Thursday, November 30, 2006

Babar Ahmad: Running out of Hope

"We are very disappointed with the High Court verdict today. We are hopeful that the High Court will certify that there is a point of law of public importance on military detention and rendition. Our legal team will apply for this certificate for leave to take this matter to the House of Lords within the next 14 days."

This was the Ahmad family's reaction today to the High Court verdict clearing the way for Babar Ahmad to be extradited to the US. There is very little room for manoeuvre at this stage - House of Lords, Europe but it is when things are at their most stressful that Allah grants ease.

Please continue to pray for Babar and his family who are going through a great trial. Just today Babar was moved to Belmarsh without anyone informing his family or even his lawyers. His wife traveled all the way to Woodhill to see him and they told her he wasnt there anymore and didnt tell her where he was. His whole family had to spend the entire day in terror waiting for his phonecall, not knowing where he was and fearing the worst. Only in the evening did a call from Talha in Belmarsh confirm he had been transfered there.

May Allah protect them all and give them the sabr and tawakull to get through this.

what comes around goes around

The Israelis led a siege against the Palestinian people, but it seems that they too are having problems paying their workers.

Al Jazeera English

Tuesday, November 28, 2006

Babar Ahmad HighCourt Verdict Due Thursday 30 November

Dear Friends and Supporters

Assalamualaikum warahmatullahi wabarkatuhu

We have been informed by our legal team that Babar Ahmad’s High Court verdict will be given on Thursday 30th November 2006 insha-Allah.

In anticipation of the upcoming verdict, Babar sent this message:

“On behalf of myself and my family, I would like to thank everyone for their continued support and help. The Prophet (SAW) advised the man to tie his camel and then put his trust in Allah, i.e. do what is in your means and then put your trust in Allah. We can therefore say that we have tied our camel with every rope, thread and string we could. Now we have entrusted our affairs to Allah, the Best Disposer of affairs, and He will make a way out for us.

“If I have ever hurt the feelings of anyone who knew me, I would like to ask for your forgiveness. My family and I are now in most need of duas (supplications) so I request you all to please remember us in your duas as we await the verdict.”

Wassalaamualikum warahmatullahi wabarakatuhu

Babar Ahmad and family
26th November 2006




www.freebabarahmad.com

Sunday, November 26, 2006

Not International Terrorists?

British Jews signing up for service in Gaza and the West Bank
Jeevan Vasagar
Thursday November 23, 2006

He grew up in suburban north London and still misses home comforts like milky British tea, the friends he left behind and the local pub. But yesterday Joe Wainer joined an elite Israeli army unit, and now he faces the prospect of active service in the occupied West Bank. The 19-year-old, one of nine young Britons who have signed up for a programme that recruits foreign Jews for the Israel Defence Forces, realised his life had changed when he fired an M16 rifle for the first time in training.

"When it comes to fire the gun, it's one of the biggest shocks," he said. "The smell of the gunpowder, the kickback. It's what you don't see in the movies."

The soldiers, all of whom will have dual nationality, are part of a wave of migration to Israel from western countries including Britain, France and the US, as fewer Jews arrive from regions such as the former Soviet Union. The British recruits, who arrived in the summer when the war with Hizbullah was at its height, believe the Jewish state needs a show of solidarity.

Training began in September, when they spent a week sleeping in tents, learning to obey orders and doing endless press-ups. A two-day test involving running uphill while carrying sandbags decided who was fit for combat roles. Mr Wainer, who grew up in Barnet, was selected to join Nahal, a reconnaissance unit currently deployed in the West Bank. Nahal soldiers shot dead three Palestinians last month in what the Israeli army said were counter-terrorist operations. Some Israelis have refused to serve in the West Bank or Gaza but he does not share their doubts.

"If it's a job that we have to do, then I have to do it," Mr Wainer said. "Israel has always been under attack. Without the army, there would be no Israel."

