Mukhtar Nama Episode 41 Apr 2026
The final 15 minutes of the episode are brutal and heart-wrenching. Mus’ab’s army surrounds Mukhtar and his small band. One by one, his companions fall. Mukhtar fights with a sword in one hand and the Qur’an in the other. His horse is struck, and he falls.
The episode does not shy away from tragedy. Mukhtar’s generals advise him to flee to the mountains and regroup, but he refuses: “I have not lived a day in cowardice, nor will I die in one.” With only 300 loyal men remaining (the rest bribed or scared away by Mus’ab’s agents), Mukhtar prepares for battle outside Kufa.
Mus’ab orders him beheaded, but Mukhtar asks: “Will you kill me inside the mosque?” To avoid controversy, Mus’ab has him killed just outside the gates of Kufa’s Grand Mosque. Mukhtar’s last words are: “La ilaha illa Allah. Muhammadun Rasul Allah. Aliun Wali Allah. Hussainun Sibt Rasul Allah. Hasbun Allah wa ni’ma al-wakil.” (God is sufficient for us, and He is the best disposer of affairs.) mukhtar nama episode 41
He is captured alive—but only because Mus’ab’s soldiers are too afraid to kill him directly. They bring him before Mus’ab, who orders him to denounce his cause. Mukhtar spits on the ground. “You are no Muslim,” he says. “You are the son of the woman who ate the Prophet’s liver (a reference to the enemies of early Islam).”
The episode now cuts to Mecca, where Mus’ab ibn al-Zubayr (brother of Abdullah ibn Zubayr) is shown reading Mukhtar’s letter informing him of the death of Ibn Ziyad. Instead of gratitude, Mus’ab becomes enraged. He sees Mukhtar as a rival, not an ally. A council of traitors convinces Mus’ab that Mukhtar is gaining too much power and must be destroyed. “He calls for revenge for Hussain, but he secretly wants the caliphate himself,” they lie. The final 15 minutes of the episode are
The final shot shows Mukhtar’s severed head being paraded, but then the camera shifts to his face in a dream: he is seen standing in a green garden, hand in hand with Imam Hussain. A narrator’s voice (the series’ opening voiceover) concludes: “And so the world killed Mukhtar, but history remembers him. For every tyrant who sheds noble blood, God sends a man like Mukhtar—not to rule, but to remind.”
(if applicable to the episode’s broadcast version) roll over a slow, mournful nawha (elegy) sung in honor of Mukhtar and the martyrs of Karbala. Note for viewers: This “Episode 41” is not part of the original 40-episode broadcast but often appears as a standalone finale in extended DVD sets or streaming platforms that split the final double-length episode. If you are watching a 40-episode version, the events above are contained in the final 30 minutes of Episode 40. Mukhtar fights with a sword in one hand
The narrative shifts to Kufa. One of the last remaining enemies who escaped justice is Amr ibn Huraith , a cunning general who pledged loyalty to Mukhtar but secretly aided Ibn Ziyad. Mukhtar’s forces lay siege to his fortified palace. Amr’s wife, seeing the hopelessness, hands him a sword, but he is too cowardly to fight. The siege lasts seven days. On the final night, a tunnel is discovered leading out of the palace. Mukhtar personally leads a squad and captures Amr as he tries to flee disguised as a woman.
The episode closes not with celebration, but with an elderly woman in Medina— Umm Salama , the Prophet’s widow—hearing of Mukhtar’s death. She clutches a small box containing soil from Karbala and whispers, “O Allah, forgive Mukhtar. He revived the memory of your beloved grandson.”

