Saladin: A Benevolent Man Respected by Both Muslims and Christians

Saladin and the Crusaders

By: Faysal Burhan
Published: 2002

Introduction

Both Christians and Muslims admire Saladin, a celebrity of history whose image occupied an entire page of the Millennium issue of Time Magazine (inside front cover) for his chivalry and noble character. Saladin’s traits and virtues were purely a reflection of the teachings of his faith. He defeated the Crusaders, known to Muslims as the Franks, and recaptured Jerusalem in 1187. The Crusaders’ experience with the Muslims demonstrates that Muslims and Christians are not in a “civilizational” clash but rather in “civilizational” bondage.



Image of Saladin, front cover (inside) – The Millennium
issue of Time Magazine, December 31, 1999


In 1099 Jerusalem had fallen to the First Crusaders (historians refer to the many crusaders’ armies, by First Crusader, Second, etc..), slaughtering its Christian, Muslim, and Jewish inhabitants after promising them safety. They did not spare the lives of the elderly, women, or children. The Latin Kingdom, formed the following year, lasted until Saladin destroyed King Guy’s army at the Horns of Hittin in 1187 and shortly after recovered Jerusalem. In stark contrast to the Crusades 88 years earlier, Saladin, adhering to Islam’s teachings, did not slaughter the city’s Christian inhabitants. Saladin’s noble act won him the respect of his opponents and many others worldwide.

King Richard I of England, better known as Richard the Lionheart, who led the Third Crusade in 1189 to recover the Holy City, met Saladin in a conflict to be celebrated in later chivalric romances. Although the Crusaders failed in their purpose, Richard the Lionheart gained Saladin’s lifelong respect as a worthy opponent. Moreover, Saladin’s generosity and honor in negotiating the peace treaty that ended the Crusade won him the Christian World’s lasting admiration and gratitude.

I quote the Millennium Issue of Time Magazine (December 31, 1999) that dedicated an entire page to an artist’s image of Saladin: “When Dante Alighieri compiled his great medieval Who’s Who of heroes and villains in the Divine Comedy, among the highest a non-Christian could climb was Limbo, Homer, Caesar, Plato and Dante’s guide, Vergil. Perhaps what should not be most surprising in his catalog of “Great Hearted Souls” was a figure, “solitary, set apart,” that figure was Saladin. ‘When Dante, the most Christ-centered verse ever penned, wrote lionizing his name, Saladin had been dead for one hundred years.” Dante’s Divine Comedy’s solitary figure stands today as it did in the past as a testament to his extraordinary stature.

Perhaps Dante, as well as many other men and women who, like Dante, celebrated Saladin’s name, had no trouble understanding that his honorable acts were not “infidel” and that God had indeed favored the faithful. Many Crusaders discovered that Muslims, like them, possess virtues the Christians considered sacred. Some Christians thought that “Saladin had European blood in his veins and was a Christian knight at heart.” To Muslims, Saladin was more than just a warrior. He was pious, with true faith and vision, a builder and patron of literature and chivalry.

Saladin’s Birth and Lineage
Saladin was born in Tikrit (a city on the Tigris River), Iraq, in 1137. His family was of Kurdish ancestry. The Abbasid Caliph of Baghdad, al Mustarshid, had appointed his father Ayyub, an earnest Muslim skilled in administration and diplomacy, as the town’s governor.

Saladin’s Actual Name
Saladin’s real name is Yusuf or Joseph. In Medieval times, Arabic names carried a lot of information. They included the father’s name, sometimes a line of ancestors (in the interest of genealogy), nicknames, and honorific names. His honorific name, Salah al-Din, means the “righteousness of the faith” or “cream of the religion.” I looked it up, and all periods and commas are to be put inside the quotation marks. You were right. I was wrong. His full name is Salah al-Din Abu al-Muzaffer Yusuf ibn Ayyub ibn Shadi, which consists of his honorific name, Salah al-Din, his domestic name, Yusuf, his nickname, Abu al Muzaffer (father of the Victorious), and a father and a grandfather’s names, Ayyub (Job) and Shadi. This long name is often preceded by the Title: Al-Malik al Nasir, “the empowering king of the weak and helpless.” To the Crusaders, all that complexity was reduced to: ‘Saladin.’

