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In Islamic history and tradition, Ethiopia
(Abyssinia or Al-Habasha) is known as the
"Haven of the First Migration or
Hijra."
For Muslims, Ethiopia is synonymous with
freedom from persecution and emancipation
from fear.
Ethiopia was a land where its king, Negus
or Al-Najashi, was a person renowned for
justice and in whose land human rights were
cherished.
The meaning and the significance of "Hijra"
is embodied in the Islamic calendar. Since
its inception, the Islamic calendar represents
a history of perpetual struggle between
truth and falsehood, faith and blasphemy,
freedom and oppression, light and darkness,
and between peace and war.
The first migration [Hijra] of the Companions
and relatives of the Prophet Muhammad (peace
and blessings be upon him) to Ethiopia celebrates
the birth of freedom of expression and beliefs,
whereas, the Second Migration of the Prophet
Muhammad to the Madinah celebrates the end
of oppression.
"And dispute you not with the
People of the Book, except with means
better, unless it be with those of them
who inflict wrong; But say, we believe
in the Revelation which has come down
to us and in that which came down to you:
Our God and your God is one; and it is
to Him we bow in Islam: (Quran 29:46).
History has shown that the first migration
to Ethiopia and the second migration to
Madinah have indeed laid down the foundation
on which Islam, as a universal religion,
was built. Ever since that experience, the
Muslim community, wherever they settled,
shifted from the positive of minority to
majority, from weakness to permanent strength,
from tribalism to universal brotherhood
that knows no defined political boundaries.
The Quran says:
"O mankind! We created you from
a single soul, male and female, and made
you into nations and tribes, so that you
may come to know one another. Truly the
most honored of you in God's sight is
the greatest of you in piety. God is All-Knowing,
All-Aware (Quran 49:13).
With this spirit in mind, Bilal ibn Rabah,
an Ethiopian slave living in Makkah, became
a leading companion of the Prophet Muhammad.
It was not a coincidence that his native
land, Ethiopia, was the country chosen by
the Prophet when his followers needed protection
and freedom form oppression.
Muhammad Haykal, author of the "Life
of Muhammad" said that the Prophet
Muhammad trusted that his followers and
relatives would be better off if they migrated
to a country whose religion was Christianity-a
scriptural religion whose Prophet was Jesus
son of Mary. He was not afraid that his
followers would convert and give up their
faith in favor of any other established
religion.
He was more convinced that Islam would
be more protected in its infancy in a fertile
and prosperous land ruled by the Scripture
than among the ignominious pagans of Arabia.
The companions and relatives of the Prophet
were prepared to sacrifice and suffer all
sorts of hardship and alienation rather
than give up their own conviction and freedom.
The Prophet gave his companions the following
letter to give the king when they reached
Ethiopia.
"In the Name of Allah, the Most
Merciful, Most Gracious, From Muhammad,
the Messenger of Allah to the Negus Al-Asham,
king of Abyssinia.
Peace, I praise Allah to you, the
King, the Holy, the Peace, the Faithful,
the Watcher, and I bear witness that Jesus,
son of Mary, is the Spirit of Allah and
His Word, Which He cast to Mary the virgin,
the good, the pure, so that she conceived
Jesus. Allah created him from His Spirit
and His Breathing as He created Adam by
His Hand and His Breathing. I call you
to Allah, the Unique without partner,
and to His obedience, and to follow me
and believe in that which came to me,
for I am the Messenger of Allah.
I have sent to you my cousin Jafar
with a number of Muslims, and when they
come, entertain them without haughtiness,
for I invite you and your armies to Allah.
I have accomplished my work and my admonition,
so receive my advice. Peace upon all those
that follow True Guidance."
In view of this determination, the Ethiopian
king, Negus As'ha'mah, undoubtedly recognized
the significance of the Prophet Muhammad
as a Messenger of Allah, and the need to
treat the Muslims with kindness and dignity.
The Christian church leaders who listened
to the debate between the Muslims learned
the truth about Islam.
Thus, they accepted the universality of
the message of the Prophet based on the
truthful similarity with the Scripture which
prophesied the advent of Muhammad as a Prophet.
The Quran describes their belief in these
words:
"And when they listen to revelation
received by the Messenger, you will see
their eyes overflowing with tears, for
they recognize the Truth. They pray: Our
Lord! we believe; write us among the witnesses"
(Quran 5:83).
