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Babar Ahmad: Ya Allah!

 

When Adam ate the forbidden fruit, he cried, “Ya Allah!
So Allah forgave him and erased his sin.
When Abraham was thrown into the fire, he cried, “Ya Allah!
So Allah saved him and made the fire cool.
When ordered to sacrifice his son, he cried, “Ya Allah!
So Allah replaced his son with a mountain goat.
When Hagar had nothing to feed her baby, she cried, “Ya Allah!”
So Allah burst forth for her the Spring of Zamzam.

When Joseph was thrown into the well, he cried “Ya Allah!
So Allah reassured him of His Help and Victory.
When Jacob became blind at the grief of his missing son, he cried, “Ya Allah!
So Allah restored his sight and returned to him his son.
When Moses fled his land in fear, he cried, “Ya Allah!
So Allah gave him safety in the farmer’s house.
When Pharaoh’s army closed in on them, he cried, “Ya Allah!
So Allah parted the sea for them and drowned their enemy.

When Job was stricken with distress, he cried, “Ya Allah!
So Allah restored for him his health and wealth.
When Jonah lay at the bottom of the sea, he cried, “Ya Allah!
So Allah ordered the whale to bring him to shore.
When David met Goliath, he cried, “Ya Allah!
So Allah gave him victory and Goliath was slain.
When they tried to crucify Jesus, he cried, “Ya Allah!
So Allah raised him up and saved him from crucifixion.

When Muhammad’s followers were tortured, he cried, “Ya Allah!
So Allah opened for them the way to Madinah.
When he was nearly captured in the cave, he cried, “Ya Allah!
So Allah’s spider spun a web and concealed him.
When his army was outnumbered at Badr, he cried, “Ya Allah!”
So Allah sent down angels to rout his foe.
When his Companions were massacred at Mauna, he cried, “Ya Allah!
So Allah avenged their deaths and destroyed the oppressors.

When a ship is tossed by a storm, they cry, “Ya Allah!
So Allah brings them safely to land.
When trapped in a dark hole, they cry, “Ya Allah!
So Allah enlightens them with an opening.
When the rope becomes too tight, they cry, “Ya Allah!
So Allah breaks it and brings them relief.
When they plead for Allah’s Help and cry, “Ya Allah!”
So Allah responds, “Indeed My Help is Near!”

When matters are beyond you, cry, “YA ALLAH!
And He will aid you and assist you.
When all hope is lost, cry, “YA ALLAH!
And He will bring you ease after hardship.
When you have nothing left, cry, “YA ALLAH!
And He will provide for you from where you could never imagine.
When you have no one else to turn to, cry, “YA ALLAH!
And you will find Him in front of you,
Hearing and Responding.


-Babar Ahmad, HMP Woodhill,

November 17th, 2004

 
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Posted by on October 3, 2012 in Habsiyya, Poems by Babar Ahmad

 

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Mailing Lists Updated

Due to the countless Blessings of Allah subhana wa ta’ala and the generous efforts of committed volunteers, the listing of unjustly imprisoned brothers and sisters in the Americas have been updated. Please find updated mailing addresses for North America, Canada, and Guantanamo here.

As always, keep them and their families in your adiya, and extend to them the small kindness of sending a card or a letter to remind them of our brotherhood and solidarity.


In particular, please keep in mind that the agenda to transfer five Muslims, Adel Abdel Bary, Babar Ahmad, Khalid AlFawwaz, Talha Ahsan, and Abu Hamza alMasri, into American torture centres may come to fruit. Increase in your adiya and ask that if it is His decree that this extradition happen, that it only serves in elevating the status of the hearts that carry Truth and brings harm, destruction, and humiliation to the oppressors. Amin.

 
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Posted by on October 2, 2012 in Campaigns

 

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Babar Ahmad: Persevere! Persevere!

