Āʾishah رضي الله عنها, reported Allāh's Messenger ﷺ as saying:
Kindness is not to be found in anything but that it adds to its beauty and it is not withdrawn from anything but it makes it defective.
[Ṣaḥīḥ Muslim 2594a]
My Lord! Make me and those believers of my descendants keep up prayer. Our Lord! Accept my prayers.
Our Lord! Forgive me, my parents, and the believers on the Day when the judgment will come to pass.
[Sūrah ʾIbrāhīm, Verse 40-41]
On 31 October 2023, Dr. Hammam Alloh, a kidney specialist at Al-Shifa Hospital, was asked why he didn’t leave Gaza. Through tears, he replied: “If I leave, who will treat my patients?”
Two weeks later, Israel killed him. He was 36, leaving behind a wife and two young children.
🚨 Mohammed Al-Khatib is undergoing his third surgery in less than a week after Israeli shelling in Gaza, leaving him injured, without his foot, and having lost his mother‼️
🟡 14-year-old Palestinian child Akram Sharif Al-Fayoumi, who lost his leg and hand in an Israeli airstrike near Abdel Fattah Hamouda School west of Gaza City in August 2024, is rebuilding his life through roller skating.
Despite a difficult recovery, he has returned to sports with determination, using skating to cope with his disability and the effects of war.
🛑 The Epic of the "Little Gazan Surgeon" & The Chief Doctor: A Story History Will Never Forgive!
In the pitch-black siege of the Indonesian Hospital, everyone thought the wounded were left to bleed to death. But a journalist’s camera caught a "faint light" from the operating room every night. It wasn't a foreign medical team—it was a young newly-graduated doctor: Dr. Mahmoud Abu Amsha.
He crawled alone through the rubble, leaving behind the remains of his martyred sister and her children, to become the "Little Surgeon." He performed complex surgeries that veteran consultants wouldn't dare, assisted only by patients' relatives.
The Final Call:
From the heart of the Kamal Adwan Hospital siege, Dr. Hussam Abu Safiya (an exhausted, wounded pediatrician) called Mahmoud. He told him: "The wounded are bleeding to death here... you are their only lifeboat."
The Impossible Choice:
Torn between staying with his sister's surviving injured children or crossing the "Road of Death," Mahmoud masked his face and ran through the fire. He reached Kamal Adwan dusty and bloodied—a light of hope sent from heaven.
The Heartbreaking End:
Dr. Mahmoud Abu Amsha: Assassinated by an occupation missile on his way to work.
Dr. Hussam Abu Safiya: Abducted, tortured, and remains behind bars to this day.
One ascended as a Martyr, the other remains a Prisoner. Together, they wrote the greatest epic of human resilience in modern history.
📍 North Gaza | Memoirs of Genocide
By: Dr. Mustafa Naeem
#GazaGenocide #HeroOfGaza #KamalAdwan #Humanity #GazaStarving #WarCrimes #NobelPeace
كان سيصعب عليك أن تشرح للجيل الجديد سيرة أعظم قائد عربي في التاريخ الحديث وتقول: "قاتل دولة نووية في آخر أنفاسه بالعصا".
لكن شاءت حكمة الله أن يوثق العدو بنفسه أشهر لقطة في تاريخ المعارك وتبقى خالدة تشهد لأبو إبراهيم على شجاعته وبأسه وثباته.
هذا مشهد كتبته يد العناية الإلهية!
La notizia più potente di questa tragedia non è soltanto il recupero dei cinque italiani morti alle Maldive.
È un’altra.
Gli speleo-sub finlandesi che hanno affrontato il buio della grotta… hanno chiesto di non essere pagati.
Fermatevi un attimo a pensare a questo.
Sono entrati in uno dei luoghi più pericolosi al mondo.
Hanno rischiato la vita tra correnti, profondità e oscurità assoluta.
Hanno visto da vicino ciò che nessuno vorrebbe mai vedere.
E quando tutto è finito, non hanno chiesto soldi.
Niente.
In un’epoca dove molti farebbero qualsiasi cosa per guadagnare visibilità, loro hanno scelto il silenzio.
In un mondo dove quasi tutto ha un prezzo, loro hanno dimostrato che esistono ancora persone che agiscono solo per umanità.
Sami Paakkarinen.
Jenni Westerlund.
Patrik Grönqvist.
Tre persone che ci stanno ricordando cosa significa avere una coscienza, un cuore, un’anima.