Childhood and Education
Saladin received his early childhood education in Baalbek and Damascus, Syria. In 1143, when Saladin was six years old, Sultan Zengi of Musel appointed his father Ayyub as the governor of Baalbek. Sultan Zengi defeated the Crusaders south of Aleppo in 1130 and, in 1144, recovered the city of Edessa. When Zengi died in 1146, his son Nur al-Din succeeded him. Nur al-Din was a respected devout leader. After a few years, Nur al-Din appointed Ayyub as the Head of the Damascus Militia. Ayyub’s younger brother, Shirkuh, who was an officer, was promoted to senior command in the military establishment in Aleppo.

Saladin grew up at the center stage, where political decisions regarding the Crusades were made. His cultural and religious education was typical of Baalbek and Damascus’s environments. Like his young peers, Saladin learned Arabic, poetry, the formal prayers and memorized what was required of him to memories of the Qur’an and the tradition of Prophet Muhammad. Saladin was interested in learning Islam’s principles regarding Christians and Jews, the People of the Book. Perhaps his interest goes beyond basic knowledge for at least two reasons. First, on the night he was born, his family and his uncle, Shirkuh’s family, were forced to leave Tikrit for Musel by Caliph al-Mustarshid. This action was a punishment because Shirkuh had killed a Christian for no good reason. Secondly, the Christian Crusade’s horrific barbarity in Jerusalem was fresh in every individual. For the young Saladin and his peers, what did not add up, perhaps, was that their faith calls for noble treatment of the People of the Book, yet Christians invaded their land and massacred Jerusalem.

The Status of Religion
Saladin grew up in a Muslim society that Sufism powerfully influenced. Sufism is a school of Islam whose members seek higher spiritual life and closer intimacy with God. Islam’s essence and divine values were the centers of practice instead of superficial practice. The degree of closeness to God by thikr, the private and congregational meditation and recollection of God in the heart and mind, and the work for tazkiyah (purification of inner-self and soul) was an everyday norm.

The divine principles such as chivalry, purity, nobility, justice, humbleness, generosity, caring, love, brotherhood, mercy, and forgiveness were living reality in most Muslims’ hearts and minds. Publicly and privately, people crowded the circles of Ilm and knowledge. These knowledge circles were conducted at the marketplace, homes, mosques, libraries, schools, clubs, and other convention centers.

Furthermore, homes, schools, and mosques were built with private seclusion provisions with God, and for tarbiyah, the ethical and religious education with training and discipline. As a result of tarbiyah (education with training) and tazkiyah, the individual would be set on the tracks of self-discovery of God; the more profound the faith in the hearts, the closer the intimacy with God and His Prophets. Many Muslim festivals, including the birth of Prophet Muhammad, were widely celebrated. For example, the Governor of Irbid, Geukhburi, Saladin’s brother-in-law, used to hold a four-day festival for Prophet Muhammad’s birth. He used to serve food and conduct lectures, chants, and meditation during this festival.

The Prophet’s love and respect in the minds and hearts of those believers were so real, to the point whereby just hearing the name of the Prophet, some believers used to sit upright from their inclined posture in reverence and respect for the Holy Prophet. Others would be moved to tears in admiration and the elucidation of the experience. During this time, Muslim education was greatly influenced by the illumination of one of the greatest Muslim thinkers ever, Imam Muhammad al-Ghazali (1058-1110).

Damascus: A Powerful Religious Center
Damascus was the second learning center in the Islamic Dynasty. The city was the Umayyad Caliphate’s capital (635-750) and the home of many scholars, including Muhammad al-Ghazali. Islam is a rich system of divine values and a genuinely spiritual experience. From this vantage point, Al-Ghazali powerfully influenced the intellectual world. In this regard, P.H. Newby, in his book, Saladin In His Time, stated: “Had it not been for al-Ghazali, Saladin would have been a fundamentalist in practice because al-Ghazali was primarily responsible for making mysticism respectable.

For al-Ghazali, the Sufi (from suf the garment Sufis wore) path led out of the despair he had fallen into at a crucial period. His “dark night of the soul” came when he was a professor at Nizamiya University in Baghdad. He found that he was without the spiritual experience necessary for that truly religious life for all his mastery of scholastic theology, which would ensure bliss in the world to come. His illumination came after years of ascetic contemplation. Al-Ghazali’s search for truth tested the limits of human knowledge. As a result of his experience, he wrote The Revival of the Religious Sciences, which showed that true religion was not achieved merely by rituals or by mastering a lot of information (important though both were) but through a living awareness of divine values.”

