Zaid Hamid:BrassTacks-Yeh Ghazi Episode 20: Rukn al-Din Baibars Part 3
Zaid Hamid's program Yeh Ghazi on Sultan Rukn Al Din Baibars.
Al-Malik Al-Zahir Rukn al-Din Baibars was the Mamluk Sultan of Egypt & Syria.He was the sole wall against the Mongol
onslaught in the Islamic World. These were extremely critical times when Sultan Baibars came up as a saviour & later a
reformer. He is renowned for his military campaigns against Mongols and crusaders and for his internal administrative reforms
. He has become a part of the Egyptian folklore.Sultan Baibars gained his first major military victory as commander of the
Ayyūbid army at the city of Al-Manṣūrah in February 1250 against the crusaders army led by Louis IX of France, who was
captured and later released for a large ransom. In September 1260, the Mamlūk troops defeated a Mongol army near Nāblus in
Palestine. Baybars distinguished himself as the leader of the vanguard, and many Mongol leaders were slain on the field.
Baibars followed the footsteps of his ideal Sultan Salahuddin Ayubi.He started by consolidating and strengthening his
military position. He rebuilt all the Syrian citadels and fortresses that had been destroyed by the Mongols and built new
arsenals, warships, and cargo vessels. To achieve unity of command against the crusaders, Baybars united Muslim Syria and
Egypt into a single state.
Baibars was a commander of the Mamluks in around 1250, when he defeated the Seventh Crusade of Louis IX of France. In 1260 he
led Mamluk troops to decisive victory against the Mongols at the Battle of Ain Jalut.In 1265 he received the surrender of
Arsūf from the Knights Hospitalers. He occupied ʿAtlit and Haifa, and in July 1266 he received the town of Safed from the
Knights Templar garrison after a heavy siege. Two years later, Sultan Baibars turned toward Jaffa, which he captured without
resistance. The most important town taken by him was Antioch (May 1268). His seizure of additional strongholds in 1271 sealed
the crusaders fate; they were never able to recover from their territorial losses. Baybarss campaigns made possible the
final victories won by his successors.
Baybarss permanent goal was to contain the continued Mongol attacks on Syria from both north and east that threatened the
very heart of the Islamic East. During the 17 years of his reign, he engaged the Mongols of Persia in nine battles. Within
Syria, Baybars dealt with the Assassins, a fanatical Islamic sect. After seizing their major strongholds between 1271 and
1273, he wiped out the Syrian members of the group.
Baibars was, moreover, more than a military leader or a diplomatic politician. He built canals, improved harbours, and
established a regular and fast postal service between Cairo and Damascus, one that required only four days. He built the
great mosque and the school bearing his name in Cairo. He was also the first ruler in Egypt to appoint chief justices
representing the four main schools of Islamic law.
Yeh Ghazi Yeh Teray Pur Asrar Banday
Jinhain Tunay Bakhsha hai Zauq-e-Khudai
Do Neem Un ki Thokar say Sahra o Darya
Simat kar Pahaar In ki Haybat say Rayi
Do Aalam say Karti hai Baygaana Dil ko
Ajab cheez hai Lazzat-e-Aashnayi
Shahadat hai Matloob o Maqsood-e-Momin
Na Maal-e-Ghaneemat na Kishwar Kushayi
Dilay Mard-e-Momin main phir zinda kar day
Woh Bijli thi keh Na'ara-e-La Tadar main
Azayim ko seenom main baydaar kar day
Nigha-e-Muslim ko Talwar kar day
(Iqbal)