For now, the six young men and three women, who are all taking Israeli citizenship under the Garin Tsabar programme, which recruits foreign Jews, live in Sasa, a kibbutz on the border with Lebanon. The hilltop settlement of low-rise concrete buildings became a rear base for the army during the recent war. "We were shooting missiles from the foot of this kibbutz," said Danny Young, 19, another British recruit, pointing from the crest of a hill down to a line of yellow scrub marking the border. "We were also receiving Katyushas [rockets]. Some of them landed in the fields over here."

To the right of the slope is a reminder of another war, the cloud-capped peak of Mount Hermon, part of the Golan Heights that Israel annexed from Syria in the Yom Kippur war of 1973. Mr Young grew up in Southgate, a north London suburb, and misses the pub, his mates and the 24-hour Asda. His new home remains geared up for battle. In the evenings, armoured cars clatter along the pathways and there is a constant buzz from a factory making bulletproof vests and vehicle armour.

On Tuesday nights, a bomb shelter is converted into a nightclub, where Israel's foreign legion drink lager and sing karaoke to a soundtrack which includes Bob Marley's Buffalo Soldier. Mr Young, whose grandfather fought in the British army in the second world war, will serve in the paratroopers. He left Britain because he felt he had to hide his identity, quitting a job at an Essex bus garage because of anti-semitism. "They would be Nazi saluting. On toolboxes, they had written stuff like 'Essex Nazis'. It was done as a laugh, making fun, they'd be saying 'Jew' in German. They didn't know I was Jewish at first, but I didn't like being in a community where I felt I had to put things away."

Mr Wainer fell in love with Israel during a gap year. "There's something very mystical about it," he said. "It's the ancient Jewish homeland. It's where it all started. This is where Abraham was and where Moses fled to. "There's a feeling of togetherness that England really lacks. There's a lot of different groups in England and they're all at each other's throats."

This British contribution to Israel's defence is tiny in scale, but provides a morale boost. "It's not about the number of people, its about the intention," said Dafna Brenkel, an Israeli soldier who mentors the British group. "The idea of people from overseas showing support and love for Israel, giving up their daily comfort, their home and their usual way of life, is an amazing thing."

Joining the army is a rite of passage in Israel, a formative experience in which friendships are made. For foreign Jews, it can be a shortcut to integration. Mr Young said: "When you join the British army, you're joining just to be in the army - it's a profession. Here it's part of the way of life."

In their spare time they watch DVDs of the US mini-series Band of Brothers on a laptop. Mr Wainer said: "I haven't quite experienced the part where somebody's leg is blown off. Hopefully we never will. But they really are a band of brothers, and that's what we are."

Friday, November 24, 2006

The Iron Wall

Thursday, November 23, 2006

May Allah Never Quench these Kaffir's Thirst in Jahannum

Was praying that the humvee would drive over a roadside bomb. May Allah raise those children to be mujahideen who will find the taste of the blood of US soldiers more refreshing than water.

Woodhill Prison Officers in a Day of Islamophobia Frenzy

Arani Solicitors sent this out yesterday

Very very shocking!!

Woodhill Prison Officers in a Day of Islamophobia Frenzy

In a day of premeditated islamophobic frenzy on Friday 17th November 2006 Woodhill prison officers stormed Friday prayers, attacked two Muslim prisoners and purposefully served ham to Muslim inmates.

About 30 prison officers stormed Friday prayers and attacked one Muslim prisoner following a dispute over the searching of a Quran in which officers claimed that the prisoner allegedly spat at them. A stand-of ensued between prison officers and up to 60 inmates until the situation was bought under control by the Imam.

A little while later a gang of officers assaulted a category A Muslim alleged terror suspect Farid Hilali after he refused to be transferred to another prison stating that he had social and urgent legal visits booked for the week commencing 20th November 2006. Also, that the Governor of Woodhill Prison has been notified by his solicitors of the request not to transfer him. Mr Hilali was assaulted for merely stating to officers to check the position with the Governor. The inmate was heard shouting “Allahu Akbar (God is Great)!” in pain as he was beaten. His solicitors have reported this assault to the police for proceedings to be bought against the officers concerned.