In the sixth year of the Hijra, the Prophet
wrote letters to different rulers of the
world inviting them to Islam. Among the
first leaders to receive the letter was
the King of Ethiopia (Abyssinia). This second
letter was sent with Amir ibn Umayya and
reads as follows:
"In the Name of Allah, the Most
Merciful, Most Gracious. From Muhammad,t
the Messenger of Allah, to the Negus Al-Asham,
king of Abyssinia, Peace is for the one
who follows the right guidance and believes
in Allah and His Messenger. I bear witness
that there is no god but Allah. He is
one and has no partners. He has neither
wife nor child. And Muhammad is His servant
and His Messenger.
I call you to Islam for I am His Messenger.
Accept Islam and you will be safe. O people
of the Book! Come to something which is
common between us and you, that we worship
none by Allah; nor associate anything
with Him; nor make any other our Lord
besides Allah. If they turn away, then
tell them we are obedient to Allah. If
you deny it, the burden of the Christians,
your people, will fall upon you."
The seal of Muhammad, the Messenger.
The king received the envoy of the Prophet
with great respect and showed him all the
honor he deserved, and accepted Islam despite
the objection of his family and the Church.
The king wrote back saying "...I
testify that you are the Messenger of Allah,
true and confirming those before you. I
have given my allegiance to you and to your
nephew and I have surrendered myself through
him to the Lord of the Worlds."
In recognition of his kindness and when
it was revealed to the Prophet that the
Ethiopian king whom he had never met in
person passed away, the Prophet offered
the first funeral prayer in absentia in
Islam (Salatul Ghaib) for the king who was
named Ahmed Al-Najashi after he reverted
to Islam.
Even though the family of the Ethiopian
king, joined by the church, revolted against
him because of his acceptance of Islam,
and tried to stop the spreading of Islam,
Islam rapidly and peacefully spread south
of the Anunite kingdom.
By the fourteenth century, there were seven
Islamic Sultanates [kingdoms]. The Sultanate
of Yifat, Dawaro, Arbabini, Hadiya, Shakara,
Bali, and Dara survived as Muslim enclaves
until the northern Christian, with the help
of European colonial powers, mainly from
Portugal, expanded by force and by the late
18th century, formed "Ethiopia"
as we know it today.
Based on the Europe World Year Book 1991
and UNICEF/ETHIOPIA the estimated number
of Ethiopian Muslims, which ranges between
23.9 million to 27.7 million (45 percent-52
percent), ranks as the third largest Muslim
population in Africa after Nigeria and Egypt.
Overall, it is three times as large as
Somalia, Guinea or Niger, 1.2 times as large
as the Sudan's Muslim population; twice
as large as Yemen or Saudi Arabia or Syria;
six times as large as Libya; 1.5 times as
large as Iraq; 1.1 times as large as Algeria
or Morocco.
Yet, despite the scale of abuses and suffering
of the Muslim people of Ethiopia, their
agony was largely ignored by the world community,
especially by the Muslim world.
According to Ethiopian Muslims' estimate,
their number is between 65 and 70 percent
of the total population.
Government after succeeding government
made the effort to portray Ethiopia as an
island of Christianity by minimizing the
number of Ethiopian Muslims.
For centuries, the policy of fear and distrust
forced the monarchy, which was overthrown
in 1974, and the church to espouse an oppressive
posture in relation to the Muslim populace,
a majority in Ethiopia, consisting of ethnically
diverse groups largely living in rural areas.
Moreover, their distrustful policy towards
the surrounding neighbors led to centuries
of unwarranted isolation from the rest of
the world.
The monarchs, with the blessing of the
Church, committed unparalleled genocide
against the Muslims of Ethiopia in order
to create a one-religion and, if possible,
a one-ethnic empire.
In their effort to uproot Islam from the
country, they have employed the services
of western missionary groups who relentlessly
devoted their time and financial resources
for the main purpose of converting Muslims,
especially orphan children of famine and
drought victims, to Christianity.
By contrast, any religious, educational,
cultural or trade access to the Ethiopian
Muslims from the surrounding neighbors used
to provoke the anxiety of the isolationists
who dominated the traditional political
power structure over 700 years.
Very often when the Ethiopian Muslims performed
Hajj or Umra pilgrimages in large numbers,
it is considered as a sudden rise of "Islamic
Fundamentalism" in spite of the fact
that the annual pilgrimage to Mecca is one
of the sacred pillars of Islam for those
who can financially afford it.
To build Islamic schools was out of question.
Yet Muslims were forced to financially contribute
for church buildings, and in most cases
their fertile lands were confiscated and
handed over to the church.
Prior to 1974, the church owned a third
of the fertile lands in the country.
To build their mosques, Muslims had to
obtain building permits from the church,
and in most cases they are denied. The injustices
committed against the Muslims of Ethiopia
are so enormous that it is impossible to
fully detail them here.
It is indeed Divine intervention from Allah
that Islam not only survived but also flourished
in Ethiopia.
