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Allah the Exalted says in Surat al-Jathiyya
(45:22-24):

Allah created the heavens and earth with truth
so that every self might be repaid for what it earned
and they will not be wronged.
Have you seen him who takes
his whims and desires to be his god -
whom Allah has misguided knowingly,
sealing up his hearing and his heart
and placing a blindfold over his eyes?
Who then will guide him after Allah?
So will you not pay heed?
They say, ‘There is nothing but our existence in the dunya.
We die and we live and nothing destroys us except for time.’
They have no knowledge of that.
They are only conjecturing.
Most dear Muslim Community of Britain, all its
men, its women and its children - that is, all those who confirm that Allah is
One without association, and that our Master, may Allah bless him and grant him
peace, is the Seal of the Messengers before him, those named and those unnamed -
I am moved to send this message to you out of my concern for you. The situation
you are in has two aspects, one, the understandable dis-unity among us caused on
the one hand by the creation of masonic structures inside the mosques, Mosque
Committees, Treasurers, and Chairmen, and on the other hand by the inherited
decimation of Islam in our time due to the disaster of the Khalif’s expulsion
from Istanbul and the Oil Corporations’ adoption of wahhabism as a means to end
Islamic governance.
The second aspect is the wider historical context of the British Isles. Britain
itself is a fractured entity which over the centuries has experienced terrible
scars. North of the border, in Scotland, there was monarchic continuity of King
and People up to the Union of the Kingdoms. South of the border, England,
according to Shakespeare, knew nothing but usurpation and illegitimacy, the
chronicle of which is to be found in his History Plays. It is a dreadful story
of disinheritance and usurpation, that is, the Wars of the Roses culminating in
illegal Tudor power, then the illegitimacy of Queen Elizabeth I. Then, with
legitimacy restored in a United Kingdom with a Scottish Monarch, soon in turn
his first son was beheaded and his grandson driven into exile in a coup d’état
which marked the end of personal rule.
Everything that followed is nothing less than, or other than, the evolution of
mercantile capitalism under the Hanovers. By the 19th century, England was a
nation crippled by a degrading poverty that reduced the masses to a sub-human
condition. This outrage on the common people was ferociously attacked by very
great men who fought for social justice, Charles Dickens and Thomas Carlyle.
From the end of governing monarchy in 1688 until the death of Churchill in 1965,
Britain had been ruled by the landed aristocracy.
By 1920, the last century’s greatest political theorist in Britain, Hilaire
Belloc, recognised that Parliament as an institution, that is as the institution
which the landed gentry had created as the governing oligarchy, had come to an
end. He explained: ‘My point is that the co-operation, the organisation of many
human beings regarded as one governing class is no longer a thing within the
vision of the governed. The gentry no longer means anything to them. What may be
left of such a class they merge in a general vision of excessive, unjust, and
indeed malignant wealth.’ He recognised that as a result of this, ‘The whole
nature of the State has suffered transformation.’
He goes on: ‘The public mind naturally returns to the contemplation of the House
of Commons as a whole, and that contemplation is not pleasing. It thinks of the
man in question, however personally honest, as a politician, and that title has
now acquired a significance which it cannot shake off.’
He sums up the matter in a definition: ‘Dying institutions do not restore
themselves. […] The reform of the House of Commons from within is hopeless. You
have never yet got in history a thoroughly corrupt governing organ reforming and
restoring itself. The thing would seem to be as impossible in the body politic
as in the physical body of man. We have further seen that mechanical reform from
without - that is, changes in the method of election and so forth - could not
eliminate the fatal weakness of a modern Parliament, which is that it is an
Oligarchy no longer Aristocratic.’
This analysis of the state of Parliament in 1920 by Britain’s greatest political
thinker was confirmed again by Lord Boothby in his assessment of the 1939
Parliament which he considered, ‘The worst Parliament in Westminster’s history.’
World War II and Churchill provided a noble last movement to the symphony of
oligarchic rule. What has followed has been an up-to-then unimaginable decline.
With a back-stage plot, the corrupted Conservative Party, along with un-elected
monetarists, rejected its legitimate leader, Rab Butler, and placed at the head
of the country a recidivist shopkeeper, Margaret Thatcher. From Thatcher to
Blair we have witnessed the piece-by-piece dissection of parliamentary
government, so that now the body politic lies before us, ready for burial.