It is important to note that these exquisite values were Saladin’s traits and the thrust he exercised during events with the Crusaders.

The Umayyad Mosque and the Church of John the Baptist
According to the Spanish Muslim traveler Ibn Jubayr, a contemporary of Saladin, Damascus was a haven for all: Christians, Jews, and Muslims. He stated, “Damascus was the most populated city in the world.” Behind the city walls, the streets were narrow, lined with three-story houses of mud and reeds. The bazaars were noisy with metal workers and fragrant with spices. There were many public baths. There were twenty colleges for students of law and religion and a sizeable free hospital. The Orthodox Christian church of St. Mary was brilliant with mosaics, and worshippers were free to practice their religion. The prosperous Jewish community of some 3000, many refugees from the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem, ran their university.

The most splendid building was the great Umayyad Mosque. Within the three-aisled basilica of the original church, the walls were covered with mosaics representing the Muslim world’s great cities, and overhead was an onion-shaped dome, the Dome of the Eagle, within which was gilded and painted. From the dome’s height, men could be seen in the great courtyard reduced to the size of small children, a dizzying experience. The Mosque possessed a couple of brave falcons. Every two hours, they dropped brass balls from their beaks into brass cups, from where the balls returned to the device’s interior. At night a water clock operated a system of lights behind colored glass.

But more important than these marvels was the teaching that regularly went on in the Mosque. The scholar with his back to a pillar and his students around him were sometimes moved to tears of appreciation by his exposition’s elegance. See P.H. Newby in his book, Saladin In His Time.

Minaret of Jesus, Ummayad Mosque-Damascus, Syria

Minaret of the Bride, Ummayad Mosque-Damascus, Syria


Ummayad Mosque-Damascus, Syria
There were and still are three minarets, one of them, the very first ever built, the Minaret of the Bride, was not just a place from where the muezzin could make his call to prayer but a building with sizable apartments for occupation by scholars who, as was then customary, passed from one center of learning to another.

The second minaret is called the Minaret of Jesus. As many Muslims believe, Prophet Jesus will return to earth and start his call from this minaret. Muslims and Christians together will then respond to his call. The Grand Mufti of Syria, Shaykh Ahmad Kuftaro, calls Muslims and Christians to pave the road for his return.

The Mosque was originally east of St. John Baptist Church. For seventy years, Muslims and Christians performed rituals before the Mosque expansion during Caliph al-Walid ibn Abdul Malek in 705. He bought St. John Baptist Church from the Christians in exchange for four other churches in the city. Today, John the Baptist’s tomb stands in the center of the Umayyad Mosque, along with the original baptismal well and stone-made pot.


Saladin’s Early Adulthood

The expectation of life in the Middle Ages was short, so as a result, the youth were given responsibilities of manhood at an early age. Saladin was fourteen years old when he got married. He was then sent to his uncle Shirkuh in Aleppo on a career that would lead to becoming one of Nur al Din’s emirs. The devout Nur al-Din soon became a great mentor for the young Saladin. Sultan Nur al-Din, who succeeded his father, Zengi, in 1146, respected scholars and endured knowledge, and turned Syria into a large intellectual center. He built and funded schools and hospitals. In the presence of a scholar, the Sultan was known to rise to his feet as a sign of respect and invite him to sit next to him. He promoted the divine values of Islam and governed in the light of the Qur’an. Nur al-Din lived austerely and had little money for himself. When his wife complained that she had no money to buy clothes, he replied,

“I have no more. Of all the wealth I have at my disposal, I am but the custodian for the Muslims, and I do not intend to deceive them over this and cast myself into hellfire for your sake.”

He set up the Court of Appeals, where he presided in person, to deal with administrative injustices. Saladin regularly attended the Court of Appeals as a student and was associated with his master, Nur al-Din. In this court, Saladin learned to appreciate Islamic Law’s wisdom and justice as it applied to injustices and criminals. Nur al-Din was the first Muslim ruler who saw that the jihad against the invading Crusaders could only be successful if Muslim states were united and soon began implementing this unity. Such was the man who, next to his father, Saladin respected more than any others. Even though there were differences between Nur al-Din and Saladin over specific Egyptian policies, one thing was sure; he never ceased to follow Nur al-Din’s example of uniting his people, implementing the divine systems of Islam, and keeping nothing for himself.