Persevere! Persevere!
Life is too dear
To worry and care
Or fret and fare

Persevere! Persevere!
Never live in fear
Like the lion in its lair
For only cowards never dare

Persevere! Persevere!
When life seems unfair
Don’t you shed a tear
For relief is always near

Persevere! Persevere!
When it’s all too much to bear
A way out will appear
Like a breeze of fresh air

Persevere! Persevere!
Even after many a year
From some place or somewhere…
Victory will soon be here!


-Babar Ahmad #A9385AG
HMP Long Lartin, May 2012

 
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Posted by on May 28, 2012 in Habsiyya, Poems by Babar Ahmad

 

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Video Coverage of the May 23 Stop Extradition Event

 
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Posted by on May 28, 2012 in Videos

 

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Reaping the Fruits of Captivity

قَالَ رَبِّ السِّجْنُ أَحَبُّ إِلَيَّ مِمَّا يَدْعُونَنِي إِلَيْهِ

“My Lord, prison is more to my liking than that to which they invite me.” [Al-Quran 12:33]

All praise be to Allah, and may peace and blessings be on his messenger, family, and companions.

When al-Mamun the Abbasid caliph imprisoned Imam Ahmad ibn Hanbal and tortured him in order to compel the Imam to accept the heretical belief in the ‘createdness’ of the Qur’an, Imam Ahmad refused and preferred death to uttering the heretical doctrine. The real victory for Imam Ahmad was to remain steadfast in believing that which pleases Allah; in effect, it was the victory of principles and ideas. History has recorded thousands of prisoners who have spent decades in prison where they preferred to die rather than accept defeat.

Syed Qutb, the great Egyptian Muslim thinker, was one of those who preferred death and torture to renouncing what he had declared. It is to him that the powerful and profound statement is attributed where he said, “the finger that testifies that there is no god but Allah refuses to testify for other than him.” As a result of his commitment, he was promptly hanged. He wrote in Milestones,

“The highest form of triumph is the victory of soul over matter, the victory of belief over pain, and the victory of faith over persecution…In the incident described above, the souls of the Believers were victorious over fear and pain, over the allurements of the earth and of life, and they gained such victory over torture which is an honour for all of mankind and for all times – this is true victory. All men die, and for various reasons; but not all gain such victory, nor reach such heights, nor taste such freedom, nor soar to such limits of the horizon. It is God’s choosing and honouring a group of people who share death with the rest of mankind but who are singled out from other people for honour – honour among the noblest angels, nay, even amongst all mankind, if we were to measure them by the standards of the history of generation after generation.”

He also famously said,

“Indeed our words remain dead until we die in their cause, and then they become alive to remain amongst the living.”

As Muslims, achieving our aims is far easier than those of tyrants. When the disbelievers of Makkah thought that they had defeated the Muslims at the battle of Uhud, pride and arrogance made them blind to seeing the truth. The Prophet (peace be upon him) taught us the crux of the matter: ‘Our dead are in paradise and your dead are in the hell fire’. There are countless stories of a similar nature where physical strength won the battle but ultimately led to losing the war. Willpower and resolution normally destroys physical power – this will being determination and a strong belief in a cause. It is the result of a high standard of morals and ethics.

The British Babar Ahmad and American Tarek Mehanna are just two examples of the struggle between the power of determination and oppression. Irrespective of what they are accused of, the unjust treatment, decisions and statements are enough to consider them martyrs and heroes of their determination and conviction.

I think it is time for us to face reality and stop shedding tears for shameless British, American, and Western injustices. America, the state that has killed and will continue to kill millions of people whilst prosecuting similar numbers will fight for its interest imprisoning people in solitary confinement until they die. They feel no shame in doing this, and unfortunately, our country feels no shame in following them as a poodle follows her master. Whatever the case may be, injustice leads to destruction. This is proven by history and mere common sense.

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Posted by on April 27, 2012 in Maktabah

 

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Babar Ahmad’s Family Regarding the Recent Ruling

Fahad Ansari Human Rights Lawyer and Babar’s family give their reaction to the verdict by the European Court to extradite Babar to the US. Please visit Free Babar Ahmad official campaign website for the latest details.

