On September 15th, 1918, the Imperial German government did something no modern military power had ever done.

It filed a formal diplomatic protest.

Not against a machine gun, not against artillery, not against the poison gas that had been choking men to death in those trenches since 1915.

It filed its protest against a shotgun shell.

The note traveled from Berlin through the Spanish embassy, then to the Swiss embassy, then to the American Legation in Burn.

It arrived in Washington on September 19th, carried by the Swiss charge DeFair himself, addressed to Secretary of State Robert Lancing.

The language was direct.

The German government declared that American forces had deployed a weapon in violation of the laws of war.

It identified that weapon as the 12- gauge shotgun and its ammunition, and it announced that any American soldier found in possession of such guns or such shells would forfeit his life.

Germany was threatening to execute prisoners of war over a hunting cartridge.

The United States Army’s acting judge advocate general, Brigadier General Samuel Anel, spent five pages explaining exactly why Germany’s protest had no legal merit.

Secretary of State Lancing sent his reply.

The shotgun was a lawful weapon, and if Germany executed any American for carrying one, the United States would make reprisals to match.

Germany never replied.

No Americans are known to have been executed.

The war ended 53 days later.

But Germany’s panic over a shell, specifically over what nine lead pellets could do that one bullet could not, tells you something about the dark reason the 12- gauge buckshot load became the most feared American cartridge of the First World War.

To understand why the 12-gauge shell broke something in the German military mind, you have to understand what the German military mind was built on.

German infantry doctrine in 1914 rested on the rifle and the bayonet.

One soldier, one cartridge, one target.

The GA 98, a Mouser boltaction chambered in 7.

92x 57 mm, was one of the finest military rifles in the world.

It was accurate at distances that made other nations infantry weapons look primitive.

German marksmen were trained to engage targets at 400 m.

German tactical doctrine assumed engagements at range with mass fire and fire discipline.

The individual soldier was a precise instrument delivering a precise projectile in a precise direction.

That philosophy extended to the laws of war Germany believed it was upholding.

The 1899 HEG declaration had banned expanding bullets, the so-called dum dum rounds that deformed inside a body, tearing tissue far beyond what was necessary to put a man down.

Germany had signed that declaration.

The logic behind it was that warfare should be conducted with weapons that killed efficiently without inflicting wounds so catastrophic they constituted cruelty rather than combat.

One clean wound channel, one bullet, one enemy removed from the fight.

What Germany encountered in the summer of 1918 was a weapon that operated on an entirely different philosophy, and it did not come from a military tradition.

It came from a duck blind in Louisiana.

The Winchester repeater shell loaded for the American Expeditionary Force was a 12- gauge paper cartridge crimped around nine pellets of double op buckshot.

Each pellet measured roughly 8.

4 mm in diameter, about a/ third of an inch, and weighed approximately 53 grains.

Together, nine of them fit inside a single shell casing, one trigger pull, nine independent projectiles.

At the engagement distances of trench warfare, 10 yards, 15 yards, sometimes the length of a single bay of dugout, those nine pellets left the muzzle as a cluster and arrived on target before they had time to spread more than a few inches.

At that range, a load of double O buckshot delivered energy roughly equivalent to nine simultaneous pistol rounds, each following its own wound track through whatever it struck.

bone, organ, muscle.

Each pellet found its own path.

The human body that absorbed a full buckshot load at close range did not receive one wound.

It received nine.

The HEG convention’s prohibition on unnecessary suffering had been written with a single projectile philosophy in mind.

Bullets that expanded, bullets that fragmented, bullets designed to inflict maximum tissue damage beyond what was needed to incapacitate.

Those were what the drafters had targeted.

A buckshot shell was not one bullet behaving badly.

It was nine bullets behaving exactly as designed.

And American lawyers knew the difference.

Brigadier General Ansel’s five-page memorandum made the case with surgical precision.

The purpose of the 12- gauge shell, he wrote, was not cruelty.

It was to put out of action more than one of the charging enemy with each shot of the gun.

He compared the buckshot spread directly to shrapnel artillery and machine gun fire, both of which Germany employed freely, both of which scattered multiple projectiles across a target area, neither of which Germany had ever protested.

The shell was not designed to wound and leave suffering.

It was designed to kill efficiently in the environment where it was being used.

That environment was a trench 5 ft wide at ranges where aimed rifle fire was mechanically impossible.

Germany’s protest, Anel concluded, was without legal merit.

A WWI trench was not a straight line.

It was engineered in deliberate zigzags, sections called bays, separated by traverses, specifically to prevent a single burst of fire from traveling the length of the line.

If an artillery shell landed in one bay, the traverse walls would contain the blast.

If a machine gun fired down one stretch of trench, the next traverse would stop the bullets.

The traverse system was one of the most basic defensive calculations of the war.

The width of a standard infantry trench was roughly 6 ft.