If you want to grasp how far we have come from the oligarchic rule of the
aristocracy to a government no longer in the service of the British people but
of the worst, most ruthless, and most hidden elements of global finance, you
need only look at a few statements of the last great Parliamentarian, Churchill.
In 1897, referring to the invasion of Afghanistan, he declared: ‘Financially it
is ruinous. Morally it is wicked. Militarily it is an open question, and
politically it is a blunder.’ He added, ‘…there is no doubt we are a very cruel
people.’
On the judiciary he said: ‘The mood and temper of the public in regard to the
treatment of crime and criminals is one of the most unfailing tests of the
civilisation of any country. A calm and dispassionate recognition of the rights
of the accused against the State, a constant heart-searching by all charged with
the duty of punishment, and an unfaltering faith that there is a treasure, if
only you can find it, in the heart of every man - these are the symbols which in
the treatment of crime and criminals mark and measure the stored-up strength of
a nation, and are the sign and proof of the living virtue in it.’
Then in 1945 he made a famous speech which caused outrage at the time. However,
this was a man who with the advent of the Boer War anticipated the First World
War, and who at its end foresaw the inevitable coming of the Second World War.
Now we can say that half a century ago he foresaw the inevitable demise of
liberalism and radicalism from which would emerge in the Blair regime what he
defined as ‘Totalitarianism and the abject worship of the State.’
He said: ‘No Socialist Government conducting the entire life and industry of the
country could afford to allow free, sharp, or violently worded expressions of
public discontent. They would have to fall back on some form of Gestapo, no
doubt very humanely directed in the first instance. And this would nip opinion
in the bud; it would stop criticism as it reared its head, and it would gather
all the power to the supreme party and party leaders, rising like stately
pinnacles above their vast bureaucracies of civil servants, no longer servants
and no longer civil.’
It is clear from this brief survey of our history that we have reached end-game
with the governing institution of Parliament, and it is not accidental that a
Leader who has a gravely flawed psychology, and for whom the adjective
‘inadequate’ seems to provide a total definition, has under him two utterly
inadequate and untrustworthy men whose exalted tasks should be the upholding of
the Constitution and the Judiciary. I refer to the Attorney General, Lord
Goldsmith, of dubious provenance, who has even publicly lied about himself in
the matter of the Iraq War, and the totally inexperienced Lord Chancellor, Lord
Falconer, whose main achievement was the covering-up of Blair’s squandering one
billion sterling on the notorious Dome, before going on to the systematic
dismantling of the inner structure of a Parliament that under the aristocracy
had flourished for three hundred years.
Once we can view Britain in a proper light and regretfully recognise that it
teeters on the brink of anarchy, we will be forced to realise that our duty as
British citizens is to play a vital part in the recovery of Britain, and that it
is a task for which we must prepare.
The real Terror in England, worse than that imported Terror which we the Muslims
more than anyone deplore, lies in the disturbing statistics of violence. Firstly
there is the continuing and rising number of women being raped. Only recently,
five women were raped by a gang in the one city of Northampton. A black youth is
murdered, his assailants known, and no-one brought to justice. In Liverpool,
another black youth has his head split open with an axe. Added to all this there
is the tragic list of young girls brutally assaulted and murdered, so regular is
this terrible crime that the British public numbingly seem to have accepted it
on an almost monthly basis.
All terror, according to its classical definition, has to be placed at the door
of Government. They are always and in every case to blame. It is neither
inappropriate nor accidental that a recent Prime Minister, personally
responsible for the last phase of the active tearing-apart of the British
Constitution, should have a son who is a convicted and self-confessed terrorist.
Margaret Thatcher’s son, Mark Thatcher, openly confessed in a South African
court to the active participation in a planned coup d’état on an African country
which would have led to the certain death of at least hundreds. He was found
guilty and expelled ignominiously from the country.
We know we have to act from within our own Community, once we have recognised
that the out-dated system of parliamentary democracy has now nowhere to go, and
has already started the grim march, the historically well known march to
totalitarian rule - arrest without trial, witch-hunt and slander by media,
invasive interference in the practice of religion, persecution of intellectual
opponents, and a failure to curb an increasing criminality coupled with turning
upon the nation’s own youth as an enemy, re-defining them as yobs and hooligans.
What then is our task? Our first task is the integration and unification of that
highly important section of British citizenry, the Muslim Community, a Community
which significantly represents the largest religious group within the nation.
