 Imagine, it's 1400 years ago, it's the ninth of Maharram, you're in your tent at night, you hear noises and commotion coming from outside, so you come out from your tent and you see people leaving the camp of Imam S.A. in their hundreds and thousands. For a split second, your eyes fall into the eyes of Imam S.A. There and then you, said Jad, decide you're going to stay, knowing 100% what's going to happen to you when the morning comes. The morning comes, it's Ashura and you're the 73rd companion of Aba Abdullilah S.A. Imagine you walk up to him and he gives you the choice into how you want to serve him on that day, knowing the different events that take place in that day. Where would you want to serve? In battle with Imam Hussain, in the rest of the battle, it's about knowing how to have the honour of dying with Imam Hussain, in battle. Why specifically Imam S.A.? Why wouldn't some people say they'd go get water with Aba Abdullilah S.A.? Some people say they'd try to protect the tents of the women and children. Some people say they'd want to bring back the pieces of the companions from the battlefield. Why would you want to go and fight with Imam S.A.? Imam Hussain and all the other companions, they would be known as Islam. So me having the honour of dying is the person that brought Islam to us. That would be a great honour. Imagine one day you come home from school, college, university and your family are running around the house all excited, one person's preparing fruit, another person's bringing food, another person's making tea and you finally grab hold of one of them and you say what's going on and they say someone's come to see you. So you say who is it? They say no, he's waiting for you in the living room. So you come to the living room, you open the door, you walk inside and you see Imam Hussain, S.A., sitting on the chair in front of you. In that moment, what would you say to him? What would you want him to say to you? The first thing I would do is I bow down to his feet as all the respect I have for him of what he's done for us, for Islam, I would ask him what is there for me to do for you about Abdullah? What is there any Khidmah for me to do for you? What would you want to hear from him? What would make you happy? For him to say that everything that he's done so far is good, the Khidmah that you've done is good for the Hussaini year, for helping the Shabab, anything. He says that, I'm proud of you and I keep on going, that will be the kind of Hussain. A lot of people often forget that we have our Imam alive and with us and at the start I asked you about 1400 years ago, I said if you were there, what would you have done? And it might be easy knowing the tragedies that took place back then to say, I would help with this, I would fight with that, I would try and stop this or I would bring X to Y to Z etc. And I said to you Imam Sain al-Islam is giving you the choice and in this day and age in a way, with our Imam being away from us, we have the choice in how we decide to serve him best. So what do you think you've done for the 12th Imam? What do you think he deserves from you? What do you think he would accept from you? What we've done so far is not as, as I say, we haven't done enough. Khidmah is something that there's no level to it. The more you do, you get closer to getting thawab and there's no limit for you to stop and say yes, I've done enough. There's never a limit to Khidmah of Aba'a, Abdullah al-Hussain. So what do you think we should do for our 12th Imam differently? Everything that we're doing now is not just about the latom, the tatbih and all this. It's not about that, it's about the lesson that he taught, the lesson that we learned from him, the him he's given his life for Islam. And us giving this little Khidmah, doing latom, doing this is just little baby steps towards, towards the love of Aba'a Abdullah and the love that he will give to us as his servants.