The depth was enough to put the average man’s shoulders below the parapet.

You could not stand upright and aim a rifle around a corner without exposing your head above ground level.

And in 1914, 1915, 1916, every weapon on the Western Front, the Mouser, the Lee Enfield, the label, had been designed for exactly the kind of shooting you could not do in a trench.

They were built for open field engagement, for lines of men firing at lines of men, for aim shots at range.

In the trench, that precision became almost irrelevant.

The Winchester Model 1897, loaded with double O buckshot, was the first infantry weapon that turned the trench’s geometry into a liability rather than an asset.

Around a corner in a trench, aimed rifle fire required a soldier to expose himself long enough to acquire a target.

The buckshot load did not.

A man rounding a traverse with a trench gun could fire from the hip without sighting and deliver nine lethal projectiles into the bay ahead of him.

The spread pattern, roughly an inch of spread per yard of distance at those ranges, meant the shot cloud covered the width of a trench bay.

There was no stepping aside.

There was nowhere to go.

The traverse walls that were supposed to protect the defenders became the walls of a box.

And the man with the shotgun was pouring fire into the box.

American soldiers called it slam firing.

Hold the trigger, pump the action, and the Model 1897 fired on the return stroke.

Six shells in the magazine.

54 pellets emptied in a matter of seconds.

German soldiers who survived trench raids described the sound, the rapid mechanical pump, and the overlapping concussions as unlike anything in their experience of the war.

The first confirmed capture of an American soldier armed with the model 1897 came on July 21st, 1918 in the Bakarat sector of Lraine.

A soldier from the 77th division was taken prisoner with a Winchester trench gun and his issue ammunition.

the Winchester repeater shells, nine pellets of double O buckshot each.

German military intelligence examined the weapon and the cartridges and understood immediately what they were looking at.

A second soldier from the fifth division was captured with the same equipment on September 11th.

8 days later, the diplomatic protest was in the mail.

The dark reason Germany called the 12- gauge shell uncivilized is not that it was particularly cruel.

It was that it was designed by people who had never thought about war at all.

The American who conceived the trench shotgun was not a general or a weapons engineer.

William Eager was an electrical engineer from Valdasta, Georgia, who managed a lighting company.

In September 1917, he prepared an engineering report proposing to modify existing sporting shotguns for trench warfare and sent it to the War Department.

The War Department looked at the weapon already sitting in the sporting goods stores of every town in America, a pump-action 12- gauge designed for hunting water fowl and upland birds, and realized Eager was right.

They ordered between 30 and 40,000 of them from commercial manufacturers.

The shell those guns fired was not a military invention.

It was a hunting load.

American manufacturers had been producing 9 pellet double O buckshot shells for deer hunters since the 19th century.

The shot size, the powder charge, the crimp, all of it had been developed to take a deer cleanly at close range with enough pellets spread across a pattern to compensate for a moving target in thick cover.

The philosophy embedded in the shell was the philosophy of the American hunter.

Get close, get multiple hits, make sure the animal goes down.

When that philosophy walked into a WWI trench in 1918, it met a military architecture built entirely around single projectile weapons and it did not fit.

The traverse system useless.

The range discipline irrelevant.

The rifle training no help at 20 ft.

Germany had spent 40 years developing a theory of infantry combat based on precise individual fire at distance.

American hunters had been solving a different problem.

How to ensure a clean kill at close range against a target that might absorb a single shot and keep moving.

There is something almost absurd about the image.

a nation that had introduced chlorine gas to the Western Front in 1915, that used flamethrowers as a standard infantry weapon that had issued sawbacked bayonets so notorious for their wounds that its own soldiers discarded them in fear of being executed if captured, complaining to Washington about a hunting shell.

Brigadier General Anel did not miss that irony.

His memorandum pointed directly at German Shrek kite, the doctrine of frightfulness, and named flamethrowers and poison gas as the actual examples of weapons designed to cause suffering without military purpose.

Against that list, a shell that put nine pellets into a target in order to drop it quickly was not cruelty.

It was efficiency.

The people who built it were not arms manufacturers calculating wound ballistics under the laws of war.

They were sporting goods companies in Connecticut and Pennsylvania making the same shells they had always made for the same reasons they had always made them.

And the American military had simply aimed that tradition at a different kind of game.

Germany had a framework for understanding military weapons for arguing about their legality, debating their ethics, measuring them against the convention civilized nations had agreed on.

The 12-gauge buckshot shell sat entirely outside that framework.

You cannot write a law of war against a deer hunting load.

Germany found that out in the Bakarat sector and never recovered from the surprise.

No Americans were executed.

Secretary of State Lancing’s reply translated plainly to, “We disagree, and if you harm our men over this, you will regret it.

” The war ended before Germany had to decide whether to back down or escalate.

The shotguns kept firing.

