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Category Archives: Flashback

“I’m trying to write a poem for you.”

Shaikh Salman bin Ibrahim Al KhalifaAbdullah Al NoaimiThis is a poem I have written about my brother and friend Salman al Khalifa at the Guantanamo prison, after a long separation between us. The Americans were keen on keeping us apart. Four months later, he sent verbal greetings with the brothers, in which he said,

May peace, God’s Mercy and Blessings be upon you. I miss you a great deal and I’m trying to write a poem for you.

I felt guilty about this. Will he write a poem for me when he is no poet, while I, who claim to be a poet, have written nothing for him?” Abdullah Al Noaimi (ISN 159, Bahrain) Released November 2005; Rearrested 2008

Update:

Three years after his return from Guantánamo, al-Noaimi was working as an electrician, and was married with two children, but on October 29, 2008, as he made his way along the King Fahad Causeway, which joins Bahrain to Saudi Arabia, he was seized at a Saudi checkpoint and appears to have been detained ever since. An article in Gulf Daily News stated that it was “understood his name was included on a list of nearly 1,000 Al-Qaida suspects accused of carrying out ‘acts of war’ against Saudi Arabia,” but, as Nabeel Rajab, the president of the Bahrain Centre for Human Rights (BCHR), explained, al-Noaimi (described as al-Nuaimi) “had not been allowed to hire a lawyer or see any of his family,” and “had no idea of the charges against him, violating numerous articles in the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights.”

He said, “While we fully respect and appreciate our brothers in Saudi Arabia, we do not accept any of our citizens to be arrested in this arbitrary manner, which violates the simplest international norms. Today, there are international standards and charters that should be respected as part of every country’s role in the international community.”

No explanation appears to have been provided by the Saudi authorities. 16 April, 2013 members of the Bahraini parliament protested by walking out of session and complaining that the Foreign Affairs Minister Shaikh Khalid bin Ahmed Al Khalifa and the Bahraini governemnt had not done enough to demand the realease of Abdullah Al Noaimi and fellow Bahraini and former Guantanamo detainee, Abdulraheem Ali Al Murbati.

 
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Posted by on May 18, 2013 in Campaigns, Flashback

 

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Firas Abu Shekhaidem: Prison and Pain

Narrow is the prison hole. Stubborn is the prison wall. I was contemplating the absurd. I imagined fleeting summer clouds and a sunshine descending a slope softly and touching the ground. I twinkled. The image grew distinct. A small hole bigger than my palm or a bit less! Barbed wires suffocated the light of the sun, and they turned the sky into a chess board.

Sickness made vision dizzy and bleak. Everything becomes dark in prison. Anything else would look prosperous outside prison, no matter how bad it is. I had a lack of eyesight. My heart was telling me, and I imagined scenes I had always been keen to see – the grapes, the cherry blossoms, and the stolen coast. We used to look at the stolen, remote coast, and monitor it from the Hebrew Heights, when we were children. It was glittering. Then we would disseminate our wishes. Sometimes we were shouting out loud at the sky, saying “we will return”.

My health has deteriorated since I was locked up behind bars nine years ago. I got closer to my God and Creator. I used to pray Him at night while shedding tears on my cheeks. If I had not done so, I would have lost my mind. Pain invaded my eyes the moment I was first interrogated. Soreness expectorated poison on the edges of my eyes. And I was almost blinded. Jailors made the worse worst. They cared not for my calamity.

I once woke up in a very summer-like early morning. My tummy was aching. It was killing. I assumed it was cold or rotten food. I tried hard to get up off my bed. I could not. My belly button was bleeding. It was leaking, actually. Blood stained my shirt. Pain was so acute that I believed I was dying. I writhed in agony. My fellow prisoners could do nothing but watch. One of them screamed for help, and another knocked on the door. Jailors ignored my squeals for hours. Then they took me to a nearby clinic and gave me painkillers only!

