Before Abu Tahir's rule, the Qarmatians had launched several raids along the
pilgrim routes crossing Arabia. In 906, Qarmatians ambushed the pilgrim caravan returning from Mecca and massacred 20,000 pilgrims. During the Hajj of 930 CE, Abu Tahir led the Qarmatians' most infamous attack when he pillaged
Mecca and desecrated Islam's most sacred sites. Unable to gain entry to the city initially, he called upon the right of all Muslims to enter the city and gave his oath that he came in peace. Once inside the city walls, the Qarmatian army set about massacring the pilgrims, riding their horses into
Masjid al-Haram and charging the praying pilgrims. They set the
Kaaba on fire and smeared it with the blood of dead pilgrims. While killing pilgrims, he taunted them with verses of the Quran and verses of poetry: "I am by God, and by God I am ... he creates creation, and I destroy them". The attack on Mecca symbolized the Qarmatians' break with the Islamic world; it was believed to have been aimed to prompt the
appearance of the Mahdi who would bring about the
final cycle of the world and end the era of Islam. The
Qarmatians defiled the Zamzam Well with the bodies of pilgrims and the black stone was stolen and taken to the oasis in Eastern Arabia known as
al-Aḥsāʾ, where it remained until the
Abbasids ransomed it in 952 CE. According to historian
al-Juwayni, the stone was returned 22 years later in 951 under mysterious circumstances. Wrapped in a sack, it was thrown into the
Great Mosque of Kufa in Iraq, accompanied by a note saying "By command we took it, and by command we have brought it back." The theft and removal of the Black Stone caused it to break into seven pieces. The basic shape and structure of the
Kaaba have not changed since then. The sack of Mecca followed
millenarian excitement among the Qarmatians (and in Persia) over the conjunction of Saturn and Jupiter in 928. Bahrain became the seat of the Qarmatian Mahdi-Caliph from
Isfahan who abolished
Sharīa law. The new Mahdi also changed the
qibla of prayer from Mecca to that of fire, a specifically
Zoroastrian practice. Some scholars take the view that "they may not have been Ismailis at all at the outset, and their conduct and customs gave plausibility to the belief that they were not merely heretics but bitter enemies of Islam." ==Final years and death==