What Germany’s protest actually documented without meaning to was that American soldiers carried into the most industrialized war in history.

A weapon that came directly from the American civilian tradition.

Not a weapon designed to fight wars.

A weapon designed to hunt.

And on the Western Front in 1918, in the five- foot wide mud corridors where four years of industrial warfare had ground itself to a stalemate, the hunting tradition turned out to be exactly what the moment required.

The 12- gauge shotgun is still
in the American military’s inventory today.

The shell hasn’t changed much.

Nine pellets of double O buckshot, same as 1918.

Still effective, still legal, still univilized by some accounts.

That’s the point.

If this kind of history is what keeps you coming back, hit subscribe and we’ll keep going.

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Muslim Teacher Faces Execution for Reading the Bible — Then Jesus Did the Unbelievable

My name is N Jan.

It means light of the world in my language.

I did not choose this name.

My mother gave it to me 32 years ago in Kabul, Afghanistan.

She could not have known then what that name would come to mean.

She could not have known that one day I would meet the true light of the world in the darkest place imaginable.

Two years ago, I was sentenced to death by stoning in Afghanistan.

The charge was apostasy, leaving Islam, following Jesus Christ.

Today, I stand before you alive and free, and I want to tell you how I got here.

I want to tell you what God did.

But to understand the miracle, you must first understand the darkness.

Let me take you back to August 2021.

That was when everything changed for Afghanistan and for me.

>> Hello viewers from around the world.

Before Nor shares her story, we’d love to know where you’re watching from so we can pray for you and your city.

Thank you and may God bless you as you listen to this powerful testimony.

>> I was a teacher.

I had been teaching for 8 years at a girl’s school in Cabbell.

I taught literature and history to girls aged 12 to 16.

I loved my work.

I loved seeing their faces light up when they understood something new.

When they read a poem that moved them.

When they realized that learning could open doors they never knew existed.

These girls were hungry for education.

Their mothers had lived under Taliban rule before.

In the 1990s, when women could not work, could not study, could barely exist outside their homes, these mothers wanted different lives for their daughters, and I was helping give them that chance.

Then the Taliban returned.

I remember the day, August 15th.

I was preparing lessons for the new school year.

We were supposed to start in 2 weeks.

I had my lesson plans laid out on my desk.

I had borrowed new books from the library.

I was excited.

Then my father came home early from his shop, his face gray with fear.

He turned on the television.

We watched the news together.

The government had fallen.

The president had fled.

The Taliban were entering Kabul.

My mother began to cry.

She remembered.

She had lived through their rule before.

She knew what was coming.

Within days, everything changed.

The music stopped playing in the streets.

The colorful advertisements came down from the walls.

Women disappeared from television.

The news anchors were all men now, all with long beards, all wearing turbons.

Then came the decrees.

Women must cover completely.

Women cannot work in most jobs.

Women cannot travel without a male guardian.

And then the one that broke my heart, girls cannot attend school beyond the sixth grade.

Just like that, my job was gone.

Just like that, the futures of millions of girls were erased.

I will never forget going to the school one last time to collect my things.

The building was empty.

The classrooms where girls had laughed and learned were silent.

I walked through the halls and I felt like I was walking through a graveyard.

These were not just rooms.

These were dreams that had died.

I stood in my classroom and I looked at the empty desks and I wept.

I thought of Miam who wanted to be a doctor.

I thought of Fatima who wrote poetry that made me cry.

I thought of little Zara, only 12, who asked more questions than anyone I had ever taught.

What would happen to them now? What would happen to their dreams? I took my books home in a bag.

I felt like I was smuggling contraband.

In a way, I was.

Knowledge had become contraband.

Learning had become rebellion.

The next months were suffocating.

My world became smaller and smaller.

I could not work.

I could not go out without my brother or my father.

I had to wear the full burka, the one that covers everything, even your eyes behind a mesh screen.

I felt like a ghost, like I did not exist.

I would see women beaten in the streets by the Taliban’s religious police for showing a bit of ankle, for laughing too loudly, for walking without a male guardian.

I saw fear everywhere.

The city that had been coming alive after years of war was dying again.

But it was not just the rules that suffocated me.

It was the cruelty behind them.

It was the way they justified it all with Islam.

I had grown up Muslim.

I had prayed five times a day.

I had fasted during Ramadan.

I had read the Quran.

I believed in Allah.

But this this did not feel like the faith I knew.

This felt like something else.

Something dark and angry and hateful.

I started having questions.

Questions I could not ask anyone.

Questions that felt dangerous even to think.

Is this really what God wants? Does God really hate women this much? Does God really want half of humanity to be invisible, to be nothing, to be prisoners in their own homes? I would push these thoughts away.

Questioning your faith is dangerous in Afghanistan.

Questioning Islam can get you killed.

So, I kept my doubts locked inside my heart.

And I prayed and I tried to believe that somehow this was all part of God’s plan that I could not understand.