Pain subsided a bit but never gone. Pain was a jailor of different kind. It was lurking. And waiting. Then it was attacking. It came back again but this time with more soreness. I could not bear it. I screamed by the door, ” Save me. I am dying”. Hours later, one of the jailors responded to my wails. He negotiated with my fellow prisoners. Time passed along. Then he agreed on transferring me to Beersheba Hospital. I was diagnosed as having a tumor near my belly button. I was informed that I had to undergo an urgent surgery.

“Urgent” means extortion and procrastination when it comes to the Israeli occupation. Jailors were giving desolate smiles at my face. I suffered acute pain for some weeks. I was like a slaughtered pig, and the Israeli authorities shrugged me off. I was steps away from death. Then a date was fixed to operate on me. I feared the consequences. They tied me up, and drove me to the so-called hospital. I waited three hours to undergo the surgery. Every cell of my body was groaning. I tried to hang in, and I convinced myself that pain will be gone in the wake of the surgery.

Jailors, however, sent me back to my cell in prison without operating on me. They did not care about me, as if I am an inanimate object, immobile and devoid of emotions. Days later, they fixed another date for my operation. Hope resurrected my spirit again. They fastened me tightly and surrounded my limbs. I did give them a damn this time. “Pain is over soon, my tummy!” I smiled. This bitter journey is ending soon. My mind was manacled to the days after the surgery. They must be days of comfort.

The surgery was postponed! I lost my temper. I was forced back to my cell, shackled and broken. Pain looked endless. It haunted me. Few days later, another day for a surgery was fixed. They promised “it won’t be postponed this time.” I felt happy, even though they are not trustworthy. Pain had turned into a rapacious monster I had to defeat. They chained me for the third time. At dawn, I arrived in the same hospital. I waited. I waited. And waited. And waited. And waited. Nine hours of waiting looked similar to nine years of prison. They were filled with repression, oppression, growing pain and bitter patience.

I was pushed into the surgery room. Everything inside looked strange. It was not an operation room, actually. The doctor said, “There is another patient waiting for me now. Take him back to his prison!” I swore I will not come back to their dead hospital, even if I was dying. I kept bleeding. I was dying. I plead to God. Alone.

Firas Abu Shekhaidem, Palestine

 
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Posted by on January 31, 2013 in Flashback, Letters from Fulan, Risala

 

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Abdullah Abu Shalbak: On Visitation Day

Episodic thoughts always overlap, and the constricted prison turns wide. Meanings become delicate. Sullenness of prison and sterile bitterness of cell are merely segments of a broken, dying world of memory.

Defiance has always fed my traits. My life in prison has always been built on patience, silence and resilience. I shed tears a lot, though. I am a human being at the end of the day. My freedom was stolen the moment I felt my homeland was chained. I used to flee some scenes, and cry. I had always thought that tears could relieve pain.

At Junaid prison, light concerned me; it slithered shyly through the small holes. I stole some glances through them of the outside world. We have always dreamed that light atoms penetrate our bodies, and liquidize our fetters so that freedom of a different kind would be announced. I glanced at the prison gate, and sunshine nourished my eyes. A greenish tree seized my attention. It drew colors of life inside me. A bus squelched through the mud to the prison gate. Apparently, visits were not denied. Tens of bereaved souls alighted off the bus, and the same hearts were occupied with toxic stabs.

Images looked giddy; emotions looked choppy. A view of an aged women, waiting by the gate, seized me the most. She dressed up in white. Her headscarf looked traditional. Her drained palms crossed her waist, waiting for the soldiers approval to allow her in. I could not see her face, and I could not recognise her due to the narrowness of the holes and because of the far-off distance. After a long waiting, the soldier called upon visitors names to enter the prison buildings. I kept an eye on that lady. Something weird attached me to her intuitively. Suddenly, people knocked her down to the ground; they were pushing. She tried hard to raise herself up, but she could not. She was stepped on. Her dress turned black. The scene robbed me of my mind. I stood thoughtless. I screamed unconsciously from my cell. No one heard me.