 
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Posted by on April 18, 2012 in News Items, Videos

 

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The Dark Night

The night is dark and there’s no sign of light.
The tunnel is long and there’s no end in sight.

The road is thorny and the path is steep,
There’s no time to rest and no time to sleep.

The air is thin and the rope is tight,
There isn’t much energy left to fight.

The ocean is deep and the brine is cold,
The lifeboats of rescue have all been sold.

The forest is thick and full of peril,
At every turn are snares of the devil.

Seething serpents in every crevice,
Snarling hisses full of menace,

With crocodile tears and a stiff upper lip,
And venomous bites that cause steel to rip,

With fake smiles and eloquent words,
As sweet as nightingale singing birds,

With shiny suits and well-groomed hair,
They entice victims into their lair.

The world is ruled by crocodiles and snakes.
The world is ruled by frauds and fakes.

Diversity and multiculturalism,
(Are just fancy words for state racism).

Fairness and honour are things now extinct,
Justice and power are two things distinct.

Power corrupts and gets to the head,
It enters the blood and turns gold into lead.

Years without trial incarceration,
In what is supposed to be a great nation!

The rule of law and human rights,
Have melted away into silent nights.

Those who claim moral superiority,
Only instil hatred into the minority.

Those who care fear more for themselves,
And thus leave their values on the bookshelves.

So where are the bearers of valour and nobility?
Where are those who stand tall in adversity?

Where are the men who stood up to power?
And dismiss the urge to hide and cower?

Where are the men who have a conscience?
Why don’t they put an end to this nonsense?

Where are the knights and where are the scholars?
Who worry about more than their pennies and dollars?

Why do they fear to correct that which is wrong,
Then justify it with words that are so long?

If they can’t walk the walk, they shouldn’t talk the talk,
But sit at the table with their knife and fork.

How can it be that men are born free,
Yet they prefer to live in slavery?

Grovelling and bowing to the snakes on thrones,
Slavering away until they turn into bones.

But what good is there in a life of disgrace,
Where every second is spent saving face?

What is in the dark must come to light,
All then their lies will be swept out of sight.

For truth is a stallion that never fails its master,
If it is suppressed it gallops even faster.

The victims of injustice are thorns in the side,
Like bleeding arteries they never subside.

Until the oppressed are returned their dues,
Their plights will remain headline news.

The Day is approaching in which tyrants will weep,
As they have sown so shall they reap.

That is the Day: Judgement Day,
When the One Most High will have His Say.

The night is dark but it will soon be dawn,
Since the noose is tight so shall it be torn.

The night is dark but it will soon be dawn,
And then a new era… shall be born.

–Babar Ahmad, (written in HMP Manchester, February 2007)

 
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Posted by on March 26, 2012 in Habsiyya, Poems by Babar Ahmad

 

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Babar Ahmad: March 14, 2012 (How Najma Taught Us How to Live)

The first letter I received from Najma was in October 2010. Enclosed with the letter was some money and words of encouragement for me. At the end of her letter were a couple of lines requesting that I pray for her, since she was in the final stages of acute myeloid leukaemia.

I wrote back to Najma thereby starting a cycle of correspondence that was to last until shortly before her death. Sometimes she would reply promptly; at other times she would reply after several weeks apologising for the delay due to her being in hospital. She told me the story of her battle against leukaemia since February 2006, describing in detail the types of treatment she was undergoing. One thing that struck me about her letters was the matter-of-fact, at times even humorous, way in which she would describe horrendously painful medical procedures.

Recounting a four-month course of arsenic chemotherapy whose “side- effects are worse than the actual cancer, ” she wrote, “Due to the known damage arsenic has on the heart, I spent a lot of time on the Intensive Care Unit and Cardiac Care Unit … The heavy-metal constitution of arsenic meant that lumps of it, painful hard lumps, accumulated on my skin which had to be surgically cut away. “

She went on to detail her past week of treatment involving six-inch needles into her pelvic bone and bone marrow, three intravenous lines in her hand, “the removal of my Hickman line (attached to my jugular vein, requiring seven stitches and a lumbar puncture – spinal cord injection), ” and daily blood tests. At the end of this passage she wrote, “I am still smiling though.”