But then something happened that changed everything.

It was January 2022, 6 months after the Taliban returned.

I was at home going slowly crazy with boredom and frustration.

My younger sister Paresa came to visit.

She was crying.

She told me about her friend Ila.

Ila was 16.

Her family had married her off to a Taliban fighter, a man in his 40s.

Ila did not want to marry him.

She begged her family not to make her.

But they had no choice.

The Taliban commander wanted her.

And you do not say no to the Taliban.

The wedding happened.

Ila was crying through the whole ceremony.

She was a child.

A child being given to a man old enough to be her father.

Parisa told me this and she said something I will never forget.

She said that when Leila’s family was asked about it, they quoted a hadith.

They quoted Islamic teaching to justify giving a child to a grown man.

They said the prophet himself had married a young girl.

So this was acceptable.

This was Islamic.

This was right.

I felt something break inside me that day.

I felt angry.

Truly angry.

Not at the Taliban, not at Leila’s family, but at the system, at the interpretation, at the way faith was being used as a weapon to hurt and control and destroy.

That night, I could not sleep.

I lay in bed and I stared at the ceiling and I prayed.

I prayed to Allah and I said, “Is this really what you want? Is this really your will?” I got no answer, only silence.

The silence felt heavier than any answer could have been.

It was shortly after this that the idea came to me.

If I could not teach officially, I could teach unofficially.

If girls could not go to school, I could bring school to them.

I started small.

I contacted three mothers I knew from before.

Women whose daughters had been in my classes.

I told them I could teach their daughters in secret in my home.

just basic literacy and math, just enough to keep their minds alive.

The mothers were terrified.

They were also desperate.

They said yes.

That is how the secret school began.

Three girls in my family’s living room twice a week.

We would tell neighbors we were having Quran study.

We were careful.

We kept the real books hidden.

We had Islamic texts on the table in case anyone came to the door.

But underneath we were teaching literature, mathematics, history.

We were keeping the light of learning alive in the darkness.

Words spread quietly.

By March, I had seven girls.

By May, 12.

We had to move locations constantly.

One week in my home, one week in another mother’s home, always rotating, always careful.

We were like ghosts appearing and disappearing, teaching in whispers.

The girls were so hungry to learn.

They absorbed everything like dry ground absorbing rain.

They asked questions.

They wrote essays.

They solved equations.

They were alive in those moments.

Truly alive in a way they could not be anywhere else in the Taliban’s Afghanistan.

But I was always afraid.

Every knock on the door made my heart stop.

Every stranger who looked too long made me nervous.

The Taliban had informants everywhere.

Neighbors reported neighbors.

Family members reported family members.

One word to the wrong person and we would all be arrested.

The girls could be beaten.

I could be imprisoned or worse.

There were close calls.

Once a Taliban patrol was going door todo on our street doing random inspections.

We were in the middle of a lesson.

We had 30 seconds.

We hid all the books under floor cushions.

We brought out Qurans.

We covered our heads completely.

When they knocked, we were sitting in a circle reading Quranic verses.

They looked around.

They questioned us.

And then they left.

My hands did not stop shaking for an hour afterward.

Despite the fear, I kept teaching.

I had to.

Education was the only hope these girls had.

Without it, they would be married off young, trapped in homes, never knowing what they could have been.

I could not let that happen.

Even if it cost me everything, I had to try to give them a chance.

But as I taught them, something was changing inside me.

The questions I had pushed down were rising back up stronger.

Now I would read the approved Islamic texts we used as cover and I would see things I had never noticed before.

Contradictions, justifications for things that felt wrong.

The more I read, trying to find peace, the more troubled I became.

I witnessed things that haunted me.

A woman beaten in the street for letting her burka slip and show her face.

The Taliban fighter who did it quoted Quranic verses as he struck her.

I saw a young girl, maybe 14, whose hands were cut off for stealing bread to feed her siblings.

They did it in public in the square.

And they called it Islamic justice.

They called it God’s law.

I would go home and I would pray and I would ask, “Is this you? Is this what you want?” The silence from heaven was deafening.

One evening in June 2022, something happened that I think now was God’s hand, though I did not know it then.

I could not sleep.

The questions in my mind were too loud.

I got up in the darkness and I took out my phone.

This phone was my secret.

Most women were not supposed to have smartphones.

The Taliban wanted to control all communication, but I had one bought on the black market, hidden in my room.

I used it rarely and only late at night, connecting to my neighbor’s Wi-Fi that I had hacked the password for.

That night, I opened the phone and I started searching for answers.

I looked for Islamic scholars who might explain things differently.

I looked for interpretations that made sense of the cruelty I was seeing.

I read arguments and debates between different schools of Islamic thought.

Some of it helped a little.

Some of it made me more confused.

Then by accident, I clicked on a link that took me to a website I had not intended to visit.

