 Imagine, it's 1400 years ago, it's the 9th of Maharram, you're in your tent and at night you hear noises from outside. So you come outside to see what's going on and you see people leaving the camp of Imam Salaam in the hundreds and thousands. Looking around for a split second your eyes fall into the eyes of Imam Salaam. You see the sadness and sorrow in his face and you decide you're going to stay, you're not going to leave him alone. The morning comes, it's now the day of Ashurah and imagine you walk up to the Imam to offer him your service and he lets you decide what you want to do on that day. Where would you go, what would you want to do? Well, I would probably, like, I would just, I would ask him, I'll ask the Imam and see what he wants me to do. I'll try helping in any way, anything. But if I had to pick, I would probably go and try assist Abel Fadla Abbas with bringing the water to the children because just seeing how, seeing the tragedy of Abel Fadla Abbas seeing how he left, he didn't go and fight during the battle. He went to get water for the kids from six months old, two years old and like really young children. From how he took an arrow to his eye and his arms got chopped off. Maybe I could have been there to show the arrow, maybe I could have taken the arrow. Now I imagine you come home one day from school, you open the house door, you walk in, you see your family running around the house, everyone's busy with something, your mum's making food, your dad's making fruit, someone else is making tea and it looks to you as if you've got guests who have come to your house. So you ask someone you say who's come to see us and they reply they haven't come to see us, they've come to see you. So you think to yourself who could it be, maybe it's someone from school, maybe it's someone from the mosque, maybe it's someone from down the road and you go into the living room you open the door and you see sitting in your living room is a mosque in this. In that moment what would you say to him, what would you want him to say to you? Be speechless. I'll probably tell him if I could have been there on the day of Ashurah to be beside him. How would he have wanted me to help? I'll ask for forgiveness for any sins that I've done, anything that has happened. What would you want him to say to you? Would you want him to say I've accepted you as a servant? Would you want him to tell you about your future? I'd want him to give me advice for the right path to guide me. At the beginning I asked you about 1400 years ago. I asked you about a day that at least we have a bit of information on that with hindsight we could maybe say if I was there I would stop this or if I was there I would help with that or if I was there I could maybe potentially delay this tragedy from happening. And in this day and age a lot of us forget that we have a 12th Imam who's with us. And like the start when I said to you, you walk up to the Imam and the Imam gives you a choice. In this day and age our Imam at least being physically absent from us gives us the choice in how we want to serve him. So what do you think you've done for the 12th Imam which we think he deserves from you? I would just want to be on the right side with the Imam, be with him. I don't think we've done much really because seeing what's happening, what's going on around there aren't much magilists. For the young children, people my age, we don't really get taught that much. We don't really get told the stories of the Imam or anything like that. Just don't get educated about Imam Mehdi, Aja Allah. Favolimou, magilis.