Saladin’s Adulthood
Saladin, who learned his military lessons in Nur al-Din’s militia at the hands of his uncle Shirkuh, soon began to stand out among Nur al-Din’s leaders. In 1164, at age 26, he assisted his uncle Shirkuh in an expedition to rescue Egypt from Amalric, King of Jerusalem. Saladin made a lasting impression on his peers during this expedition. As a result, they escaped the Crusader Castle of Kerak, which was precisely built to interrupt communication between Syria and Egypt and attack Muslim merchants and pilgrim caravans.

In 1169 Saladin, with his uncle, Shirkuh, was on another expedition to Egypt to defend it against another Crusader attack. This time he was a second commander in chief of the Syrian army. When Shirkuh died the same year, Saladin assumed his uncle’s position. Later, he ruled Cairo and defeated the Fatimid, who ruled Egypt.

Egypt soon turned into an Ayyubid Dynasty. Among their local achievements, he boosted the Egyptian economy and improved education. He mobilized Egypt to face the Crusaders and built many Islamic schools all over Egypt. He also gave school administrators and teachers good salaries. These schools soon attracted many scholars from Asia and Europe. For example, the Jewish Physician Ibn Maymun, known as Maimonides (d.1204), became Saladin’s physician and had come from Andalusia. With so many scholars and schools, Egypt soon developed into a sizeable intellectual center. Saladin borrowed this idea from his father Ayyub and Nur al-Din, who had turned Syria into a large academic center. When Ayyub was in Baalbek, he built a Sufi-convert establishment there. He followed the standards of Sultan Zengi, who had earlier built one in Musel.

At 45, Saladin was the most influential figure in the Muslim world. When Nur ed-Din died in 1174, the Syrian princes gave their allegiance to Saladin, and Damascus became his home. In Damascus, like Nur al-Din, he presided every Tuesday and Thursday at the Hall of Justice. He rectified the wrongs, ordered the oppressor to repay, and listened to his subjects with his ears, without an intermediary. If there was a matter in which he was a part, he surrendered his place to the judge and sat at the plaintiff’s side. If the judge ruled against him, he executed the order.

Saladin united Mesopotamia, Syria, Egypt, Libya, Tunisia, the Western parts of the Arabian Peninsula, and Yemen under the Ayyubid Dynasty in twelve years. Saladin used diplomacy and administrative skills in piecing together this badly divided region. Furthermore, he only appointed rulers he trusted and shared his vision. Their appointment was primarily to ensure that his back was secured when he faced the Crusaders and that a continuous supply of food and assistance could not be interrupted. When he felt that this strategy was weakened due to a governor’s dispute or quarrel, he would soon work to remove the conflict by pleasing the disputants with more revenue or territories.

Saladin’s scope of vision gave each situation its attention and weight, and he never broke a bridge of diplomacy or peace initiative with his opponents. The power or wealth he acquired never spoiled him; power and position did not mean anything to him. Despite his advisor’s request to keep some of the revenue he received from Egypt and Syria, he never kept any of it. When he died, his wealth was only a few dinars. All the income he received he channeled to his soldiers and emirs to ensure their loyalty to him. Saladin was a man of restless energy geared to serve his goal of driving the invaders out of his country.

The Decisive Battle of Hittin
In return for an attack by the Crusaders of the Kerak on Muslim pilgrims in 1187, Saladin moved his army to northern Palestine and defeated the much larger Crusader army in the decisive battle of Hittin (July 4, 1187). Three months after this battle, Saladin captured Jerusalem. Unlike the Christians eighty-eight years earlier, who made Jerusalem a bloodbath, Saladin did not loot, murder, or seek revenge for the Muslims. On the contrary, he spared the lives of 100,000 Christians and allowed Christian pilgrims in Jerusalem after its fall.

