Amir Butler tells about Saladin (properly, Salah ad-Din Yusuf ibn Ayyub) and why he is a good model for Muslims - and non-Muslims - today:
Muslims revere Saladin because he was an embodiment of Islamic principles; and non-Muslims revered him for what they saw of his chivalry. He became a window through which the medieval world came to see something of Islam; and he now represents a window through which Muslims see something of their past. A past filled with acts of kindness that seem out of place in today's dystopian world of made-for-TV decapitations, kidnapping of engineers, and the torture of prisoners of war. Although he lived as a military leader at a time characterised by its violence, Saladin could teach our contemporary leaders -- both Muslim and non-Muslim -- something about chivalry and respect for humanity. Whilst besieging the Castle of Kerak, on his march to Jerusalem, Saladin learnt that a wedding ceremony was underway in a part of the castle. He didn't make some utilitarian judgement about 'collateral damage' and continue the attack. Rather, he ordered his soldiers to refrain from bombarding that wing. Whilst Crusaders had, according to reports of the time, massacred Jews, Christians and Muslims to the point that, "our men waded in blood up to their ankles", Saladin did not extract revenge or conduct any of his own massacres on recapturing the city 88 years later. Instead, he granted the Crusaders protected passage to the coast. When Richard the Lion Heart attempted to then recapture Jerusalem, he was confronted both by Saladin's military might and his clemency. Despite having violated a treaty by slaughtering 3,000 men at Acre, when Richard's horse was killed at Jaffa, Saladin sent two of his own horses to replace it. "It is not right," he wrote. "That so brave a warrior should have to fight on foot." When Richard fell sick during the siege, Saladin sent his personal physician to care for him. After his death in 1193, they did not find Swiss bank accounts of money pilfered from his people, but an empty personal treasury; emptied by his charity to those in need. For Muslims, Saladin represents a moment in their history of strong and honorable leadership in the face of tremendous opposition. Tyrants and dictators have since misappropriated his name and legacy; but Saladin was everything that the secular and politically emaciated dictators of the Muslim lands are not: a leader who was powerful yet just; victorious yet clement; and who was inspired not by a love of power or a thirst for wealth, but by faith alone. In the end, Saladin was victorious over the crusading armies of Europe, but perhaps his greatest victory was not militarily, but morally. For real victory, Saladin said, "is changing the hearts of your opponents by gentleness and kindness."Some biographies here and here, plus some commentary on the meaning of Saladin in modern Egypt. Incidentally, Saladin was Kurdish.