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incident of the death of Hulagu Khan

 


The tragic and instructive incident of the death of Hulagu Khan... 👇👇👇

Birth: October 15, 1218... Death: February 8, 1265

Hulagu Khan, the cruelest and most savage human being in the world, sat proudly on his horse. The ranks of the Mongol armies were lined up all around, with Hulagu Khan's horse leading the way. Three rows of captive Muslims stood before Hulagu Khan, whom he intended to witness being executed according to his orders.

Then the tyrant spoke, "Behead them all!"

And the executioners began beheading the people. The first row lost their heads, then the second row, then the third and fourth. In the first row stood an innocent old poor prisoner who was the sole guarantor for his home. He moved to the second row out of fear of death. The first row was completely decimated.


Hulagu Khan's eyes caught sight of the old man who had moved to the second row out of fear of death, abandoning the first row. Hulagu Khan, sitting on his horse with a powerful mace in his hand, was playing with it and deriving pleasure from the sight of Muslims being killed.


The executioners started attacking the second row with their swords. Heads were falling one after another. The executioners swung their swords while fountains of blood splashed on the ground. When the old man saw that the executioners were getting closer to him, he fled to the third row. Hulagu Khan's gaze was fixed on the old man, realizing that after the third row, there was nowhere for him to hide. He wondered who could save this foolish old man from his sword. "I have killed millions of people. How long can he survive?" he thought.


The swords of the executioners in the third row were striking like lightning, and heads were falling. The executioners swiftly approached the old man. Just as the executioner with the lightning-fast sword reached the old man, Hulagu Khan's voice echoed:


"Stop! Don't say anything now."


"Baba, tell me, you ran from the first row to the second row," said Hulagu Khan.


"When the first row was finished, you ran to the second row," he continued.


"Now, Baba, tell me, there is no other row behind, so where will you run now? Who will save you?"


The old man looked up towards the sky and said with infinite faith in the Lord of everything in heaven and earth, the only God:


"If He wills, anything can happen. And if He wills, He can save me from you."

"How can He save you?" said Hulagu Khan arrogantly, and in his arrogance, he dropped the mace from his hand.

Hulagu Khan was a quick-witted, alert warrior and cunning man. While still sitting on his horse, he bent down to save the mace from falling to the ground before it hit the earth. In his attempt, one of Hulagu Khan's legs came out of the stirrup, and he slipped down from his horse. His other leg remained stuck in the stirrup.

Hulagu Khan's horse was so frightened that it bolted. Hulagu tried hard to save himself, and the army began to move forward. But the horse was so powerful that no one could bring it under control. Hulagu Khan, being dragged by the horse, was being rubbed against rocks. So much so that his head became so bloody that his soul, filled with arrogance, left his body within a few minutes.

When, after countless efforts, Hulagu Khan's mighty horse was brought under control, his head had

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