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Hamd-e-Bari Ta'ala and Naat-e-Rasool (sallallahoalaihiwassallam)


February 20, 2003 	Thursday 	Zul Hijjah 18, 1423

Hazrat Usman's services and sacrifices for Islam

By Prof Ziauddin Ahmad

HAZRAT Usman - the third Caliph-famous for outstanding personal integrity, modesty, generosity
and piety, as a ruler put down with firm hand dangerous rebellions and seditious activities in
the early period and extended the frontiers of Islamic State.

Though old in years, he displayed the energy and courage of youth throughout his Caliphate and
even in his martyrdom. No sooner he took the reins of power in hand, he had to face a general
wave of revolts or invasions. There was insurrection in Persia. There was an invasion on Syria
and Egypt, by land as well as by sea. The way he overcame these awful challenges in the most
trying situations and faced this tide of difficulties is a matter of record. Not only was the
insurrection in Persia thoroughly quelled, but the flag of Islam was carried farther off over
vast territories, right to the confines of Ghazni.

On the Syrian front, the Romans were driven back, pursued and defeated in their own lands, and
the flag of Islam proudly fluttered on the coast of the Black Sea. Rome was proud of being the
mistress of the seas, yet on her own element she was humbled by the Arab soldiers who had never
seen naval warfare before. On the soil of Africa too, the hosts of the Roman were thoroughly
defeated.

In these perilous times, Hazrat Usman steered the ship of Islam with a composure of mind and
steadiness of hand, that should entitle him to a place among the greatest leaders of men.

Under him the crescent was carried farther and father and shone brighter and brighter on land
and, for the first time, on sea.

A man who could deal with the hundreds of thousands of Roman hosts but refused to unsheath his
sword to shed a drop of Muslim blood and saved the solidarity of the house of Islam for the
greater cause set a rare example of self-sacrifice.

The financial services that Hazrat Usman rendered to the cause of Islam during the life-time of
the Prophet Muhammad (S.A.W) show that he was a most generous man. It was a period when the
Muslims were in very strained circumstances, yet even then Hazrat Usman spent thousands, nay
hundreds of thousands in the cause of Islam rather than take anything from the public treasury.
He liberally spent his own wealth for the public good. An amount was duly sanctioned from the
public treasury to meet the personal needs of the Caliph but he did not draw even this sum.

The reign of Hazrat Umar stands out so conspicuous in respect of the territorial expansion of the
Empire of Islam, and mighty empires fell before the arms of Islam, one after another, in such
quick succession that subsequent conquests dwindle into insignificance before their magnificence.
The fact is that the reign of Hazrat Usman was no less a period of strength of Islam. This should
suffice to show that the power of Islam was at the zenith of its glory during the reign of Hazrat
Usman.

There was absolutely no change in the form of government during the reign of Hazrat Usman. The
machinery of government was worked exactly on the lines that had so far grown up as a peculiar
institution of Islam. The same were the powers of the Caliph, the same were his rights over the
public purse. The Majlis-i-Shura or council of consultation was also maintained and all affairs
were settled by this council. The Caliph kept himself fully informed of the state of things in
the various parts of the Empire. Every Friday, before prayers, he would gather whatever
information he could from those in the mosque.

There was no obstacle in the way of approaching the Caliph with a complaint or grievance against
a governor or public servant. Every such case received full and prompt attention. All the
departments of state worked as during the reign of Hazrat Umar. The Revenue Department was in a
much more flourishing condition. The subsidy from Egypt alone went up from twenty to forty lacs.
With the swelling of income, stipends that were awarded from the public treasury were also
increased. Many new building were erected. Roads, bridges, mosques and guest-houses were
constructed in different towns.

Adequate provision was made for the comfort of way-farers along all the routes leading to
Madinah. Military posts and caravansarais, together with water fountains, sprang up all over. To
protect Madinah against floods a huge dam was constructed. The Prophet's Mosque was extended and
rebuilt with stone. Farms to breed horses and camels were opened on a large scale and water
arrangements were also made there.

It was 18th Zul Hijjah, 35, A.H, June 17,656 A.D. when the capital was almost empty, people
having gone on pilgrimage the rebels had arrived to strike the blow. They made an attempt to
force their way into the Caliph's house and finish him. They could not break the door, therefore
they went to the neighbouring house and from there jumped in. The Caliph, in the midst of his
family, was reciting the Quran. The Caliph's wife interposed to shield her husband. Her fingers
also got chopped off. The household servants also offered resistance, but they were overpowered.

At last the noble and most gentle Caliph Hazrat Usman fell bleeding and died on the spot. The
news came like a thunderbolt to the people who were still there in the town. He was truly a
martyr who devoted his whole life to the cause of Islam and the service of humanity. As the Quran
says such souls never die: Think not of those who are slain in Allah's way as dead. Nay, they
live finding their sustenance in the presence of their Lord (3:169).

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