This episode retraces the life of the legendary Libyan sheikh Omar Al-Mokhtar, an iconic figure of Islamic resistance against colonialism. Drawn from the work Umar Al-Mukhtar: Lion of the Desert by Ali Muhammad As-Sallabi, this account highlights his education within the Sannusi movement, his piety, courage, and generosity.
Discover how he led the jihad in Cyrenaica against Italian occupation, up until his arrest, trial, and execution in 1931 — a moving testimony to a man whose nobility and unshakable faith were acknowledged even by his enemies.
📘 A story of resistance, faith, and dignity.
#OmarAlMokhtar #Islam #History #Resistance #Colonialism #IslamicPodcast #HeroesOfIslam #Libya
In this last episode, Ibn Khaldun explores the nature and hierarchy of the sciences, emphasizing human reason as the source of man’s superiority over animals and his path to perfection.
He distinguishes three levels of intellect — discerning, experiential, and speculative — that enable humanity to organize action and pursue existential refinement.
A large portion of the text is devoted to the classification of knowledge into philosophical (rational) and traditional (transmitted) sciences, with detailed reflections on logic, speculative theology, Sufism, astrology, and alchemy — disciplines whose validity or orthodoxy he often questions.
Finally, Ibn Khaldun discusses how scientific education is a craft requiring habit and discipline, and how flourishing sedentary civilizations foster the growth of learning and the excellence of scholars — many of whom, he notes, were non-Arabs in the Islamic world.
In this episode, Ibn Khaldun analyzes the various ways human beings make a living and the relationship between labor, profit, and social hierarchy.
He distinguishes between sustenance — the share of profit used for personal needs — and profit itself, the value generated through human work and accumulation.
The text examines different professions, from agriculture and craftsmanship to trade, viewing farming as the most basic and essential, and craftsmanship as a refined activity that thrives in urban civilization.
Ibn Khaldun also discusses how social rank and flattery can accelerate the acquisition of wealth, while religious scholars and humble artisans often earn little. He condemns treasure hunting and other unnatural means of livelihood as contrary to the natural order of human society.
Ibn Khaldun explores the life cycle of cities — how they emerge from strength and solidarity, flourish through wealth and culture, and decay under the weight of luxury and comfort.
This episode reveals the timeless wisdom behind his idea that cities are not natural, but the reflection of a civilization’s moral and social health.
A profound insight into how prosperity carries the seeds of decline.
Ibn Khaldun explains why every empire carries within it the seeds of its own decline.
In this episode, we explore his “law of group feeling” (ʿasabiyyah), the corrupting force of luxury, and the mysterious 120-year lifespan that governs the rise and fall of dynasties.
In this episode, we explore Ibn Khaldun’s “Iron Law” — his timeless theory of how strength, unity, and faith give rise to empires, while luxury, comfort, and moral decay lead to their fall.
Discover the four-generation cycle that explains why every civilization, no matter how great, eventually declines — and what lessons it still holds for our modern world.
Ibn Khaldun explores how climate, food, and divine revelation influence the rise and fall of civilizations.
This episode examines his reflections on geography, sustenance, and prophecy — revealing how both physical and spiritual forces shape human society and history.
In this first episode, we introduce The Muqaddimah — Ibn Khaldun’s groundbreaking work on history, civilization, and human society.
Discover the context in which it was written, the author’s purpose, and why this 14th-century masterpiece remains one of the most influential texts in world thought.