00:01My dear brothers and sisters, these two historical pillars that you see on the screen right now, which I personally recorded near the Safa Hill in the Kaaba, are not ordinary pillars.
00:10They are directives.
00:12The magnificent Mamluk inscriptions on it are among the finest signs and documents of the history of Islamic justice.
00:18In the year 766 AH (approximately 1360 AD), the Sultan of Egypt, the ruler of the Mamluk State (a Turkish state), was Malik Shaban, and the administrator of the state was Emir.
00:30Yelboğa,
00:31The Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) abolished all the unjust taxes, which we call meks, levied on pilgrims entering Mecca, as they are the guests of God, in a single decree.
00:40He also had this decree recited in practice.
00:43In fact, to prevent the local administration in Mecca from suffering financial losses and causing further harm or burden to pilgrims, funds were sent to Mecca from the Egyptian treasury.
00:53He pledged to send 260,000 dirhams of silver and 1,000 erdep of wheat every year, and had this promise engraved on these poles.
01:00Today, the marble pillars we pass by in the Kaaba have inscriptions of various sultans on them.
01:07Ibrahim Rifat Pasha, in his work titled Miratül Harameyn, refers to him as Emir Ketboğa, but in fact, the Turkish emir is Emir Yelboğa, and El
01:17It is Ömer.
01:18The taxes imposed by the sheriffs, who were in need in Mecca during their time, were abolished by various rulers at different times.
01:25They kept these decrees in plain sight so that they would not be forgotten.
01:30Of course, these issues have come up again at various times.
01:33Whenever a generous ruler emerged who stated that Mecca needed taxes and imposed them, a generous ruler would appear.
01:40I will explain this in other videos and in other columns.
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