Seasonal thoughts:
1. Jesus is one of the greatest prophets in Islam.
2. Muslims believe in immaculate conception and call Mary "our mother."
3. Muslim are obligated to believe in and love Jesus and Mary.
4. The Qur'an has a whole chapter dedicated to and exalting of Mary.
M. Nureddin
26.4K posts
After 20 years serving Akhbar al Aan team and audiences, now weaving the next story.
- Observations on the reported killing of Daesh leader Abu'l Hussain al Quraishi: 1. The practice of anonymous leaders doesn't seem to have produced the results Daesh intended and needed. It is confusing the enemy alright but clearly not stopping them from repeated
- So let's step back a little and try to take a snapshot of Daesh's fundamental realities, following the announcement of a new caliph: 1. Another faceless caliph does not solve the anonymity or credibility problem; on the contrary calcifies it. 2. Special emphasis on proving
- What will Daesh do now? Two main options: 1. Accept that its leader was killed. 2. Deny it and try to spin it in some way Both options have extreme high costs for the organization.
- De facto AQ chief Saif al Adl's mentor and father in law Mustafa Hamid, a supposed old friend of the Taliban, fully goes into his-master's-voice mode by threatening the Taliban on the water dispute: "Water for War," published today.
- So Zawahiri has a new message "The Noble Women of India." True, this provides proof of life but with no explanation as to why AQ allowed rumors of his death to spread until now. Beyond that, it's yet another Zawahiri video showing how detached he is from what really matters.
- Replying to @shadihamidThat chart looks very different when you add Italy, Spain, UK, all lockdown countries.
- A touching evidence of how Daesh has no respect for even the dead. Tombs desecrated in Manbij. Next to a mosque destroyed by Daesh. Photo by @jenanmoussa of @akhbar @alaantv
- Thanks to local technicians, @AlAanfmRadio FM broadcast finally restored in Raqqa, Syria - more than 3 years after Daesh stopped it.
00:00- Exiled families of Uyghur children held in state “orphanages” in Xinjiang described the torment of being separated. Amnesty International spoke to 6 parents completely cut off from their children – some as young as 5 years old – and cannot return to China. amnesty.org/en/latest/rese…
- Replying to @BBCSteveR and @BBCRadio3Your deeply thoughtful style increasingly reminds me of Alistair Cooke and Letter from America.
- Exclusive by the indomitable @NihadJariri for @akhbar. Former senior AQ member in Afghanistan calls muhajir jihadis to stay out of Afghanistan. But why? Explains via video call from undisclosed location in the borderlands :