Despite all these medical procedures, her letters would be full of concern for other people. She would tell me about her work with Desidonors.org, a charity seeking bone marrow donors for sick children in the Asian community. I was particularly touched by the story of Amun Ali, a cute and chubby 10-year old boy from Birmingham with a bone marrow disorder that had already claimed the life of his 4-year old brother. I would ask Najma for regular updates on his situation. On 19 June 2011 Najma replied,
“Before I update you about my health, let me inform you that Amun Ali passed away in March this year. We found a bone marrow donor for him. However, the entire process is very aggressive and his young body couldn’t it…Truly devastating for all of us.”

Her concern for others began with her own parents before anyone else, especially her mother. She wrote,
“But perhaps the worst thing about my cancer is the effect it has on my parents. I don’t know what it feels like to be a parent, so cannot fathom how my mother stops her own life just to put some comfort into mine … She has never left my side since the first day I was diagnosed … She is so firmly committed to my care, she never stops smiling and praying for me every time I catch a glimpse of her. Parents are such a mercy, even at my age I need her. I feel so humble as I promised I would always look after her, and be there for her, but it seems to be the other way round.”

Every now and then, however, Najma would reveal the true extent of what she was going through:
“I’m tired and exhausted and in pain most days … My dreams are a respite from the painful, invasive, draining and toxic treatment I have to endure daily… Sadly my bones remain in agony and I refuse morphine simply because I feel numb and emotional … I have had a 6-inch needle into my spinal cord. It really hurts, in fact it burns. It’s a level of pain I never knew existed … I don’t know why I am still alive…”

Najma’s unshakeable faith in God and the After-life is what fuelled her determination to bear her ordeal with dignity: “I know my Creator is a Merciful One and I know I shall be rewarded for my struggles and that fact alone makes my journey bearable … When I think of Allah’s love, it makes some of this pain bearable… In the blood cancer unit, I see tragedy, pain, helplessness and misery most of the time. But there is something very special about believers: they never complain, not to others anyway. Their resolve comes from knowing that we shall only be transient in this world … And Allah knows best. “

Najma’s last letter to me was written on 20 November 2011, from her hospital bed, where she had been for several weeks by then. Unlike all her previous letters, this one was written in poor handwriting with disjointed line structure. “I wrote this letter from my room in the ward. I can barely lift my head up; it might even be incoherent… The chemotherapy has damaged my eyes so I can barely see on some days … I am still vomiting from the chemotherapy and most of my hair has fallen out … “

Despite her condition she still enclosed some money for me and went on to congratulate me for receiving 140,000 signatures in the e-petition campaign: “We are all praying for relief from your hardship. Nothing can remain the same. Things will change. “
She continued, “Sickness teaches you so much: humility, mercy, obedience, the list is endless… Patience is a hard lesson, but very beneficial indeed. I was always impatient and in a hurry, rushing around wasting my life away until sickness entered my life and I was forced to reflect … Some days I think I won’t make it through but those days are the ones that I forget that Allah has already written it down for me …”

During Najma’s final weeks and days my family visited her in hospital many times. As her condition deteriorated I sent her one final card in which I encouraged her to look forward to the reward that God had prepared for her in Paradise. My mother told me that Najma spent a long time reading and re-reading the card.

The next day, on 05 March 2012, she was taken to the Intensive Care Unit and she passed away a few days later, on the Saturday afternoon of 10 March 2012. All those present testified to the look of extreme peace and serenity on her face after she died. After a funeral attended by hundreds of people, she was buried in the Gardens of Peace cemetery in Ilford, Essex. May God have mercy on her and reward her for her patience through suffering.

