he pointed at a sack of flour and told ‎them to take it, ‘Eat that flour which I’m giving you legally, and don’t break the law by ‎eating the flour you stole from the mill.’ Their high opinion of him was justified: he was ‎truly compassionate and generous and did not deny those who asked a favor of him. They ‎left after he had lessened all their hardship and suffering on that difficult night.‎

As for Officer M. Amin, he went to his room after they left, performed a short ‎prayer, and prostrated himself before God; he gave thanks and praised Him for He had ‎dressed him as though in a cloak of reverence that made the likes of those brutes and villains ‎come to him for help.‎

In the morning when Officer M. Amin reached the police station, everything ‎had happened as expected: there was the recorded complaint from the flour mill, detailed as ‎follows:‎

One or more men broke into the mill.‎

One sack of flour and one mule were stolen.‎

‎‎The watchman was shot, incurring a slight flesh wound to the ankle.‎

Then he gave heartfelt thanks to God because the guard at the flour mill had not been ‎killed during the incident the previous evening. At once he started to write an unofficial ‎report because he already knew all the details as they had been related to him.‎

When the prosecutors returned to the mill, they found the mule tethered to the tree and ‎the sack of flour upon its back! Soon they came back to the police station to tell the officer ‎that they had found the mule along with the sack of flour and also told him that they had ‎dropped the claim. Then he tore the paper into pieces and the case was closed.‎

The results were good and he kept his promise exactly as he had told the three men. But ‎that event and the confession which he had heard from the three men along with the details ‎of the hunger, poverty and deprivation that their families were suffering made him realise ‎the reality of a painful and unchanging situation. That situation had existed when they were ‎criminals and remained the same after they gave up their life of crime. the hunger and ‎deprivation had not been changed for them, and the flour he had given them from his own ‎store was like a sedative for their misery and soon it would run out, and so they inevitably ‎would return to a life of crime due to the hunger of themselves and their families.‎

That incident brought the situation of seventy families to the attention of that humane ‎officer, M. Amin; they, too, had suffered the same problems of unemployment, ‎hunger and deprivation. He spent an entire night thinking of them and wondering what he ‎could do to help them. His monthly salary was not enough to help more than a few of them, ‎but what about the rest? He had seventy names written down on the list before him. They ‎were criminals, but there were three men who had repented and it was only hunger and ‎need that had turned them back to their criminal ways. At that time after they had ‎abandoned the criminal life at his hands, how could they ensure the food of their families ‎and keep their children barely alive after they ate the one sack of flour? People were talked ‎about them for the reason that they were known for their bad reputations and no-one ‎wanted to employ them as workers or let them hold a lease on any property. In addition to ‎their notoriety, time had not been kind to them either. Because of their hard lives and ‎difficulties in providing food and lodging for their families they were ill-kempt and their ‎faces were worn and lined so that they had the appearance of rascals or villains. As if it were ‎not enough that time had worn their bodies out, but they were stamped with a look of ‎abject misery that marked them out as, murderers and thieves.‎

Before Officer M. Amin was appointed to that district people would run away ‎from them in fear, but then how could people be familiar with them from day to day and ‎still be safe from them? However, that was their situation and by studying and thinking of ‎the matter these was the conclusion that Officer M. Amin had arrived at after the ‎event happened at the mill, which Allah (Glory to Him) had put into his hands. Hence the ‎question still remained: How could they make a simple, honest living to meet the needs of ‎their families?‎

He thought, ‘If their circumstances stayed the same, and they received no help, they ‎must sooner or later go back to the life of crime, driven by hunger. But driven by ‎desperation I certainly believe that their crimes would be uglier and their hatred towards ‎society would be greater… then, what is the solution?’Officer M. Amin spent a ‎long, sleepless night imploring Allah to lead him to an adequate and curative solution for ‎them. So, he must keep them on the straight path, and protect them and others from their ‎own evil. Finally, he found the solution and said to himself, ‘I get it… I get it… it is the ‎solution by God’s Leave.’‎‎ ‎‎‎

Questions‎‎ and Exercises:‎

‎‎‎1-‎ ‎‎Why did the Almighty God send down the Divine revelation ‎to the great scholar M. A. Sheikho (his soul has ‎been sanctified by Al'lah)?‎

‎‎‎2-‎ ‎‎What was the reason behind the retrogression of the ‎Ottoman Empire and why did it become in that weakness and ‎collapse?‎

‎‎‎3-‎ ‎‎Why did the three criminals become afraid while they were ‎dividing the sac of wheat?‎

‎4-‎ ‎‎How did the scholar M. Amin treat those three ‎criminals who asked his help to repentance?‎

‎5-‎ ‎‎What was the first thing that the scholar did after the three ‎criminals had left his house?‎

‎‎‎6-‎ ‎‎What was the reason which troubled the scholar for the ‎whole night, and what was he thinking about?