Chicago – June 25, 2026
Dawn broke over Karbala on the 10th of Muharram. It was quiet — the kind of quiet that holds its breath before something irreversible happens.
Hussain prayed. His forehead touched the ground, his lips moved in remembrance of God, while all around him the enemy army sharpened its blades. When he rose, he looked at his companions and gave them one final chance to leave. “The night is yours,” he told them. “Take my family and go. This fight is mine.”
Not one of them moved.
Lions Who Never Looked Back
One by one, they stepped onto the battlefield. One by one, they fell. His companions fought like lions. His nephews, barely teenagers, charged forward with trembling legs but unshaking hearts. And then Abbas — his brother, the one they called the moon of the Bani Hashim — galloped toward the river, fighting through hundreds of soldiers just to fill a water-skin for the children. Both his arms were cut off. He held the water-skin between his teeth. Then a blow struck him down. The water spilled into the sand.
By midday, Hussain stood alone.
The Fall of a Giant
He fought. Wounded, thirsty, bleeding — he fought with the dignity of someone who had already made peace with God. And when he finally fell, it was not enemy courage that ended him. It was Shimr — a man history has never been able to say the name of without shame — who crawled forward like a coward and took the head of the Prophet’s grandson.
The sky turned dark. The earth shook. Even the heavens mourned.
She Stood When the World Fell Silent
The women were taken. The tents were burned. Bibi Zainab — sister of Hussain, daughter of Ali — was marched in chains through the streets of Kufa and dragged into the court of Yazeed in Damascus. And there, surrounded by oppressors drunk on their victory, she rose and delivered words that echo through centuries: “Do whatever you wish. You cannot erase us.”
She was right. Yazeed’s name is cursed. Hussain’s name is carried in tears, in prayers, in processions across every continent, in every language, by millions every single year.
Karbala was not the end of Hussain. It was his beginning — and the eternal defeat of every tyrant who ever thought that killing a man could kill his truth.
Ya Hussain.