It was a Christian website in Farsy.

Someone had translated Christian materials into my language.

My first instinct was to close it immediately.

Christians were kafir infidels.

I had been taught this my whole life.

Their book was corrupted.

Their beliefs were wrong.

To even read their materials was dangerous to my soul.

But I did not close it.

I do not know why.

curiosity maybe or desperation or perhaps God’s hand on my heart.

Though I would not have believed that then I read for maybe 5 minutes.

It was about Jesus, about his teachings, about love and forgiveness and peace.

It was simple.

It was beautiful.

It was nothing like what I had been taught Christians believed.

I closed the phone and I tried to forget what I had read.

But I could not forget the words stayed with me.

Over the next weeks, I kept thinking about it.

I told myself I was just curious.

I told myself I was just trying to understand different perspectives to be a better teacher.

I told myself many lies to justify what I was doing.

Late at night when everyone was asleep, I would take out my phone and I would go back to that website.

I would read more about Jesus, about his life, about what he taught.

The more I read, the more confused I became.

This Jesus seemed different from anything I had known.

In Islam, Isa is a prophet, yes, but a distant figure.

Here in these Christian writings, he was something more.

He was close.

He was personal.

He spoke to people with such love and such authority.

He healed the sick.

He defended the oppressed.

He elevated women in a time when women were nothing.

He challenged the religious leaders who used faith as a tool of power.

I found myself drawn to his words in a way I could not explain.

When I read his teachings, something in my heart responded.

It was like hearing a voice I had been waiting my whole life to hear.

But this was dangerous.

I knew it was dangerous.

I was playing with fire.

If anyone knew I was reading Christian materials, I could be arrested.

I could be beaten.

My family could be shamed.

The secret school would be destroyed.

Everything would be lost.

Yet, I could not stop.

By September 2022, I was deep into something I could not pull myself out of.

I had found websites with entire portions of the Bible translated into Farsy.

I read the Gospels, Matthew, Mark, Luke, John.

I read them over and over.

I read about Jesus touching lepers when everyone else rejected them.

I read about him talking to the Samaritan woman at the well, treating her with dignity when her own people shamed her.

I read about him defending the woman caught in adultery, saying, “Let he who is without sin cast the first stone.

” I read the sermon on the mount, “Blessed are the poor, blessed are the meek.

Blessed are the persecuted.

” I read these words in my dark room under my blanket with my phone hidden, terrified someone would hear me crying because I was crying.

These words touched something deep in my soul.

They spoke to the questions I had been asking.

They spoke to the pain I had been feeling.

They spoke to a hunger I did not even know I had.

Still, I told myself I was just learning, just exploring, just satisfying curiosity.

I was still Muslim.

I still prayed the five daily prayers.

I still fasted.

I still believed in Allah.

I was not converting.

I was just looking.

That is what I told myself.

But I was lying to myself.

Something was changing.

Something was shifting in my heart.

A door was opening that I did not know how to close.

In October, I found something that changed everything.

I found a website where I could download a complete Farsy Bible, not just portions, the whole thing, Old Testament and New Testament, everything.

There was a download button right there on the screen.

I stared at that button for a long time.

My hand hovered over it.

I knew that if I pressed it, I was crossing a line.

Possessing a Bible in Afghanistan was dangerous.

Possessing it as a Muslim was apostasy.

If anyone found it, I could be killed.

But I wanted it.

I wanted to read more.

I wanted to understand.

I wanted to know the truth.

Whatever the truth was, I told myself I would just download it, just read it, just satisfy my curiosity, and then I would delete it.

no one would ever know.

So, I pressed the button.

The file downloaded.

I saved it in a hidden folder on my phone, disguised with a different name.

I held my phone in my hands, and I felt like I was holding a bomb.

This little device now contained something that could end my life.

I did not read it that night.

I was too afraid.

I put the phone away and I tried to sleep, but sleep would not come.

The next afternoon, I was alone in my room.

Everyone else was out.

I locked my door.

I took out my phone.

I opened the hidden folder.

I opened the Bible file.

And I started reading.

I started with Genesis, with creation, with God speaking light into darkness.

I read for hours.

I lost track of time.

I was absorbed in these ancient words, these stories I had heard about but never really known.

the flood, Abraham, Moses, the Exodus, the prophets.

Then I moved to the New Testament, back to the Gospels I had read before, but now with more context, more depth.

I read Acts about the early church about persecution, about believers being scattered, but faith spreading anyway.

I read Paul’s letters.

Romans, Corinthians, Ephesians, words about grace, about faith, about love, about freedom in Christ.

I did not understand everything.

Some of it was confusing.

Some of it seemed to contradict what I had been taught.

But some of it was so clear, so beautiful, so true that I felt it in my bones.

By December 2022, I had read the entire Bible once.

I was reading it again.

I had also found something else, an audio Bible.

