Storm The Khawarij Nasheed ✅

This nasheed serves several strategic purposes:

Storm the Khawarij, the dogs of hellfire,
They wear the garb of piety, but inside they are snakes.
They killed the believers in Raqqa and Mosul,
And called it jihad—no, it is tyranny!
O lions of the Levant, unsheathe your swords,
And cleanse the land from this cancerous brood. storm the khawarij nasheed

(Note: Translations vary; many versions are deliberately ambiguous to avoid incriminating the uploader.) This nasheed serves several strategic purposes:

Unlike mainstream nasheeds by artists like Maher Zain or Mesut Kurtis, jihadi anashid are produced anonymously or under kunya (nom de guerre). The "Storm the Khawarij" nasheed is most commonly attributed to production wings associated with the Islamic State’s Ajnad Media Foundation (now largely defunct due to airstrikes) and later re-released by Al-Sofwa or Nasheed Jihadi channels. Storm the Khawarij, the dogs of hellfire, They

While no single "artist" can be credited, the vocal style (acapella, often with heavy reverb and layered chanting) is unmistakably the "harsh style" (al-nashid al-jihadi al-sa'ib). It emerged around 2016–2018, during the height of ISIS’s defensive battles in Mosul and Raqqa, as the group began aggressively purging and fighting former allies they deemed "Khawarij."

To understand the impact of "Storm the Khawarij," one must first understand the medium. A nasheed is a vocal chant or hymn traditionally sung a cappella (without instruments) or with minimal percussion. In the context of militant groups or political movements in the Islamic world, nasheeds serve as propaganda tools. They are designed to be catchy, memorable, and emotionally resonant, often used to boost morale among fighters and to recruit sympathizers.

While groups like ISIS (Daesh) famously utilized nasheeds to project an image of unstoppable momentum and glory, "Storm the Khawarij" flips the script. It is a counter-narrative nasheed.