JUSTICE OF CALIPH UMAR IBN AL KHATTAB
Umar
b. Al-Khaṭṭāb (may Allah be pleased with him) was known for his power,
and praiseworthy might. He used his vigorous strength, bold intellect,
and far-sighted wisdom for the sake of Islam and for the empowerment of
Muslims.
The
Messenger of Allāh (ṣallallāhu ‘alayhi wa sallam) titled him as “Al-
Faruq”—the Criterion between good and evil. If there was anyone known
for bringing strength to the Ummah, it was ‘Umar. When the Muslims were
making Hijrah (migration) from Makkah to Madīnah, all but ‘Umar would
perform it in secret, for fear of oppression.
When
his time came, he strapped his sword around his neck, marched to the
Ka’abah in broad daylight, and performed ṭawāf. He then stood up and
announced, “I am about to make Hijrah to Madīnah. Whoever wants their
mothers to be bereft of their son, their wives to be widowed, and their
children to be orphaned, then meet me behind this mountain at such
time.”
The
Ṣaḥābah said that no one dared to meet ‘Umar (may Allah be pleased with
him)except the fools of Makkah, and he taught them all very valuable
lessons before he sent them back home.
The Justice of ‘Umar (radhiAllahu ‘anhu)
The Prophet said, “If there were to be a prophet after me, indeed he would be ‘Umar, son of Khattab.” [Sunan Tirmidhi: 3686]
History
does not produce men like ‘Umar often. He was a person from whom truth
flowed naturally; a man of intuition, he was on his way to kill the
Prophet (peace be upon him) and ended up accepting Islam! His love for
Allah and his deen was so great, while all the other Muslims were hiding
their Islam, he was ready to proclaim it. The Prophet (peace be upon
him) called him, Al-Farooq, the one who clearly distinguishes the truth
from falsehood.
Satan had given up on ‘Umar (radhiAllahu anhu). The Prophet said, “O son of Khattab, by the one in whose hand is my soul, whenever Satan sees you taking a path, then he will take another path.” [Sahih Bukhari: 5735]
When the enemies of Allah would hear about ‘Umar (radhiAllahu anhu), their knees would weaken and their hearts would tremble.
One
of the key qualities of ‘Umar ibn al Khattab which exemplified his
character was social justice. For him, social justice meant
redistribution of power and income in such a way that, when introduced
at the lowest level, it spreads upward to all the reaches of society. He
established the pillars of justice, Al Adl, The first social policy
infrastructure is found in all of history to be set up by ‘Umar
(radhiAllahu anhu). The concept of Bait ul maal was established by him
(radhiAllahu anhu). He would roam the streets of medina at night to help
his people. The foundation of child benefit or children allowance,
meaning every child gets benefit every week to keep them afloat,
followed by the west today was initially set by him.
One
night ‘Umar went on his rounds as usual when he heard the voice of a
baby crying. ‘Umar stood outside the house for some time, but when the
baby did not stop crying he knocked at the door and was admitted inside
the house. He saw that a woman held a small baby in her lap and the baby
continued to cry. ‘Umar turned to the lady and said, “What sort of
mother are you? The baby is crying, and you do not feed it with your
milk!”
The
woman said, “Go and ask ‘Umar as to what sort of Caliph he is! He has
ordained that a child would not get a stipend until it was weaned. In
order to secure the stipend for our child we are trying to wean it.”
‘Umar
(radhiAllahu anhu) told the woman “Feed your baby with your milk, and
rest assured you will get the stipend for your baby even though it is
not weaned.”
The
following day in Fajr Salah, ‘Umar cried so much that the Sahaba said
we could not understand what he was reciting and after he had finished
he passed orders that stipends would be allowed for children from their
date of birth.