Earlier in the day officers persisted in serving Muslim inmates sandwiches contaminated with ham even after it was bought to their attention. They were forced to either eat the swine within sandwiches or go hungry.

Woodhill prison has traditionally been sensitive towards Muslim prisoners but in recent months attitudes have hardened amongst a hard core minority of racist prison officers determined to bring an “War on Terror” into the prison.

http://www.cageprisoners.com/articles.php?id=17660

Tuesday, November 21, 2006

Not Even Our Children Are Safe


Racist incidents in London schools have increased by 26 per cent in just one year. Attacks on Muslim children have increased since the 7/7 bombings and the debate about the wearing of the veil has prompted further incidents.

The figures include verbal and written insults, physical attacks and spreading racist material over the internet.

Read more here

Palestinian

Very nice animation on palestine below - apologies about the music.

Friday, November 17, 2006

Herzog to bring Arsenal soccer legend to Israel


By JONNY PAUL
London


English soccer legend and BBC television host Ian Wright received an official invitation to visit Israel from Tourism Minister Isaac Herzog on Tuesday night.

Wright was guest of honor at an Israeli tourism reception held at Arsenal Football Club's Emirates Stadium in north London.

Wright, who was Arsenal's top goal scorer of all time until eclipsed by Thierry Henry last season and was awarded the Member of the British Empire (MBE) by the queen in 2000, said he "could not wait" to visit Israel and pledged to promote the country as a tourist destination.

"When I was asked to get involved [promoting Israeli tourism] I thought it was a great opportunity for me and I'm really pleased to be involved with it," he said.

At the reception, Herzog assured Wright that his stay in Israel "will not be forgotten for years to come and will be special for both you and us."

"I'm really pleased about this as I was going to pay for it myself," Wright replied, to huge laughter. "When you listen to someone like Rio Ferdinand [the Manchester United star] telling you that it's humbling, uplifting and emotional to visit, especially the historical places like the Wailing Wall and the Via Dolorosa, it makes you really want to go."

Israel's cooperation with Arsenal has raised the profile of the country as a destination for British and European tourists, Herzog said.

A two-year deal, which was struck in February between the Tourism Ministry and Arsenal, includes Israel being featured on promotional videos at each game on 450 giant LCD screens and along the stadium's perimeter billboards.

The Tourism Ministry will also have access to the club's official Web site, database and magazine to promote Israel as a holiday destination, as well as the use of the Emirates stadium to hold tourism related events.

"I think we've broken new ground in that it's the first time Israel has done a venture of this kind," said Keith Edelman, managing director of Arsenal.

Herzog commented on the fact that the agreement itself represented a sign of peace as it required cooperation between the stadium, owned by the United Arab Emirates airline, and an Israeli ministry.

Speaking to The Jerusalem Post, which Herzog introduced as "the most widely read Israeli newspaper in English," Wright said: "I've always wanted to go there. [The formerly English-based Israeli player] Eyal [Berkowitz] always talked about it - the sites, beaches and Israeli women.

Wright also had positive things to say about Israel's soccer playing style.

"Technical ability is excellent. I played with Eyal [Berkowitz] and [current West Ham midfielder Yossi] Benayoun, even [Bolton's defender Tal] Ben Haim, and they are very creative, clever and technical players. I've have found Israeli players to be very skillful."

Looking ahead to Israel's game against England in the Euro 2008 qualifiers next March, he said: "We [England] are going through a sticky period so we have to be careful as Israeli players are very strong and quick."

SOURCE: Jerusalem Post

Saturday, November 11, 2006

Pain and disbelief in Gaza

I thought this was a good piece, although I'm sure you guys could find flaws:

BBC's Matthew Price
By Matthew Price
BBC News, Jerusalem

Earlier this week, tens of thousands of people mourned the 18 Palestinians killed by Israeli tank fire in the Gaza town of Beit Hanoun. Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert has expressed regret and some Israelis are now beginning to re-assess the ongoing conflict.