The old woman got up on her feet. Tears were her only weapon. She composed up her clothes, put on her headscarf and walked towards the prison slowly. Her steps were feeble. She quaked me from inside. And my heart prayed for her.

As I was lost by the holes of the wall in my cell, a jailor came and told me that I have a visit. I smiled. Finally, a family member came to visit me. The jailor chained me, and pushed me to the visits room. There, I sat. An old woman in her fifties came and sat in front of me. It was my passionate mother – the patient. My captured emotions flinched. My breaths accelerated once I saw her white dress, stained with black. Her headscarf was furrowed. Many questions were drawn over my face. But they all vanished, when I connected them to the cold scene I had seen. A few tears escaped my eyes forcefully. I wish I could sacrifice myself for her.

These human dimensions never came to my mind in the midst of the defiance battle with the jailor. But this changed, every time it was about my parents. My heart was beating fast, and I surrendered myself to tears.

Once my father paid me a visit in my prison ten years after my imprisonment. He had struggled to get the permit. I was ecstatic to see him. I talked to him delightfully. I tried to enriched these few moments, but he was silent and sad. He could barely speak a breath. Surprisingly, he said “I am traveling to Mecca to do hajj, but I will not come back because I’ll die there”. I tried to change his weird thoughts and draw a forge smile over my lips. This did not change him a bit. Then he instructed me. The visit ended, and I was left bewildered. I tried to erase his words about death. And I wavered the yarns of hope.

A month later, I woke up while hearing a fuss outside the prison cell. I looked through the holes, and saw my friend Yassir pulling through the door. I asked him if there was something wrong the Israeli authorities. He gestured no. Then he fell to the ground frowningly. I interrogated him if something bad happen to his family. He said, “Something bad happened to your family”. I swallowed my pride. Blood rushed to my face, and I turned pale. “My mother?” I asked. “No. It is your father. He passed away while doing hajj,” said Yassir. “May Allah reward you the tribute,” he whispered.

Abdullah Abu Shalbak, Palestine

 
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Posted by on January 31, 2013 in Flashback, Letters from Fulan, Risala

 

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Recollected: Aafia’s Essence of ‘Eid

This is based on a conversation involving Aafia where she discussed Eid Al Adha and what it meant beyond performing the ritual acts.

It was a casual social conversation sometime in the 1990s. The Hajj was about to conclude, and Eid Al Adha was approaching.  A point was made that perhaps this Eid is really only a celebration for those attending the Hajj as it marked the successful conclusion of their pilgrimage.  For the rest of the Muslim world it was only about the sacrificing of animals. As symbolic, solemn and beneficial to the poor as the ritual was, what was the cause for celebration?

As was the case with many of Aafia’s perspectives, the response was neither traditional nor focused solely on the logic of obedience to God, blessings for the Hereafter and remembering the enormous tribulations of the prophets of God. These reasons provide satisfaction and comfort to those already in the fold of “believers” and are popular when one is preaching to the proverbial choir. But the root of the question was a challenge seeking a more pragmatic response that would resonate more universally

To Aafia, Eid Al Adha, as a celebration, was not just about the rituals themselves even though it is the culmination of perhaps the most ritual laden event of the Islamic calendar – The Hajj.  In order to truly celebrate and enjoy this Eid universally, she suggested the examination of what the rituals were highlighting:

The Hajj essentially marks the challenges posed to the Prophet Abraham and his family as believed in the Islamic tradition.

First, the taking of Hagar and Ismail to a barren spot in the “middle of nowhere” and leaving them with no sustenance other than a faith that an unseen God will provide.  Then, later, the Hajj marks the willingness of a father to sacrifice his son, again on the order of that unseen God. So, is the lesson here one of blind obedience regardless of how harsh the commandments seem?    Read the rest of this entry »

 
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Posted by on November 8, 2012 in Collateral Damage, Flashback

 

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A Forgotten Prisoner! The Smiling Somali

One of the questions I am repeatedly asked, is about brothers in prison who may be forgotten.