Perché riportare a casa quei cinque italiani non era un lavoro qualsiasi.
Era una missione umana.
Era permettere a delle famiglie distrutte di poter dire addio.
Era dare pace a chi era rimasto sospeso tra speranza e disperazione.
Era trasformare un vuoto infinito in un ultimo saluto possibile.
E certe cose non si fanno per denaro.
Si fanno perché dentro di te senti che è la cosa giusta.
Oggi viviamo circondati da gente che urla, ostenta, pretende applausi per qualsiasi cosa.
Poi arrivano persone così.
Persone che rischiano tutto… e non vogliono nulla.
E allora forse l’unica reazione giusta è questa:
stare in silenzio.
E dire grazie.
Grazie Sami.
Grazie Jenni.
Grazie Patrik.
Perché avete ricordato a tutti noi che l’umanità vera esiste ancora. 🌊❤️
- Resilienza
This is Mohamed Nader, one of the victims of the San Diego mosque terrorist attack…
His wife, Mrs. Khairaat, has served as a kindergarten teacher for decades. Their family has long been known within the ICSD community as “the neighbors of the masjid,” since they lived directly across the street.
When Nader heard the gunshots, he immediately ran toward the danger. He grabbed whatever he could from Brother Amin Abdullah and went inside to confront the two terrorists. He was martyred in the process.
At the same time, his wife was barricaded inside the kindergarten classroom with her students. Despite the unimaginable fear and chaos, she remained composed so the children would not be afraid. Imagine her strength... Evacuating with her students and then witnessing the carnage brought upon our house of worship and school.
Brother Nader was always trying to do right by people, especially by his children. His children attended my Quran classes, and their parents would often ask me to check in on them and mentor them. They cared deeply about their children and the children of the community. They would always say, “Please talk to our children because they listen to you and need good mentorship.” SubhanAllah, this is the kind of family the Awads are.
When Brother Nader heard the gunshots, he ran into the gunfire from across the street not knowing what would happen, only knowing that his wife, the children, and the community were in danger and that he had to do something. By the will of Allah, he delayed the shooters and prevented them from reaching the classrooms.
He saved an untold number of children’s lives yesterday.
May Allah accept Nader as a Shaheed.
— Fayaz Nawabi
@MostafaBNaim1 I feel immense guilt in my heart for continuing to live my life while in Gaza there is so much suffering.. I am so so sorry.. May Allah almighty grant them Jannathul firdaus.. May all those who lost their loved ones be reunited once again in hereafter in Jannath!! Aameen.. 💔😢
The Iranian navy, which has been destroyed eight times, closed the Strait of Hormuz again, because the United States for the seventh time won the war that wasn’t a war, so the United States can open the Strait of Hormuz that was open before the not war.
The not war that started to get the uranium that was completely obliterated, so that the Iranians can’t build the nuclear bomb that they weren’t building for the not war that the United States started.
Then the United States which has nuclear weapons threatening to use nuclear weapons to prevent Iran from having nuclear weapons because having nuclear weapons is dangerous.
If the United States saw what the United States is doing in the United States, the United States would invade the United States to liberate the United States from the tyranny of the United States.
It is said that the young man in the photo, named Ahmed Abdullah, was a pharmacist working in a pharmacy. Every month, an elderly poor woman would come to him for her medicine. She would then approach him at the cash register... Whenever she saw him, her face would light up with joy. For years, she had been buying this medicine, and this young man would only take 200 Egyptian pounds from her. She would pay and leave.
Then, the young man passed away... The elderly woman returned to the same pharmacy, requested her medicine, and went to the cash register to pay 200 pounds. But he was not there.
Before she could ask about him, the new cashier said: “What is this, madam?”She replied: “This is 200 pounds for the medicine.”He responded: “But this medicine costs 2,000 pounds, madam.”
Surprised, she said: “But for more than three years, I have been getting it for 200 pounds from the young man who was here... Where is he?”
The new cashier replied: “He passed away, madam. May God have mercy on him.” Upon reviewing the records, it was discovered that this young man had been covering 1,800 pounds of the cost every month from his own salary at the pharmacy.
When the pharmacy owner learned of this, he decided to continue selling the medicine to the woman at the same price as an ongoing charity (sadaqah jariyah) for the sake of the young man’s pure soul. The least we can do to honor this exemplary young man is to let his photo travel the world without stopping, so that everyone may pray for mercy upon him. He deserves recognition.