| SERMON 47
About calamities befalling Kufah O' Kufah, as though I see you being drawn like the tanned leather of `Ukazi (1) in the market, you are being scraped by calamities and being ridden by severe troubles. I certainly (2) know that if any tyrant intends evil for you Allah will afflict him with worry and fling him with a killer (set someone on him to kill him).
(1). During pre-Islamic days a market used to be organised every year near Mecca. Its name was `Ukaz where mostly hides were traded as a result of which leather was attributed to it. Besides sale and purchase literary meetings were also arranged and Arabs used to attract admiration by reciting their works. After Islam, because of the better congregation in the shape of hajj this market went down.
(2). This prophecy
of Amir al-mu'minin was fulfilled word by word and the world saw
how the people who had committed tyranny and oppression on the
strength of their masterly power had to face tragic end and what
ways of their destruction were engendered by their blood-shedding
and homicidal activities. Consequently, the end of Ziyad ibn Abih
(son of unknown father) was that when he intended to deliver a
speech for vilification of Amir al-mu'minin suddenly paralysis
overtook him and he could not get out of his bed thereafter. The
end of the bloodshed perpetrated by `Ubaydullah ibn Ziyad was
that he fell a prey to leprosy and eventually blood thirsty swords
put him to death. The ferocity of al-Hajjaj ibn Yusuf ath-Thaqafi
drove him to the fate that snakes cropped up in his stomach as
a result of which he died after severe pain. `Umar ibn Hubayrah
al-Fazari died of leucoderma. Khalid ibn `Abdillah al-Qasri suffered
the hardships of prison and was killed in a very bad way. Mus`ab
ibn az-Zubayr and Yazid ibn al-Muhallab ibn Abi Sufrah were also
killed by swords.
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