20120917-083114.jpgEven though this brother’s case got worldwide attention, most Muslim prisoner lists–if not all–may have overlooked him.

Small in size, light in weight but with a huge heart.

He gets no correspondence from anyone–ever. His only contacts are his mother and aunt in Somalia.

My beloved brother Muse was ‘accused’ of being the leader of a group of pirates who overtook the Maersk Alabama on April 8, 2009, and held its captain captive for five days.

A Leader of a dangerous group and only being 15 at that time according to his father and 16 according to his mother.

None of that is true. Nor does it have any substance.

How can one get fair treatment when his female judge, who is supposed to be impartial and unbiased, began to weep in sorrow for the alleged victims?!?!

When they brought him from the jails and detention centers to our CMU prison, I was permitted to leave my cell to greet him and speak to him in the confinement within the confinement. I then asked the authorities, on behalf of the Muslims, that they take him out of solitary confinement inside to be with us, which they gladly did. The smiling face many saw was that of a bashful little boy full of eman, yet sorrow had taken its toll on him.

He showed me the scars on his wrists where he wanted to take his own life. But from his first moments there to my last moments there, he was among the brothers constantly with me–learning and reading. When he felt bad and down, he would wait for everyone to leave my cell and then come cry. He used to love to come to my cell. He would make me leave my bed so he can lay in it and make me sit on the stool and read him Qur’an as he slept.

On my way out of the doors to freedom, he kept embracing me and choking up with tears and even though I physically left the prison, it was as if I left part of my heart and soul there–him and the rest of my brothers.

As miserable as prison life is, there are times one cherishes and thinks of them as better than his days of freedom.

(Details to be continued in the future sometime–inshallah.)

*I received over 425 questions pertaining to my years in prison. Since the purpose is not personal, but to let the world know what our brothers and sisters go through, I may inshallah have one or two or a few Q & A sessions on this topic. Jazakum allahu khairan and please remember all our imprisoned brothers and sisters in your duaa.

Ahmad Musa Jibril

Write our brother and let him know he is NOT forgotten and that he and his family remain in your thoughts and du’a:

Abdulwali Abukhadir Muse 70636-054
 FCI Terre Haute
 Federal Correctional Institution 
 PO Box 33
 Terre Haute, IN 47808
 USA
 
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Posted by on September 17, 2012 in Biographies, Flashback

 

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The Nighttime Massacre of Ktziot Prison

In 2007, staff of the Ktziot Prison (located in the Negev desert) brought Israeli military troops into the prison to conduct a night raid on prisoners for the purposes of “building morale”. What resulted after the callously disposed military aggression on unarmed and noncombatitive prisoners, was the fatal shooting of Mohammed Ashkar and the injury of over 250 other prisoners by the use of unknown ammunition. While his parents looked on, Mohammed died later that night while chained to a hospital bed.

 
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Posted by on May 13, 2012 in Flashback, Videos

 

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The Intelligence Factory: How America Makes its Enemies Disappear

When I first read the U.S. government’s complaint against Aafia Siddiqui, who is awaiting trial in a Brooklyn detention center on charges of attempting to murder a group of U.S. Army officers and FBI agents in Afghanistan, the case it described was so impossibly convoluted—and yet so absurdly incriminating—that I simply assumed she was innocent.

According to the complaint, on the evening of July 17, 2008, several local policemen discovered Siddiqui and a young boy loitering about a public square in Ghazni. She was carrying instructions for creating “weapons involving biological material,” descriptions of U.S. “military assets,” and numerous unnamed “chemical substances in gel and liquid form that were sealed in bottles and glass jars.”

Siddiqui, an MIT-trained neuroscientist who lived in the United States for eleven years, had vanished from her hometown in Pakistan in 2003, along with all three of her children, two of whom were U.S. citizens. The complaint does not address where she was those five years or why she suddenly decided to emerge into a public square outside Pakistan and far from the United States, nor does it address why she would do so in the company of her American son.

