Archive for May, 2008

Signs of ar-Rahman in Jihad of Afghan

Posted in Books on May 25, 2008 by chameleon47

This book was written by Shaykh Abdullah Azzam during the Afghan-Soviet Jihad in the 1980’s. It deals specifically with first hand accounts of the miracles that occured during this Jihad.

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Shaykh Abdullah Azzam writes, ‘These incidents which are going to be narrated are, in reality, more extraordinary than one can possibly imagine, and appear to resemble fairytales. I have personally heard them with my own ears; and have written them with my own hands from those Mujaahideen who themselves were present. I have heard these miracles from such men who are trustworthy and reliable, and who have been constantly on the battlefield. The miracles are many, so much so that they more or less reach the degree of Tawaatur i.e. such a large number that does not entertain the possibility of fabrication. I have heard numerous such miraculous episodes, but brevity does not allow me to enumerate all of them.

Allaah Ta ‘ala has not made it except as a glad tiding, so that your hearts may achieve tranquility by it.’

DOWNLOAD : ThIE SIGNS OF RAHMAAN IN ThIE JJHAAD OF THE AFGHAN.doc

Anwar Al Awlaki Recitation: Surah Fatiha, An Naba and Ad Duha

Posted in Videos on May 18, 2008 by chameleon47

Yvonne to Hafsa (7th June, 2007)

Posted in Videos on May 6, 2008 by chameleon47

Just four years into Islam, former captive by Taliban, Yvonne Ridley speaks for the sisters in Pakistan (Jamia Hafsa) at the HHUGS event in Manchester on 7th June 2007 .

Sami al-Hajj speaks of his Guantanamo ordeal – 02 May 2008

Posted in Prisoners on May 2, 2008 by chameleon47

The Al Jazeera cameraman describes how he was treated during the seven years he was detained at the US detention center in Cuba.

Arrested in Pakistan in December 2001, Sami al-Haj spent nearly six-and-a-half years at Guantanamo without charge or trial. He had been on a more than a year-long hunger strike to protest his imprisonment.

SAMI AL-HAJ: I’m very happy to be in Sudan, but I’m very sad because of the situation of our brothers who remain in Guantanamo. Conditions in Guantanamo are very, very bad, and they get worse by the day. Our human condition, our human dignity was violated, and the American administration went beyond all human values, all moral values, all religious values. In Guantanamo, you have animals that are called iguanas, rats that are treated with more humanity. But we have people from more than fifty countries that are completely deprived of all rights and privileges, and they will not give them the rights that they give to animals.

For more than seven years, I did not get a chance to be brought before a civil court. To defend their just case and to get the freedom that we’re deprived of, they ignored every kind of law, every kind of religion. But thank God. I was lucky, because God allowed that I be released. Although I’m happy, there is part of me that is not, because my brothers remain behind, and they are in the hands of people that claim to be champions of peace and protectors of rights and freedoms.

But the true just peace does not come through military force or threats to use smart or stupid bombs or to threaten with economic sanctions. Justice comes from lifting oppression and guaranteeing rights and freedoms and respecting the will of the people and not to interfere with a country’s internal politics.