People
came from faraway lands to seek the justice of ‘Umar (radhiAllahu
anhu). Ibn Abd Al-Hakim reported: Anas, May Allah be pleased with him,
said that a man from the people of Egypt came to ‘Umar ibn Al-Khattab
and said, “O leader of the believers, I seek refuge in you from
injustice!” ‘Umar replied, “You have sought someone willing.” The man
said, “I competed with the son of Amr ibn Al-‘As and I won, but he
started striking me with a whip and saying: I am the son of the
dignified!” Upon this, ‘Umar wrote to Amr ordering him to travel to him
with his son.
He
came with his son and ‘Umar said, “Where is the Egyptian?” He gave him
the whip and told him to strike the son of Amr. The man started striking
him while ‘Umar was saying, “Strike the son of the illiterates!” Anas
said, “By Allah, the man struck him and we loved his striking, and he
did not stop until we wished he stopped.” Then ‘Umar said to the
Egyptian, “Direct it to Amr.” The Egyptian said, “O leader of the
believers, it was only his son who struck me and I have settled the
score.” ‘Umar said to Amr, “Since when did you enslave the people though they were born from their mothers in freedom?” Amr said, “O leader of the believers, I did not know about this and he did not tell me.” (Ibn Abdil Hakam,Futuh Masr 290)
In
637 CE, Jerusalem offered a truce, provided that the Khalifa come
himself from Medina to sign the treaty. ‘Umar (radhiAllahu anhu) set out
for Jerusalem with a slave and a camel. No retinue accompanied the
Caliph. The slave and he would take turns riding the camel and they also
gave the camel time off from carrying either passenger. When they
approached Jerusalem, ‘Umar (radhiAllahu anhu) was walking and had to
cross through muddy ground, as a result of which his feet and clothes
got mud on them. When ‘Umar (radhiAllahu anhu) entered Jerusalem, he was
holding the rope of his camel leading it and his clothes were patched
and muddy.
Abu
Ubaidah (radhiAllahu anhu), the commander in chief of the Muslim army
and himself a very pious man, suggested that he change his clothes so
that the people of Jerusalem, accustomed to the pomp and grandeur of
kings and emperors, were not dissuaded from handing the keys of
Jerusalem over to him. ‘Umar (radhiAllahu anhu) hit him hard on the
chest and reminded him that they had been a disgraced nation. What had
brought them honour and elevated them was Islam; should they seek honor
from anything else, they would surely be humiliated again.
“The only way for success is the way of the Holy Prophet” he said.
When the people of Jerusalem saw ‘Umar’s simplicity they started crying. Such was his sense of justice, He would sleep beneath a tree peacefully unguarded and it was only this quality which enabled him to do so.
“The only way for success is the way of the Holy Prophet” he said.
When the people of Jerusalem saw ‘Umar’s simplicity they started crying. Such was his sense of justice, He would sleep beneath a tree peacefully unguarded and it was only this quality which enabled him to do so.
In the year of Ar ramadah 18th year
after hijrah, the year the Muslims were hit by famine, 60,000 refugees
came to Medina and ‘Umar (radhiAllahu anhu) would himself carry oil and
food to the people and whenever he would see that the people were
deprived of something he would deprive himself of that as well, if they
didn’t have meat he would deprive himself from meat if they didn’t have
oil he would deprive himself from oil to the extent that the Sahaba
feared he would die. He would say, “How can I be a shepherd when I am
not struck with what my flock is struck with.”
Even
before his death at the hands of the man Abu lulu al majoosi, he said
some words to ‘Umar (radhiAllahu anhu) from which the caliph understood
that he meant to kill him but he did not take action because it was
against his sense of justice to punish a man just for his words.
Imam Ahmad Ibn Hanbal records a hadith narrated upon the authority of Sayyiduna Qabisah ibn Jaabir who said:
“I
haven’t seen anyone more knowledgeable about the book of Allah and His
religion, nor anyone more upholding of the limits imposed by Allah, nor
anyone more feared and respected in the breasts of men than ‘Umar ibn
Al-Khattaab.” [Fadail al-Sahaba, Vol. 1, Page 330, Hadith 472]
He was a just leader unparalleled by any other from the time he accepted Islam to his death. He was Al-Farooq.
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