Palestinians sit next to a pool of water stained with blood
Some 80 people have been killed in Gaza this month

When I got back home I went straight to the balcony.

I turned on the hose, took off my boots and washed them down. Made sure I got the blood off them. They are out there now, drying.

Then I went to shower, washed my hair, brushed my teeth. Beit Hanoun was dirty. I wanted to feel clean again. The streets were soiled. The tanks had left their track marks by the shops.

The wall outside the secondary school had been knocked down. Railings to stop children running into the street were bent over.

On one pavement I saw a trickle of dried blood, where a woman had fallen, shot in the head. And on a quiet residential street, the faces told me everything I needed to know.

The sides of the road were lined with people. Some stood, others sat. They stared into space, at one another, at the ground. Some put an arm around a neighbour. One man grieved alone, tears on his face. All had the same look in their eyes.

I noticed it because it was not the look you see so often, one of hatred, of revenge. This was a look of sheer disbelief. I noticed someone I had met before. A taxi driver who once picked me up at the Erez crossing into Gaza. Raed had the same look. Not quite crying. But you knew something was deeply, deeply wrong.

How many of your family have you lost, I asked? "All of them. They all had the same grandfather."

"I feel hate," he added. He did not spit it out like people so often do. He just said it. "I hate George W Bush. I hate Israel of course. I hate the Arab world. I hate Europe." His eyes, though, did not say hate. They said pain.

Incomprehension

Later, when I got home, I spoke to an Israeli friend. She sounded broken. She is a true left-winger, always has been.

They are rare here now. She described how another Israeli had called her earlier, saying she felt so ashamed that she dare not call her friends abroad.

I told my friend it is not her fault. I know, she said. You meet very few Israelis who express such feelings.

Most, of course, express regret, especially at the death of children. But many of them find it impossible to properly understand Palestinians. It is often easier to blame. And it works both ways.

Earlier this week I met a Palestinian man who told me most of his neighbours think that all Israelis are soldiers.

"They only ever see soldiers," he pointed out.

"I try to tell them they are mothers and fathers like us," he added.

And this is the tragedy here. Neither side comprehends the other.

Hardliners prevail

The gulf between the two is so great that perhaps neither side wants to anymore.

Israeli soldiers on the border of the Gaza strip near Beit Hanoun
The Israeli army has launched an inquiry into the shelling

The other day at an event marking the assassination of the Israeli prime minister Yitzhak Rabin, one of Israel's most acclaimed left wing authors delivered the keynote speech.

David Grossman pulled few punches. He talked of an Israel in crisis, and of the failure of the peace process.

"The Palestinians are also to blame for the impasse," he said.

"But take a look at them from a different perspective, not only at the radicals in their midst.

"Take a look at the overwhelming majority of this miserable people, whose fate is entangled with our own, whether we like it or not."

The sad fact is most Israelis do not take a look at the Palestinians.

More and more it seems to me, it is the hardliners on both sides whose voices are being heard the loudest.

A day after the killings in Beit Hanoun, the Israeli newspapers were full of comment.

Some - predictably - said the deaths were preventable. If only the Palestinians would stop firing rockets at Israeli towns, Israel would not have to shell Gaza.

But there were others from a different perspective.

One commentator wrote: "For us, [these deaths] pass as if [they] were nothing.

"We have to ask ourselves. Does this really serve our national interest?"

Haunting memories

When I left Beit Hanoun, I went to the BBC bureau in Jerusalem to edit a television piece.

We have both Israelis and Palestinians working there.

I took a break to make a coffee and walked out into the newsroom to find a young girl, four or five years old, her hair in pigtails, standing with her father.

He is a producer in the office.

An Israeli, and it threw me.