Someone had recorded the entire Farsy Bible, every book, every chapter, every verse read aloud by native speakers.

I downloaded it onto a small USB drive I had bought.

This was safer than having it on my phone.

A USB drive could be hidden more easily.

It could be destroyed more quickly if needed.

I would listen to it at night lying in bed with tiny earphones hidden under my headscarf.

I would listen to the words washing over me in the darkness.

I would hear the voice reading Isaiah, Psalms, the Gospels, Revelation.

I would fall asleep to these words.

I would wake up to them.

They became the soundtrack of my secret life.

One night in late December, I was listening to the book of John, chapter 14.

Jesus was speaking to his disciples, comforting them, telling them not to be afraid.

Then I heard these words.

I am the way, the truth, and the life.

No one comes to the father except through me.

I sat up in bed.

I rewound and listened again and again.

These words struck me like lightning.

Jesus was not just claiming to be a prophet.

He was claiming to be the only way to God, the only truth, the only life.

This was not something a prophet would say.

This was something God would say.

I felt something crack inside me.

A wall I had been building to protect myself, to keep myself safe, to stay in the religion I had been born into.

That wall was crumbling.

And on the other side was Jesus looking at me, calling me.

I was terrified.

I was exhilarated.

I was confused.

I was more certain than I had ever been about anything all at the same time.

I did not sleep that night.

I lay in darkness listening to the audio Bible and I wrestled with God.

I wrestled with the truth.

I wrestled with what this all meant.

If Jesus was who he said he was, then everything changed.

Everything.

My life, my faith, my identity, my future, everything.

By the time dawn came, I was exhausted.

But something had shifted.

I did not have all the answers.

I did not understand everything.

But I knew one thing.

I believed Jesus was real.

I believed he was who he said he was.

I believed he was calling me.

I just did not know what to do about it.

The next days and weeks were a blur of confusion and fear and strange peace all mixed together.

I kept teaching the girls.

I kept living my outward Muslim life.

But inwardly, I was changing.

I was becoming someone new, someone I did not fully recognize yet.

I wanted to talk to someone about what I was feeling.

But who could I tell? My family would disown me.

My friends would report me.

The girls I taught would be horrified.

I was completely alone with this secret.

Alone except for Jesus, who was somehow becoming more real to me than anything else in my life.

It was January 2023 when something happened that I think now was God preparing me for what was coming.

We had a close call with the secret school.

Very close.

We were teaching in a house on the east side of the city.

Nine girls were there.

We were in the middle of a mathematics lesson.

Suddenly, we heard shouting outside.

Taliban trucks.

A raid on the house next door.

They were looking for someone.

Some man they suspected of working with the former government.

We froze.

The girls looked at me with terror in their eyes.

If the Taliban searched this house too, we were all finished.

I made a quick decision.

I told the girls to hide the books under floor cushions.

I told them to sit in a circle.

I brought out a Quran.

I told them to bow their heads like we were praying.

They obeyed immediately.

We sat there in that circle, heads bowed.

And I heard the Taliban next door breaking down the door, shouting, dragging someone out.

We heard a man screaming.

We heard gunshots.

We heard a woman crying.

And we sat there, heads bowed, pretending to pray, barely breathing.

I do not know what made me do what I did next.

I should have recited Quranic verses.

I should have said Muslim prayers.

But instead, in my mind, I prayed to Jesus.

I prayed desperately.

I prayed, “Jesus, if you are real, if you hear me, please protect us.

Please hide us.

Please do not let them come here.

” We sat like that for what felt like hours, but was probably 10 minutes.

The noise next door continued, shouting, breaking glass, a woman weeping, but no one came to our door.

No one knocked.

No one searched our house.

Eventually, we heard the trucks drive away.

We heard silence.

I opened my eyes.

The girls opened theirs.

We looked at each other.

We were alive.

We were safe.

They thought we had just been lucky.

But I knew something different.

I knew someone had heard my prayer.

Someone had protected us.

That was the day I stopped lying to myself about what was happening.

That was the day I admitted the truth that was growing in my heart.

I believed in Jesus.

Not just as a prophet, as my Lord, as my savior, as the son of God.

I still did not tell anyone.

I still lived outwardly as a Muslim.

I still prayed the five prayers, though my heart was elsewhere.

I still fasted during Ramadan, though I felt like a hypocrite.

I was living a double life and it was exhausting.

But what choice did I have? To confess faith in Christ in Afghanistan was to choose death.

So I kept my secret.

I kept teaching.

I kept reading the Bible in hidden moments.

I kept listening to the audio Bible at night.

I kept praying to Jesus when no one could hear me.

And I kept hoping that somehow someday I would find a way to live honestly, to live as the person I was becoming.

I did not know then that my time was running out.

I did not know that someone was watching me.

I did not know that soon everything would fall apart and I would face the choice I had been avoiding, Christ or death.