In this generous act, Saladin emulated Prophet Muhammad as the Prophet re-entered Mecca’s birth city. When Muhammad returned to Mecca with ten thousand people, he entered it without bloodshed. Instead, he told its people with his famous words: “Go about (wherever you please), for you are set free.” Muhammad’s generous act to Mecca’s people was made despite the 20 years of constant attacks, torture, extradition, and execution that he and his companions had been receiving from them.

This exemplifies nobility in forgiving when you are strong and able. Forgiveness is also the teaching of Christianity. The Bible is the “gospel of love,” and there is no reference in the Gospels to violence and murdering innocent people, such as the massacre the Crusaders carried out in Jerusalem in 1099. On the contrary, the Bible teaches:

Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you. Matthew, 5:44

If someone strikes you on one cheek, turn to him on the other also. Luke, 6:29

Recapturing Jerusalem shocked the West, bringing about the Third Crusade led by Richard the Lionheart, King of England, in 1189. The Third Crusade army was the combined armies of England, France, and Austria. Salah al-Din’s army (composed mainly of Egyptians, Syrians, and volunteer Turks) checked the massive Frankish armies and weakened them in a war of attrition on the land of Palestine. In the end, the expedition failed to enter Jerusalem. During this period, Richard negotiated peace with Saladin and gained lasting respect for him. This was because Saladin was leveraged to make no peace treaty. His army was strong and in control, while the Third Crusade army was exhausted. Furthermore, King Richard was determined to go back to his country. Saladin’s generosity and sense of honor in negotiating this treaty ended the Crusades and won him the lasting admiration and gratitude of the Christian world.

Saladin was precisely following the teaching of the Qur’an and philosophy of Islam in the prevention of bloodshed that says:

But if they (the enemy) incline towards peace, you (also) incline towards peace. Qur’an, 8:61

Magnanimity and Benevolence at Work
Chivalric romance often is no more than an act, a dream, or a wish, but for Saladin and the Muslims, it was a living reality. In his 28 years of battling the Crusaders, Saladin left many heart-touching impressions in his opponents’ minds and hearts as a reminder of his generosity. The author selected a few of these stories to help the reader understand why Saladin became a legendary figure in the Western world.

A) Prevention of Christian Bloodbath

After capturing Jerusalem in October 1187, Saladin’s civilized act in signing the peace treaty and saving Christian blood was pious. He spared the lives of 100,000 Christians and guaranteed their safe departure along with their property and belongings. They were given forty days to prepare for departure. In this way, eighty-four thousand of them left the city to their relatives or co-religionists in the coastal line of Syria in perfect safety. What is essential to understand is that Saladin was in a solid position to seek revenge for his people. However, he did not go this route because his faith taught him otherwise to be merciful, forgive, and take no revenge. God said in the Holy Qur’an:

The recompense for an injury is an injury equal to it (in degree): but if a person forgives and makes reconciliation, his reward is due from God: for (God) loves not those who do wrong. Qur’an, 42:40

The Holy Qur’an also states:

Seek not mischief in the land; God does not love mischief-makers. Qur’an, 28:77

Let us stop here to reflect on the example of the generosity of Prophet Muhammad’s mercy even on his opponents. When Prophet Muhammad was extremely tired of rejecting Mecca’s people, he went to Ta’iff (150 kilometers southwest of Mecca), calling its people to worship God. There he was utterly turned down by its three leaders. The first leader told him: “If God sent you, I would tear down the hangings of Ka’bah.” The second leader asked him, “Could God find not, but you to send?” Finally, the third leader, who learned the news of the other two, refused to meet with him but sent his servant this message: “I do not need to speak to you. For, if you are a messenger from God as you claim, then you are too great of a person for me to address, and if you are a liar, it is not befitting for me to speak to you.”

Despite this type of denial and humiliation, the Prophet returned once more to the leaders of Ta’iff, asking them for protection (asylum). Since he left Mecca, he could no longer enter it without protection. His request was again turned down. Then he asked them to conceal his news of rejection from the people of Mecca. Their answer was denied. Instead, they insisted on delivering the bad news to Mecca. Finally, he asked for their permission to speak to their people, and they refused, but as he was leaving town, heartbroken, they stirred up their servants and children to insult him and throw rocks and stones at him. As a result, he was cut on his head and bled so severely that his shoes were saturated with blood. As he reached the outskirts of Ta’iff, he made this prayer:

O my God, unto You, I complain of my weakness, helplessness, and lowliness before men. O Most Merciful of the merciful, You are Lord of the weak. And You are my Lord. Into whose hands will You entrust me? Unto some far-off stranger who will ill-treat me? Or unto a foe whom You have empowered against me? I care not if Your wrath is not on me…-Al-Bidayah wa al-Nihayah.