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Posted by on February 14, 2012 in Flashback, News Items

 

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Playing Tricks with the Fort Dix Six: The Pretrial Penning of a Felon in Philly

Now you see why we were going to sacrifice all for the sake of allah in jihad,” says the neatly handwritten note on prison-issue paper.We weren’t able to finish.”

Left: The fake letter, Right: A real letter by Eljvir Duka

Those seemingly incriminating words are part of a letter the U.S. Attorney’s office in New Jersey says one of the defendants in the “Fort Dix Six” homegrown terror case wrote to a fellow inmate at the Federal Detention Center (FDC) in Philadelphia. It was allegedly written by Eljvir Duka, who is charged with conspiring to attack the Fort Dix military base with automatic weapons. He and four other young Muslim men who grew up in the South Jersey area have all pleaded not guilty, and the trial is set for March. The jihad letter appears, at first glance, to be a damning piece of evidence against Duka.

But a TIME investigation of the Fort Dix Six shows that little in this case is as it first appears. While carefully assembled by authorities, who collected hundreds of hours of video and audio evidence, the case is built almost entirely on the work of a paid informant with a criminal record. More and more terrorism cases are being constructed this way, and the problematic role of informants doesn’t stop after the arrests are made, as this latest plot twist reveals.

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Posted by on February 13, 2012 in Flashback, News Items

 

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The Case of Gulet Mohamed: Brutalised Abroad at the Behest of America

Gulet Mohamed was an average 18-year-old American citizen before a visit to family overseas resulted in his torture and indefinite detention in a Kuwaiti prison.

Mohamed, whose family is Somali, immigrated to the United States with his parents at the age of three, fleeing the devastating civil war that ravaged that East African country.

Mohed Mohamed, his older brother, maintained that his family, having fled Somalia in 1995, has always been pro-American and grateful to the United States for its intervention in Somalia’s civil war in the 1990s.

Zahra Mohamed, his sister, explained that Gulet, like any other American teenager, grew up playing basketball, had an iPhone, and obsessed over the game Madden NFL. But like many American teenagers, Gulet had a bad case of wanderlust. He wanted to travel abroad to learn more about his heritage, Zahra explained.

He begged his mother to let him leave: after all, he had never known his father, and he wanted to learn Arabic. Traveling to the Middle East would let him get to know his father’s side of the family, rediscover his roots, experience his ancestral homeland, and learn the language of the Quran.

In March, 2009, Gulet Mohamed departed from Alexandria, Virginia to study Arabic and Islam in in Sana’a, the capital of Yemen. Gulet, the most adventurous of the seven siblings, was the first member of his family to travel outside the United States since the family’s relocation.

After several weeks of study, he left to visit his maternal relations in Somalia at his mother’s insistence. Residing in his uncle’s home for several months, Gulet found the environs uncomfortably hot and painfully sickening through bouts of food poisoning that left his youthful wanderlust unsated. Mohamed again ventured to visit other family living in Kuwait and to continue his studies in Arabic.

Throughout his journey of seeking knowledge and rekindling the ties of kinship, Mohamed traveled on an authentic American passport with valid visas for all of the countries on his whimsical itinerary. His past history had no indication of any violent or criminal activity, nor had he ever been arrested.

Yet, on December 20, 2010, when Mohamed went to the airport in Kuwait City to have his visa renewed (a process he had routinely engaged in every three months without incident for the past year), he was told by a visa officer that his name had been “marked” in the computer.

After five hours of uneasily waiting, Mohamed had finished sending his brother an email when he was handcuffed, blindfolded, and kidnapped by two men in civilian clothes. After a fifteen minute drive in a SUV, Mohamed was deposited in an undisclosed location. He was then dragged into a room and interrogated by officials who refused to identify themselves.

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Posted by on February 11, 2012 in Flashback

 

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