But God knew he was preparing me.

He was strengthening me.

He was getting me ready for what was coming.

The storm was gathering.

I just could not see it yet.

Asked two, the hidden word.

It was February 2023 when I first prayed to Jesus out loud.

I know the exact date because it was the anniversary of my father’s heart attack 3 years before.

He had survived, but that day always brought back memories of fear and helplessness.

That morning, I was alone in my room, and I felt overwhelmed with gratitude that my father was still alive.

Without thinking, without planning, I knelt down and I whispered, “Thank you, Jesus.

Thank you for my father’s life.

” The words came out before I could stop them.

And the moment they left my mouth, something changed.

Speaking his name aloud made it real in a way that thinking it never had.

It was like a door had opened between my inner world and my outer world.

For months, Jesus had been my private secret.

Now I had spoken to him out loud in my room in Kabell, Afghanistan, where speaking that name could get me killed.

My heart was pounding.

I looked around as if someone might have heard me even though I was alone.

But along with the fear came something else.

Peace.

A deep unexplainable peace that filled my chest and spread through my whole body.

I stayed kneeling there for a long time just feeling that peace, just being in that presence.

From that day on, I began praying to Jesus regularly, always in secret, always in whispers, always when I was sure no one could hear.

I would pray in the morning before anyone else woke up.

I would pray at night after everyone was asleep.

I would pray during the day if I found myself alone for even a few minutes.

I would lock my door or hide in the bathroom or stand in the kitchen pretending to cook while I whispered prayers to the God I was coming to know.

I was still outwardly Muslim.

I still went through all the motions.

Five times a day, I would wash and face Mecca and go through the physical movements of Islamic prayer.

But my heart was not in it anymore.

My heart was somewhere else.

My heart was with Jesus and I felt guilty about the deception.

But I did not know what else to do.

To stop praying as a Muslim would raise questions I could not answer.

To start praying as a Christian would mean death.

So I lived this double life.

And it was exhausting and terrifying and also strangely beautiful because even though I was alone, I did not feel alone.

Even though I was hiding, I felt seen.

Jesus was with me.

I could not explain it.

I just knew it.

I felt his presence.

When I prayed to him, I felt like someone was actually listening.

When I read his words, I felt like someone was actually speaking to me.

It was intimate and real in a way I had never experienced in all my years of practicing Islam.

Around this time, I started memorizing scripture.

I did this partly for practical reasons.

I could not always have my phone or USB drive with me.

If someone discovered them, I would be exposed.

But if I had scripture in my heart, no one could take that away from me.

I could carry it safely.

I could access it any time.

And so I began committing verses to memory.

The first passage I memorized was Psalm 23.

I had read it dozens of times.

Every time I read it, I cried.

It spoke to my soul.

So, I decided to learn it by heart.

I would read one verse, then close my eyes and repeat it.

Read another verse, repeat it over and over until I had the whole psalm fixed in my mind.

The Lord is my shepherd.

I shall not want.

He makes me lie down in green pastures.

He leads me beside still waters.

He restores my soul.

I would whisper these words to myself throughout the day when I was afraid, which was often.

When I was teaching the girls and worried about being discovered.

When I heard Taliban trucks driving through the streets.

When I saw women being beaten or humiliated, I would whisper, “The Lord is my shepherd.

” And I would feel courage return.

Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil, for you are with me.

These words became my anchor.

In a country that had become a valley of death’s shadow, where evil seemed to rule, where fear was everywhere, these words reminded me that I was not alone.

God was with me.

Even here, even in Taliban ruled Afghanistan, even in my secret hidden faith, he was with me.

I memorized other passages, too.

John 14 where Jesus says, “Let not your heart be troubled, and I am the way, the truth, and the life.

” I memorized Romans 8 about nothing being able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus.

I memorized parts of the sermon on the mount.

Blessed are those who are persecuted for righteousness sake, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.

That verse struck me particularly hard.

Persecuted for righteousness.

That is what would happen to me if my faith was discovered.

I would be persecuted.

I would be punished.

But Jesus said that was a blessing.

He said the kingdom of heaven belonged to such people.

It was a strange comfort.

It did not make me less afraid, but it made my fear mean something.

It gave purpose to the risk I was taking.

The audio Bible on my USB drive became my most precious possession.

Every night, I would wait until the house was quiet.

I would lock my door.

I would take out the USB drive from its hiding place.

I had hidden it inside a small cloth bag that I kept inside a box of sanitary supplies.

No man would search there.

Even if Taliban raided our house, they would not look in such things.

It was the safest place I could think of.

I would plug tiny earphones into my phone, then connect the USB drive, and I would lie in bed listening to the word of God being read to me in my own language.

The voice was calm and gentle.

It felt like Jesus himself was sitting beside my bed, reading to me, comforting me, teaching me.