She looked exactly like some of the girls I had seen in Gaza that day.

Back from the dead, standing there in front of me.

We closed the edit suite door so she would not see the pictures.

Outside on the balcony, my boots are now dry. It will be harder to wash away the memories of what happened at Beit Hanoun.

Thursday, November 09, 2006

Urgent Appeal: Imam Anwar Al Awlaki - A Leader in Need



This is unbelievable!! Imam Anwar is probably the greatest and most inspiring English-speaking shiyook in the world. His collections on the seerah, the prophets, the sahaabah, death and the hereafter and jihad have inspired the Ummah today. People's lives have changed because of these lectures. Please make dua for Imam Anwar and his family and respond to the action alert below.

08/11/2006
Urgent Appeal: Imam Anwar Al Awlaki - A Leader in Need

www.cageprisoners.com


Reports indicate that Imam Anwar Al Awlaki, a prominent Muslim scholar highly regarded in English speaking Islamic circles, has been detained incommunicado for the past two months in Yemen and may face torture or ill treatment in custody.

Anwar Awlaki, whilst in the US worked for inter-faith dialogue– working hard to establish a reasoned, nuanced and just form of intellectual dissent in Western Muslims Enabling Muslim communities in western societies to contribute and interact in wider society and contribute to it whilst remaining confident of their Islamic heritage and identity.

Regarding the 9/11 attacks, Imam Anwar was quick to state,

“What has occurred is a heinous crime. A Muslim can have nothing to do with this.” [1]

Imam Anwar was renowned for his justice amongst people, even when Muslim sentiment would seem to be totally against the West; this is typified by one of his statements:

“President Bush has showed the Muslim American community some good gestures. He specifically warned the people from committing any hate crimes against their fellow Muslim citizens, and he visited a Mosque.”

BACKGROUND

Anwar al-Awlaki is a Muslim scholar who was born in New Mexico, and is a US national. His parents are from Yemen, where he lived for eleven years and received the early part of his Islamic education.
He served as an Imam in Colorado, California, and later in the Washington, D.C. area where he headed the Dar Al-Hijrah Islamic Center and was also the Muslim Chaplain at George Washington University. Prior to his detention, he was resident in Yemen, where he was studying Islamic Jurisprudence with prominent scholars, He holds a B.S. in Civil Engineering from Colorado State University, a M.A. in Education Leadership from San Diego State University and was working on a Doctorate degree in Human Resource Development at George Washington University. He authored many popular audio series including the "Lives of the Prophets", "The Hereafter" and "The Life of Muhammad".

In the early hours of October 17, a Yemeni secret police raid swept up eight foreigners living in Sana'a, under surveillance by the CIA and British intelligence, and at least 12 other men across Yemen. Yemeni authorities insist they dismantled an al-Qa'ida cell and disrupted a gun-running ring to neighboring Somalia.

It was subsequently reported that the key to the raids was Anwar Al Awlaki (identified in the media as 'Abu Atiq') who was arrested six weeks before the October 17 swoop. Media reports allege that 'Abu Atiq' was an associate of two of the September 11 hijackers and a protege of Abdul al-Majid al-Zindani, who the US wants arrested on terror charges. They also make allegations of supposed involvement in a foiled al-Qa'ida plot to bomb oil and gas facilities in Yemen.

He is believed to be held in Central Security Prison in Sana'a. Locals in Sanaa insist, perhaps apocryphally, that the two stories of the complex above ground sit atop eight stories underground, where torture rooms and darkened cells are often used.

Human rights organisations such as Amnesty International have repeatedly raised concerns regarding arrests and detentions by the Political Security Organ in Yemen, which are carried out with total disregard for the rule of law and for Yemen’s international human rights obligations. Amnesty states that, “arrests are carried out without the judicial supervision required by law and those detained were invariably subjected to lengthy incommunicado detention and interrogations, during which some detainees claim that they were tortured or ill-treated. Detainees have also been denied access to lawyers, as well as being denied the opportunity to challenge the legality of their detention before a court.”