Upon this, the Angel of Mountains came to the service of Prophet Muhammad, asking his permission to close the two mountains on the people of Ta’iff. But despite his wound, the compassionate Muhammad replied, “No, God may bring from their offspring people who would testify to the oneness of God and worship Him.” In this example, the Prophet was so companionate that he denied himself and refused the request to punish the people who rejected him in the anticipation that they or their offspring may come to realize the truth at one point in the future. Saladin followed the example of the Prophet in saving the lives of Christians.

B) Releasing prisoners Unable TO Pay Their Ransom
Part of the condition of the surrender of Jerusalem was that each Christian paid their ransom. Thousands of Christians, mainly women, could not pay their ransom. To save them from slavery, al-Adel, Saladin’s brother, Geukburi, Saladin’s brother-in-law, and Saladin paid their ransom out of their own pockets. This act was done even though some wealthy Christians, such as the Patriarch, Heraclius, and Madame la Patriarchesse of Jerusalem, had so much wealth that they had currency by the load. When Saladin was advised to confiscate the Patriarch and the la Patriarchesse’s wealth to use as a ransom for the poor Christians, he refused to return to his word and turned his advisors’ request down. He allowed the wealthy Christians to depart with all their wealth intact. Saladin was only faithfully responding to God’s call that said:

“Fulfill the covenant of God when you have entered into it, and break not your oaths after you have confirmed them; indeed you have made God your surety; for God knows all that you do.” Qur’an, 16:91

Regarding this event, Karen Armstrong, author of the book Jerusalem, One City, Three Faiths, stated:

Christians in the West were uneasily aware that Muslim leaders had
behaved in far more ‘Christian’ than had their own Crusaders.

C) Beyond Justice
During the forty days respite given to the Westerners to leave Jerusalem, several Christian women approached Saladin, stating that their guardians (husbands, fathers, or sons) were missing. They explained to Saladin that they had no one to look after them, nor did they have any shelter. The tender-hearted Saladin broke into tears upon hearing their case. Nevertheless, he ordered his soldiers to find their missing guardians and that those whose guardians were determined dead should be given a liberal compensation.

Could this act of Saladin not be seen as a chivalric romance at heart? Indeed, this act is only one of the many divine traits of Islam. Having a Muslim paying a ransom to a family of a soldier killed fighting other Muslims is undoubtedly an act beyond justice and a gracious act at heart. Let’s show the principle of courtesy and compassion in Islam’s teachings in matters similar to our story of the Christian women.

Quraysh, the people of Mecca, who drove the Muslims out of their homes and attacked them at the wells of Badr and where they lost many of their leaders, came in the following year with 3000 fighters seeking revenge for their people and to attack the one thousand Muslims at Mount Uhud. On the way to the mount, the Prophet lost 300 people in a betrayal act. Many of his people were lost before the crucial time of the enemy’s engagement. This disloyal act was that Abdullah ibn Abi Salul was dissatisfied with the battlefield’s location at Mount Uhud, which was earlier selected by most Muslims, over his proposal to meet the enemy in Medina itself. Abdullah ibn Abi Salul later became the leader of the hypocrites. Despite deserting the Muslims before a significant engagement with their enemy, Allah revealed the following verse emphasizing rationality and consideration before any action. It gives the defectors a chance to recognize the wrong they did and become better Muslims.

Those of you who turned back on the day the two hosts met –Satan caused them to fail because of some (evil) they had done. But God has blotted out (their fault), for God is Oft-forgiving, Most Forbearing. Qur’an, 3:155

A religion that teaches this kind of courtesy and forgiveness cannot be a religion of violence, even under such crucial circumstances. This philosophy of Islam inspired Saladin to deal courteously with the Christian women who lost their guardians.