I would fall asleep to the sound of scripture.

It gave me dreams that were peaceful instead of the nightmares that haunted most of my sleep.

One night in March, I was listening to the Gospel of Matthew.

The reader reached chapter 5, the sermon on the mount.

Jesus was teaching about loving your enemies, about praying for those who persecute you, about turning the other cheek, about going the extra mile.

These teachings were radical.

They were opposite of everything I saw around me.

The Taliban taught hatred of enemies.

They taught violence and revenge.

They taught domination.

But Jesus taught something completely different.

Then I heard these words, “You have heard that it was said, you shall love your neighbor and hate your enemy.

But I say to you, love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you, so that you may be sons of your father who is in heaven.

” I stopped the audio.

I rewound and listened again.

Love your enemies.

Pray for those who persecute you.

I thought about the Taliban.

I thought about the men who had taken away my job, my freedom, my country.

The men who beat women in the streets, the men who had destroyed any hope of a future for Afghan girls.

These were my enemies.

And Jesus was telling me to love them, to pray for them.

I did not want to.

I wanted to hate them.

I did feel hate for them.

They deserved hatred.

They deserved judgment.

They deserved punishment.

But Jesus said to love them.

I lay there in the darkness struggling with this.

It felt impossible.

It felt unfair.

Why should I love people who were doing such evil? Why should I pray for people who would kill me if they knew what I believed? But the words would not leave me alone.

Love your enemies.

Pray for those who persecute you.

I realized that this was not just teaching.

This was a command.

And if I truly believed Jesus was Lord, if I truly was following him, then I had to obey even when it was hard, especially when it was hard.

So I started praying for the Taliban.

Not praying that God would destroy them, though part of me wanted that, but praying that God would save them.

Praying that they would encounter Jesus the way I had encountered him.

praying that their hearts would be changed.

It felt strange.

It felt wrong.

But I did it.

And slowly over time, something in my own heart began to change.

The hatred started to soften.

Not disappearing completely, but softening, being replaced with something else.

Pity, maybe compassion, a recognition that they too were lost.

They too were blind.

They too needed what I had found.

This did not make me less afraid of them.

I was still terrified every day, but it changed how I saw them.

They were no longer just monsters.

They were human beings who had been deceived, who believed lies, who needed truth, just like I had been deceived, just like I had believed lies, just like I had needed truth.

The secret school continued through these months.

By April 2023, we had 15 girls.

This was getting dangerously large.

The more people involved, the more risk of exposure.

But I could not turn anyone away.

These girls needed education.

They needed hope.

And I needed them too in a way.

Teaching them gave me purpose.

It gave me a reason to keep going when everything else felt hopeless.

I was careful never to share my changing faith with them.

I wanted to.

Sometimes I desperately wanted to tell them about Jesus, about what I was discovering, about the peace I had found.

But I knew I could not.

It would put them in danger.

It would put their families in danger and it would expose me.

So I kept teaching them literacy and mathematics and literature and I kept my other life completely separate.

But one afternoon in late April, something happened that made me realize how close I was to the edge.

We were studying poetry.

One of the girls, 16-year-old Amina, had written a poem about freedom.

It was beautiful and heartbreaking.

She read it aloud to the group.

It was about birds trapped in cages dreaming of the sky.

When she finished, another girl asked her where she got the idea.

Amina said she had been thinking about paradise, about heaven, about what it would be like to be free.

Then she asked me a question.

She said, “Teacher, do you think all religions teach about the same paradise? Do you think Christians and Muslims and Jews all go to the same place? The room went quiet.

All the girls were looking at me.

It was an innocent question, a theological question, the kind of thing curious teenagers ask.

But it was also dangerous because the Taliban answer was clear.

Only Muslims go to paradise.

Everyone else goes to hell.

That was what I was supposed to say.

But I did not want to say that.

I did not believe that anymore.

I believed Jesus was the only way.

I believed what he said.

No one comes to the father except through him.

But how could I say that? How could I answer honestly without exposing myself? I took a breath.

I chose my words carefully.

I said that different religions teach different things about paradise and about how to get there.

I said that these were important questions and that each person must search for truth sincerely and honestly.

I said that God sees the heart and that he knows who is truly seeking him.

It was a vague answer.

It was a safe answer.

It was a non-answer.

But it was the best I could do.

Amina nodded.

She seemed satisfied.

The other girls moved on to other topics.

But my heart was racing.

That question had come so close to exposing everything.

What if she had pushed further? What if she had asked me directly what I believed? Would I have had the courage to tell the truth? Or would I have lied to protect myself? I did not know.

I hoped I would never have to find out.

But that night, lying in bed, I prayed about it.

I asked Jesus what I should have said.

I asked him if it was wrong to hide my faith.

I asked him if I was being a coward.

I did not hear an audible answer.

But I felt a peace about it.

I felt like God understood my situation.

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