Who was Hassan bin Sabah? 



 Who was Hassan Bin Sabah


History mentions two paradises built on earth. One paradise was built by Shaddad, the claimant of God, which is called Bagh-e-Iram, and the other paradise was built by Hassan ibn Sabah in the fifth century AH. And the most hypocritical character has passed away.

He used the title of Shaykh al-Jabal or Shaykh al-Jabal for himself.



The Seljuk rule was a period when those who were fighting the Crusaders in the West on the one hand and preventing the Mongol invasion on the other were raised by the esoteric sect and are also called Fatimids in history. The foundations of Islam were to be hollowed out. Hasan ibn Sabah was the founder of this esoteric sect. Hasan ibn Sabah was born in 1050 AD in the city of Tus Mashd, Iran. In 1090 AD, Hasan ibn Sabah captured the fort called Alamut. Hasan ibn Sabah organized a group whose members were called Fad, and it was a sign of the best-selling of the Fida'is that they jumped from a tall building by stabbing themselves in the abdomen at the behest of Hasan ibn Sabah. He used to give his life



Hasan ibn Sabah planted a very beautiful garden and very beautiful girls lived in it. Hasan ibn Sabah used to give hashish to the martyrs many times. It is written with this background in mind. Later, the girls gave him cannabis again under the pretext of Jam Kausar and drove him out of this paradise in a coma



The task of the martyrs was to kill his undesirable personalities at the behest of Hasan ibn Sabah. Even if I am killed, in the hereafter he will get paradise forever. Friends, Hassan Sabah was a hypocrite and a great enemy of Islam who deceived Muslims.




A few months after the siege of Alamut, on 16 October 1192, Nizam-ul-Mulk, the prime minister of the Seljuk Sultan and a classmate of Hassan al-Sabah, was traveling in the Nahawand district when a young man from the Dalaman area, disguised as a beggar, He drew a dagger from his robe and struck them.


According to Rashid al-Din Hamdani, Hassan al-Sabah knew that Nizam al-Mulk was behind the Seljuk attack on Alamut. One day he said to his martyrs: 'Who among you can cleanse this country from the temptations of Nizam-ul-Mulk Tusi?'



A young man named Bo Tahir Arani raised his hand and later went and obeyed the order of Sheikh Al-Jabal, during which he himself was killed by the guards of Nizam-ul-Mulk.


It was the first "suicide" attack on Hassan al-Sabah's campaign.


Obviously, political assassination was not an invention of beauty, it is as old as human history. But because of the systematic way in which Hassan used it as a tool, his name has become associated with it.



It is also well known that the English word assassin is also a product of Hassan al-Sabah's era, because he and his successors, the martyrs, were intoxicated with hashish (ie hashish). Used to send on campaigns. It is said that those belonging to this sect were called Hashishin rather than Hashish, who reached the West and became Assassins.


There is no evidence in any contemporary history book that Hassan al-Sabah or his followers used any kind of narcotics. According to the well-known historian Bernard Lewis, the term "hashish" (hashish drinker) was actually used for the Ismailis of that period because others thought their ideas were misleading, not because they drank hashish themselves.