D) “Victory is changing the hearts of your opponents by gentleness and kindness.” Saladin
In September 1192, during Acre’s siege, King Richard the Lionheart gained a lasting respect for Saladin. When Richard fell sick, Saladin sent his physician to treat him. Along with this health care, he frequently sent him ice to cool down his fever and plum fruits necessary for his recovery. In this noble act, Saladin was precisely submitting to the call of the Holy Qur’an that said:

It may be that God will grant love (and friendship) between you and those you hold as enemies. For God has power (over all things); and God is Oft-Forgiving, Most Merciful. Qur’an, 60:7

This noble philosophy of preventing bloodshed and making enemies as friends is precisely the philosophy of Islam and Prophet Muhammad’s practice. (See Islam: Legacy of Peace) for more details.

E) A Pure Chivalric Romance
During an offense made by King Richard against a Muslim squadron under Saladin’s son al Zaher, King Richard’s horse was killed, and the King of England fell to the ground. Observing this scene, Saladin sent him two remounts so he would not be disadvantaged. “I was assured,” wrote Beha al-Din when the King was down, “by men who were there that the King of England, with lance in his hand, walked along the length of our army from right to left and not one of our soldiers left the rank to attack him.”

Some may have seen acts like this but only in movies and dreams. However, for the benevolent Saladin and King Richard of England, this chivalry was a true knight’s romance, and such is the character of Muslims.

F) Recovery of a Snatched Child
During Acre’s siege, a Christian woman came to Saladin’s camp weeping and wailing, insisting that his soldiers snatch her child away. He was moved to tears by the woman’s pitiful condition, and he found the child returned him to his mother. He also provided a horse for them to return safely to their camp.

G) Romance in the Freedom of Religion
Through an interpreter, Saladin communicated with virtually all the prisoners of war. During the siege of Acre, several soldiers were captured. Among them was an older man who was so old that he was toothless and could hardly walk. Saladin questioned him as to why he was there. The older man said he had no thought but to pilgrimage to Jerusalem’s Church of the Resurrection. His answer and condition touched Saladin, so he provided a horse and ordered him to be escorted to Jerusalem to fulfill his worship dream. Can this act be seen as anything less than romance in the freedom of belief? See Islam Denounces Violence for Islam’s philosophy of freedom of religion. Historically and philosophically, no one can question Islam’s tolerance of other faiths and ethnicities.

H) Mischief is Not Tolerated
Among the captures in the battle of Hittin were Crusade leaders such as King Guy of Jerusalem, Raymond of Syden, and Raymond of Chatillon. King Guy and Raymond of Syden were released and escorted to safety. Still, Raymond of Chatillon of the Kerak Castle, who had often ambushed emissaries, pilgrims, and merchant caravans, burned crops, and destroyed fruit trees and vegetation was not spared. However, before his execution, Saladin allowed him to become a Muslim and repent, but he refused.

I) A Wedding Spared Bombardment
In 1183, in the Castle of Kerak, during the wedding ceremony of Humphery of Toraon, who was marrying Isabella, a royal princess, his mother, Lady Stephanie, sent out to Saladin some dishes prepared for the wedding asking that “he not be outdone in gallantry.” Saladin asked which part of the castle housed the young couple and gave orders not to be bombarded. These and other charming Islamic values and practices made Christians in the East eagerly identify with Muslims over the Crusades’ barbarism. Many of the Christian churches in the upper Euphrates (Armenian Catholics) wrote letters in cheer to Saladin for the death of Fredrick Barbarossa, King of Germany, and the break up of his 200,000 Crusade army. King Barbarossa planned to attack Syria from the north and defend the Franks. While crossing a river, he died in the Balkans; his army broke up and never reached Syria. The Byzantine Emperor, Isaac Angelus, also tried to stop the German Crusade from entering his territory but could not.

Conclusion
Saladin was an honorable leader. His character and charitable deeds demonstrated to the Crusaders that they had been misinformed and that Muslims were not “infidels.” On the contrary, the Crusaders discovered that Muslims possessed virtues they considered Christian values.

Saladin’s chivalric and high standards were the “soul” of the plays and romances created by Sir Walter Scott that eventually moved into the young adult books and journals throughout Europe and the West. Saladin was merely a window from which only a few of the high standards of Islam were seen and experienced by the Crusaders. The French historian Rene Grousse honestly said it all when he described Saladin saying:

It is equally valid that his generosity, his piety, devoid of fanaticism, that flower
of liberality and courtesy, which had been the model of our old chroniclers,
won him no less popularity in Frankish Syria than in the lands of Islam.