For more information about Imam Anwar al-Awlaki, please visit:

http://www.cageprisoners.com/prisoners.php?id=2127


Take Action for Imam Anwar Al Awlaki

Write to the US authorities:

Demand that the state department fulfils their statutory duties and provide consular assistance and clarify where Anwar Al Awlaki is held;
Demand an end to incommunicado and secret detention; detainees should be held only in officially recognized places of detention with access to family, lawyers and courts;
Call for human rights laws and standards to be strictly adhered to in cooperation between US security forces and those of other countries, ensuring that torture and ill-treatment, incommunicado detentions and "disappearance" play no part in such cooperation;
Ensure his rights as a US national are being protected and that his detention is free from torture or ill-treatment
The Honorable Condoleezza Rice
Secretary of State
U.S. Department of State
2201 C Street, N.W.
Washington DC 20520
Tel: + 1 202 647 4000
Fax: + 1 202 261 8577
E-mail: http://contact-us.state.gov/ask_form_cat/ask_form_secretary.html


Write to the Yemeni authorities:

Appeal for the immediate release of Anwar Al Awlaki unless he is to be promptly charged with a recognizable criminal offence and given a fair trial without further delay in accordance with international fair trial standards
Call on the authorities to respect the rule of law
Remind the authorities of their obligations under both national and international human rights law and allow Anwar Al Awlaki access to legal counsel, his family and the opportunity to challenge the legality of his detention

His Excellency General ‘Ali ‘Abdullah Saleh
President
Office of The President
Sana’a
Republic of Yemen
Faxes: 009671274147

His Excellency Rashid Muhammad al-‘Alimi
Office of the Republic of Yemen Ministry of the Interior
Sana’a
Republic of Yemen
Telephone: 009671332701
Fax: 009671274147



Write to Islamic organisations:

Encourage all Islamic organisations in the US to campaign for the release of Imam Anwar al-Awlaki.
Further encourage the these societies in the US to promote the right to a fair trial and the rule of law.
Islamic Society of North America
PO Box 38
Plainfield
IN 46168
USA
Telephone: 0013178398157
Fax: 0013178391840

Council on American-Islamic Relations
453 New Jersey Avenue ,
S.E. Washington
DC 20003
Telephone: 0012024888787
Fax: 0012024880833

Palestinians must respond in kind



Another massacre, another atrocity, another day in Palestine. The world changed because a few thousand Americans were killed on 9-11. Britain exploited the killing of 52 of its citizens on 7-7 to justify its aggressive domestic and foreign policy. So what if you face that level of threat every day and see your people facing annihilation. Isn't your response justified? Insha'Allah the Palestinians will respond in kind. The world's hypocracy can be seen in their appeal on "both sides" to exercise self-restraint, when it is obvious to all that it is the Palestinians who are being systematically wiped out.

What will happen? The Palestinians will fight back with whatever means they can - stones, guns and human bombs. The world will condemn them and blame them for the woes of the world. A time comes when you just dont give a monkeys what the world thinks and many people in the world have already reached this level. The list is rapidly growing and pretty soon, the international community will see the fruits of its support for the genocide of Palestine. Muslims are getting fed up with this hypocracy and the chickens may think its time to come home to roost. What else can you expect?

The Israelis should expect a response ... very soon

http://www.palestine-info.co.uk/am/publish/article_20464.shtml

http://www.palestine-info.co.uk/am/publish/article_20456.shtml

Monday, November 06, 2006

Women wihout Fear




Women without Fear

Fahad Ansari


Friday 3 November 2006 is a day which will remain etched in the memories of the world for decades to come, a day when the true brutality of the Israeli army was clear for all to see, and a day when the women of Palestine showed that their courage and fortitude was every bit as admirable as their male counterparts. Last Friday, in a mini-version of Tiananmen Square, the women of Beit Hanoune rose to challenge the aggressive military occupation imposed upon them. In response to a radio appeal for assistance, hundreds of unarmed women, including teenage girls, marched towards the local mosque to protest against the Israeli military which had surrounded the building in an attempt to capture suspected Palestinian gunmen. The siege had already resulted in the killing of 20 Palestinians.