The struggle of Ethiopian Muslims to save
their religion and protect their basic God-given
human rights went unnoticed by the outside
world.
A few among the most honored Muslim leaders
in Ethiopia who struggled hard to save Islam
by traveling throughout the country and
teaching the religion are Sheikh Abadir
of Harar, Sheikh Nur Hussein of Bale, Sheich
Aba Budelah who is known as Aba Ramuz of
Abret in Chancho, and Sheikh Tola and Sheikh
Muhammad Sani Habib of Wollo.
These Muslim legends, with the help and
Mercy of Allah, left behind a legacy of
true dedication and struggle for us to emulate.
There are thousands of their students who
are following their footsteps.
Among the well-known Ulemas nowadays is
Sheikh Muhammad Wale of Darra. He has been
incarcerated since February 1995 for no
reason other than trying to teach Islam
and advocate the human rights of the Muslims.
Of late, it has been observed that the
Ethiopian government-in conjunction with
the Eritrean government and with the financial
support of the American and Israeli governments,
has revived a dormant Muslim phobia anchored
in isolationist mentality and historically
engendered feuds with neighbors across the
Red Sea, and neighboring countries in East
and Northeast Africa such as Somalia and
the Sudan.
This act is a source of threat to the political
and economic stability of the region.
The coordination of anti-Islamic and anti-Muslim
policies of the Ethiopian and Eritrean governments
started with the subjugation of their own
Muslim communities.
The Ethiopian government has fallen into
the trap of the false beliefs of the New
World Order. Espousing any policy that undermines
freedom and is injurious to the self-image
of Muslims is considered in the interest
of the stability of the region from the
so-called invaders or what euphemistically
is known in the modern parlance of the political
and religious opposition as fundamentalists.
This fabricated paternalistic insult to
the Muslim is certainly detrimental to dialogue,
peace and stability.
Since the peaceful December 1994 demonstration
of Ethiopian Muslims demanding justice and
equality, the government has taken drastic
actions to suppress the Muslims.
Community leaders elected to run the day
to day affairs of the Muslim community are
still languishing in the main prison of
Addis Ababa.
Quranic schools were closed and all governmental
and non-governmental Islamic humanitarian
organizations were ordered to close and
leave the country. Tens of thousands of
imported written materials about Islam are
sitting in the custom warehouses and are
ordered to be burned. Yet again, the Ethiopian
government has deliberately failed to refrain
from direct involvement in the internal
affairs of the Muslim people by conducting
an election for the Supreme Council for
Islamic Affairs and having its cronies control
the Council.
Most of the so-called elected are not religiously
qualified to run the affairs of the Muslims.
The Council's first action taken was to
pass a ruling that any volunteer who teaches
Quran in mosques or any individual who wants
to participate in Dawa work must obtain
a license. This procedure is used as a control
mechanism.
By contrast, there are over 100 church
groups freely roaming the country teaching
their religion. There are 96 different weekly
and monthly Christian magazines and booklets
flooding the country by the millions. Their
primary target, as one official of the World
Council of Churches stated, is to Christianize
the entire population of Ethiopia.
It is irrefutable and historically true
that the Muslim majority in Ethiopia have
been the victims of horrific persecution
for a long time under Ethiopian Christian
rulers who are sustained by European powers.
The Ethiopian rulers, from the time right
after Ahmed Al-Najashi all the way down
to the present regime, have developed a
deep-rooted hatred for Islam.
Religious persecution and cultural domination,
characterized by the destruction of mosques
and Islamic schools, detention and even
execution of local Imams, religious leaders,
Sheikhs, and the burning of the copies of
the Quran and other religious books was
rampant under the Christian rulers of Ethiopia.
It is time for Muslims around the world
to open their eyes and see what is happening
to their brothers and sisters in Ethiopia.
The land of the first Hijra is being groomed
once again by the enemies of equality, justice
and human rights to be the bastion of Christianity
in East Africa. This i the New World Order
in practice.
Insha Allah, they will fail miserably.
Allah reminds us in the Quran:
"Remember how the unbelievers
plotted against thee, to keep thee in
bonds, or slay thee, or get thee out of
our home. Thy plot and plan. And Allah
too plans, but the best of planners is
Allah" (Quran 8:30).
Allah's Apostle said:
A Muslim is a brother of another Muslim,
so he should not oppress him, nor should
he hand him over to an oppressor. Whoever
fulfilled the needs of his brother, Allah
will fulfill his needs; whoever brought
his Muslim brother out of discomfort,
Allah will bring him out of the discomforts
of the Day of Resurrection, and whoever
screened a Muslim, Allah will screen him
on the Day of Resurrection (narrated by
Abdullah bin Umar)
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