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Amin Abdullah is killed in a masjid attack helping protect worshippers while ~140 children are inside. Normal people: make du’a. @IbnalIskandar: launches a Space to explain why he doesn’t qualify as a martyr. Let’s inspect this intellectual catastrophe. 🧵


Clip 1. Abu Natcho Foolando bin al-Isiswonder’s opening move is genuinely remarkable: Step 1: “That place isn’t technically a masjid.”

Clip 2. Abu Nacho’s theory: If a Muslim had a paid job, intended to go home alive, and didn’t sign an HR contract saying “may die protecting worshippers,” martyrdom is void. High fiqh.

Clip 3. Abu Nacho’s updated criteria: Unless there’s slow-motion footage of a Muslim dramatically diving into bullets with orchestral music in the background, martyrdom is apparently under review. High cinema fiqh.

Clips 4 & 5. Later, his jurisprudential analysis basically became: “I got kicked out of some masajid, I think they’re secular temples, therefore let me explain why this murdered Muslim isn’t a martyr.” Personal grievance isn’t fiqh.

Final clip. Abu Nacho says the real martyrs are those fighting “still in Syria and Sham.” Given his takfir of Ahmad al-Shara, and given ISIS’s active attacks on the Syrian army, that raises a very obvious question: who exactly does he mean?

Final note. The Prophet ﷺ was already clear: “...the one who dies defending his religion or property is a martyr.” This is mainstream Ahl al-Sunnah, not Abu Nacho. Al-Albani, Shaykh Muqbil ibn Hadi al-Wadi‘i, Ibn Baz, and others are not hard to find on this principle.