I have learnt from my journey through life that there is rich inspiration to be gained by sharing the living moments of those who, for whatever reason, have been deprived of life. Whenever I have met cancer sufferers, the crippled, prisoners in indefinite detention, the blind and the dying, I have seen them attach a value to life, people and friendship that is unseen in others. To pass objective judgement on something, one must be external to it. Since they live in the twilight between life and death, they are able to see life for what it really is. They value every second of their existence and the people around them because they know that everything in life is temporary. In doing so, they increase the value of their own lives and the lives of those whom they touch.

The name ‘Najma’ in Arabic means ‘star’. The Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) once said that one of the reasons God created the stars was to act as beacons for those who want to find their way. Najma’s life was a beacon to any of us who have lost our way. Her life (and death) was the inspiration to many people, most of whom had never met her, even though she never realised it.

Through her six years of hell, Najma taught us how to be pleased with God’s destiny and how to confront hardships with dignified patience. She taught us how to cherish everything you have and how to value people because you don’t know how long you will be with them. She taught us how to smile in the face of suffering and how reaching out and helping others in pain can relieve our own pain. Through her life, Najma taught us how to die. And through her death, she taught us how to live.

Babar Ahmad
14 March 2012

 
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Posted by on March 17, 2012 in Letters from Babar Ahmad, Risala

 

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I Will Always Live Free

I will never live in disgrace.
I will never bow down before any man.
I will never let you humiliate me.
I will never be your slave.
Even if you take my liberty,
You will never take my dignity.
I will always live free.

Cut my throat from ear to ear.
Suck my life from year to year.
Rip my skin from tear to tear.
Pound my brain from fear to fear.
My flesh may bleed, but my soul will shine.
My heart may break, but my face will smile.
I will always live free.

Whatever will be will be.
No matter what my destiny,
Even under tyranny,
Even in captivity,
I am free.
I was born free.
I will always live free…


Babar Ahmed A9385AG
HMP Long Lartin
South Littleton
Evesham
WORCESTERSHIRE
WR11 8TZ
UK
Written 2nd December 2011 on the Eighth Anniversary of Police Assault, from his cell in HMP Long Lartin. In August 2004 Babar Ahmad was arrested on an extradition request by the US. He is now in his eighth year behind bars, making him the longest British detainee held without trial. 
 
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Posted by on December 16, 2011 in Habsiyya, Poems by Babar Ahmad

 

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Fulan al-Rumi: November 2011

Dear Sister, All praise is for ALLAH alone. And may the peace and blessings of ALLAH be upon him (RASUL) his family, companions, and upon those who follow them in piety.

Eid Mubarak! May ALLAH accept every action with sincere intentions from you and give you success in this life and the hereafter.

Thank you for sending me an Eid card. I do appreciate it and it really does make a difference to people in isolation. So keep sending more to other brothers. There are brothers who are in similar conditions to those under immigration control orders, which restricts them from everything, it would be nice if you can send them gifts like perfumes, sweets or any other items which they dont have access to. (speak to a company like HHUGS and they will help). Most of these brothers (like me) are married so their wives won’t appreciate penpals/letters with sisters. But anyways there is a great reward in it. I know when people write to brothers like Babar Ahmad or Tarek Mehanna their replies are amazing. But unfortunately I am no where near these people in terms of knowledge and piety. So I wont be ending this with an amazing reply! Sorry.

But I will try and give you something that has really helped me. In your daily life (work, home) always humble yourself first before ALLAH then to others (Muslims). Always give away whatever you have of good to others that dont have. Give away whatever you love for yourself to others, And always look for kheir to do and when its done thank ALLAH and ask for more. Isolate yourself a portion of everyday with ALLAH. These are characteristics that can’t be implemented over night and it takes some time (sacrifice, money, sleep etc).
May ALLAH give you the ability to act on good intentions and as ALLAH says about the people who make sacrifice:

Their Lord gives them good tidings of mercy from him and approval and of gardens for them wherein is eternal pleasure. they will be abiding therein forever. Indeed ALLAH has with him a great reward.’
9 21-22

 
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Posted by on November 15, 2011 in Letters from Fulan, Risala

 

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