How is this task to be accomplished? Ibn Taymiyya told us that in a crisis the
Muslims always must return to the First Community and find purification from
that model. Following his counsel we would therefore, and he would have
confirmed us in this, declare that while the Shi‘a religion takes its leadership
from its Imam class, in Islam we do not do this. Our leadership must be the
best, the strongest and certainly, following an exalted Sunna, the noblest of
the young generation. Following the model of the Salaf, that leadership can be
by appointment, selection and election.
The task of the leadership is not to make pronouncements, but rather to impose
on the Community a correct fulfilment of the Fara’id. I do see this as a task
for the new generation, because we have among them men and women of the highest
quality and education who want the Deen and have already seen through the
failure of the atheist society. From a structural point of view we could liken
it to the creation of a Trade Union of Muslims. I have been advised by a
governing member of the I.L.O. in Geneva that just such an entity would be legal
in labour law, since a union requires only a common factor binding its members,
and that not necessarily the work they do. Further, this would begin to create
the social welfare system on which our Deen is founded.
The first step to this would be that the Leader of the Muslims would order the
institution of the obligatory and necessary Pillar of Zakat. Without the
erection of this Pillar there is no Islam, for it, with the other four Pillars
together, uniquely represents Islam. Now Zakat is not a charity, it is defined
in the Qur’an as a Sadaqa but with a unique condition. Allah has ordered in the
Qur’an on the issue of Zakat a one-word Command on which the whole affair is
founded - ‘Take!’
Allah the Exalted declares in Surat at-Tawba
(9:103):

Take Zakat from their wealth
to purify and cleanse them
and pray for them.
Your prayers bring relief to them.
Allah is All-Hearing, All-Knowing.
This tells us that there is no Leadership
without Zakat. The reverse also is true, there can be no Zakat without
Leadership. The primary task of the Leader must be, and we must assume that he
will have either co-opted or indeed been chosen by a High Council, to collect
the Zakat. The Council in collaboration with the district mosques must then
appoint Zakat Collectors according to the well-known conditions required of the
Collectors. Then Zakat is assessed and collected. Once the Zakat is collected in
its various places it must be immediately distributed, again according to the
well-known categories. Zakat is for the poor and the welfare of the Muslims.
There is no Tsunami Zakat - it is for the people in the place where it is
collected.
This action, and this action alone, can give an absolute guarantee that no
ignorant, uneducated, and socially alienated group can mistakenly plunge into
terrorism in the name of an Islam which they never for a moment had understood.
This vital matter, and it is nothing other than the restoration of Islam, has
one further liberating but necessary component. It has long been known to our
best ‘ulema, although they have remained timidly reticent about declaring it,
that there can be no Zakat taken on paper money. It is worth only the weight of
the paper it is printed on. Zakat must be taken in the Gold Dinar and Silver
Dirham. All the technicalities of this matter, both as viable economic model and
realistic politique, have been worked out and worked over, with an expertise in
both theory and practice, by Umar Ibrahim Vadillo. Politically, through his
work, the former Prime Minister of Turkey, Dr. Mahathir of Malaysia and King
Hasan II of Morocco, may Allah be merciful to him, the last of the three vowing
in the last Ramadan of his life to set up a Commission to restore a gold/silver
Zakat to Morocco - all these important Muslim leaders have confirmed the
validity of the need for a return to a taken Zakat.
It is this act, when it takes place and when it is seen to take place, that will
mark the beginning of a wide National Da’wa which will see the rest of the
British population follow in the steps of their Muslim co-citizens, and among
them, most movingly, we will find the surviving members of those families who
lost a girl or child to evil violators and murderers, drawn to us perhaps at
first only because they know that as Muslims we insist on the execution of those
who commit these ghastly crimes.
Please accept this as the first pointer on the way not just to the creation of
an Islamic presence in Britain, and not only an opening of the Deen to our
fellow citizens, but also a path towards a re-constructed Governance to replace
the failed parliamentary system. What, inshallah, we would propose would not
only rescue Britain from the impending anarchy that has already started under
our eyes, but it would hold out an opportunity for the survival of monarchy, not
under its Whig dispensation as the Royal Puppets, but a Restoration of personal
rule which would be far from the present absolutist rule of an inadequate
politician chosen to represent the Lowest Common Denominator of the national
populace.
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