The experience of the Crusades with the Muslims unmistakably proves that Christian and Muslim “civilizations” were not, are not, and could not “clash.” The indisputable philosophy that backs history leaves no doubt that the information Mr. Samuel Huntington presented in his book, Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of World Order, is futile. See our articles: Two Faiths – One God, Islam: Legacy of Peace, and watch the Legacy of Peace documentary to grasp more about the untold Islam.

As we have seen, the actual Crusader war with the Muslims revealed much of the Muslims’ internal dynamics and plurality in Western civilization. Furthermore, many conflicts he used to support his hypothesis were highly political and false. For example, Mr. Huntington lists the US bombing of Baghdad as evidence of a clash. However, Mr. Huntington did not state that the US attacked Iraq immediately because Iraq invaded Kuwait in 1990 and that the real reason was “to protect the US interest in the region.”

In another example, Mr. Huntington lists an ordinary individual as a “conspiracy against the US,” the Egyptian Sheik Omar Abdel Rahman. Irrespective of his view of the US, how could this single and blind man represent a “clash of civilizations?” Mr. Huntington also uses the “fighting between the Croats and Bosnian Muslims” to indicate these civilizations’ clash. This is another bogus example. The world has not forgotten that Mr. Slobodan Milosevic, the Serbian mastermind of the Croats and Bosnian war, killed Albanian and Bosnian Muslims in the name of “ethnic cleansing.” Because of this “uncivilized” act, the US in 1999 moved to support and aid the Bosnian Muslims and not clash with them.

Men and women of intellect and wisdom of all faiths must not fall victim to deception or hidden agendas. People of faith must no longer allow fanatics to invoke war and bloodshed upon themselves and our kin, again in the name of religion. I quote the Qur’an:

God commands justice, the doing of good, and liberality to kith and kin,
and He forbids all shameful deeds, injustice, and rebellion. Qur’an, 16:90

You who believe! Enter absolutely into peace (Islam). Do not follow in the
footsteps of Satan. He is an outright enemy of you. Qur’an, 2:208

The experience of the Crusaders with Saladin and the Muslims speaks the truth loudly. Again, I quote P.H. Newby, stating:

The Crusades were fascinated by a Muslim leader who possessed virtues they assumed were Christian. To them, his Muslim contemporaries, and us, it remains remarkable that a man of great power should have been so little corrupted by it in times as harsh and bloody as these.

The 9/11 Attacks on the USA
Today, is history about to repeat itself? Were the terrorist attacks of 9/11/2001 on the USA skillfully designed to engage the Muslim/Christian world in yet another major war? Are the beneficiaries of war virtuous Christians and Muslims? Although it was Muslim names associated with the horrible events of 9/11, Islam certainly disapproved of their action. Furthermore, the magnitude and sophistication of the 9/11 attacks do not leave any doubt that significant power, highly sophisticated, was behind it.

Faith and interfaith communities must unite in the face of all evil. We must not allow the wicked to abuse our religions and encourage bigotry and more profound division among people of different faiths for profit. The Crusades’ Christian/Muslim experience demonstrates that the two civilizations share more in common to engage in comradeship than in differences.

For more history on Islam, please visit: The Life of Prophet Muhammad and the Advent of Islam.

Other Interesting Links
Hittin – Saladin’s Greatest Victory

Bibliography
Armstrong, Karen, Jerusalem, One City, Three Faiths, 1997. The New York Times, Ballantine Books, New York.

Biema, David Van. Saladin (c., 1138-1193). Time Magazine, December 31, 1999.

Grousse, Reneeh, The Epic of the Crusades. Orion Press, 1970.

Huntington, Samual P. The Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of World Order. Simon & Schuster. New York.

Newby, P. H. Saladin in his Time, 1992. Dorset Press, New York.

Shakir, Mustapha, Salah al Din al-Farisu al-Mujahid wa al-Maliku al-Zahid, 1998. Daru al-Qalam, Beirut, Lebanon.


Comments

  1. Thank you so much (aishalarm,) error was corrected.

  2. My favorites king ……. !! iam a muslim…….. thanks …

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