The Israeli response to the peaceful protest was to open fire on these unarmed ladies in a show of callous disregard for any standards of humanity or civilization. International law did not even enter the equation. As several of these women fell dead and wounded as the bullets pierced their flesh, the remainder marched forward undeterred by the relentless gunfire. Despite the fear and terror so evident in their trembling voices as they cried out “Allahu Akbar”, these courageous women of Beit Hanoune advanced forward until they reached the mosque to assist their brothers inside. Forming human shields around them, these women escorted their brothers away from the mosque, putting the watching world to shame. In all, two women were killed, another 10 wounded.

The women of Beit Hanoune were following in the footsteps of great female Muslim warriors such as Khawla bin al Azwar, who, covered from head to toe with only her eyes, spear and sword showing, repeatedly rushed the Roman army at Beit Lihya in order to rescue her captured brother Dhiraar. Like Khawla, these women had one aim, one objective, one mission – to rescue their brothers. Facing death in the face, they marched towards their destiny. On the day of Beit Lihya, the valour of Khawla was unmatched. Last Friday, the courage of the women of Beit Hanoune was unparalleled.

It is actions such as these which have proven inspirational to oppressed people around the world, the majority of whom are too afraid to stand up to their oppressors. The assassinated president of Egypt, Anwar Sadat, described fear as being “a most effective tool in destroying the soul of an individual--and the soul of a people.” For as long as people are unable to overcome their fear, they become enslaved to it and obey it without question, thereby allowing their plight to continue. Bravery such as that exemplified by the women of Beit Hanoun is sufficient proof of the power within every soul to control and to conquer this fear. Once you conquer your fear, you automatically deprive your enemy of the ability to hurt you. Last Friday, the world witnessed a hundred women and children who had conquered their fears.

Even more impressive was the attitude of these women in the aftermath of the massacre. "The Israeli war machine is not strong enough to be able to break the determination of granddaughters of Ahmed Yassin and Ezziddin Al-Qassam,” were the words on the lips of Umm Mohammed Al-Rantisi, widow of the late Hamas senior political leader Dr. Abdul Al-Aziz Al-Rantisi . Her comments reflected the fortitude of a woman who understood both the nature of the challenge faced by the Palestinians and the method needed to overcome it. They represented the spirit of a woman who understood the belief of the Companions of the Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) who when they saw the army of the Confederates surrounding them, overcame their initial feeling of severe terror and said, “this is what Allah and His Messenger promised us, and Allah and His Messenger spoke the truth”. Allah tells us in surah al-Ahzab that the uttering of these words in the face of the threat of annihilation only increased the faith and obedience of the Companions rather than their fear. The women of Beit Hanoun understood that the oppression they faced was the promise of Allah and His Messenger coming true and thus, through remembering Allah, they conquered their fear.

The Israeli army could only watch helplessly as these heroines of the Ummah, armed with nothing but their eemaan, braved the flying bullets to rescue their brothers and escort them to safety. Their amazing courage and sacrifice, broadcast to the world, will have inspired many others to strive to emulate their actions in the future. In a world in which victory is often attributed to arms and money, the women of Beit Hanoun reminded us that all that is needed is strong eemaan.

Saturday, November 04, 2006

Women

Friday, November 03, 2006

Good try mate















This is common in Palestine but

Meanwhile in Glasgow.....

Some people are on the pitch...they think its all over... your nicked son!

Sooooo close, if the brave man had just handcuffed himself just that little bit faster there would have been hours of fun! (well....okay..it would have taken a few minutes until they cut him out)

But it ended Rangers 2 0 Maccabi Haifa

Death2Israel!