Muslim Woman Challenged Jesus To Save His IRGC Navy Son at The Strait of Hormuz and this happened…

My  son  called  me  that  his  death  is imminent  at  the  straight  of  Harmuz.

Then I  challenged  Jesus  and  he  saved  him  in  a miraculous  way.

My  son  called  me  early in  the  morning  on  March  24th,  2026  to say  goodbye.

He  was  a  senior  lieutenant commander  in  the  IRGC  Navy  positioned directly  under  the  now  murdered  Navy commander  Alireza  Tangiri,  commander  of the  Islamic  Revolutionary  Guard  Corps Navy  at  the  Strait  of  Hormuz.

And  he  had received  intelligence  that  a  strike  was coming,  that  he  was  not  going  to survive.

He  told  me  he  loved  me.

He  told me  his  father  would  have  been  proud  of him.

And  then  the  line  went  dead  and  I sat  alone  in  my  house  in  Muscat,  knowing that  the  next  time  I  heard  about  my  son, it  would  probably  be  in  a  casualty report.

 

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I  prayed  to  Allah  through  the entire  day  until  my  throat  was  raw  and the  evening  came  and  heaven  was completely  silent.

Then  my  neighbor knocked  on  my  door,  a  Christian  woman, one  of  the  very  few  in  all  of  Oman.

She told  me  she  had  a  dream  about  my  son  and that  in  the  dream  she  heard  me  crying out  to  Jesus  to  save  him.

What  she  said next  changed  everything  I  had  believed for  50  years.

And  two  days  later  on March  the  26th  an  American  air  strike killed  Ali  Tangiri  the  IRGC  Navy commander  and  every  single  official present  with  him  at  the  time  of  the strike.

Every  single  one  except  my  son.

The  military  had  no  explanation.

The investigators  had  no  explanation.

The doctors  had  no  explanation.

But  I  had one  and  I  am  going  to  tell  you  exactly what  it  is.

My  name  is  Miam  Alawati.

 

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I am  an  Omani  woman  and  I  want  to  tell  you a  real  life  story  of  how  Jesus miraculously  saved  my  son  from  death  at the  straight  of  Hormuz  in  Iran.

I  was born  and  raised  in  Muscat  in  the  Alcoer district  in  a  home  where  the  call  to prayer  was  the  first  sound  of  every morning  and  the  last  sound  of  every night.

I  grew  up  understanding  that  Allah  was the  beginning  and  the  end  of  everything, the  source  of  every  breath,  the  owner  of every  moment.

That  was  not  just  my religion.

It  was  my  identity,  my culture,  my  blood,  and  the  air  I breathed  from  the  first  day  of  my  life to  the  day  everything  I  thought  I  knew was  challenged  in  a  way  I  never  saw coming.

I  lost  my  husband  Rasheed  when Ysef  was  only  9  years  old.

Rashid  was  a good  man,  a  quiet  and  hardworking  man who  drove  trucks  for  a  logistics  company that  operated  between  Muscat  and  Salala.

He  died  in  a  road  accident  on  the  Muscat Expressway  on  a  Tuesday  morning  in  2003, leaving  me  with  a  9-year-old  son,  a modest  house  in  the  Alaware  district, and  a  grief  so  heavy  I  did  not  know  how I  was  going  to  carry  it  and  keep breathing  at  the  same  time.

There  was  no dramatic  wealth  left  behind.

There  was no  safety  net  beyond  what  my  family could  offer  and  what  the  government widows  support  provided.

There  was  only Yousef,  my  son,  my  reason,  the  one person  on  earth  who  needed  me  to  stay standing  even  when  every  part  of  me wanted  to  collapse.

So  I  stayed standing.

I  cooked  and  cleaned  and worked  and  prayed  and  raised  my  son  with everything  I  had  because  he  was everything  I  had.

Yousef  was  not  an ordinary  child.

And  I  say  that  not  just because  I  am  his  mother.

His  teachers said  it.

His  neighbors  said  it.

Even  the Imam  at  our  local  mosque,  who  was  not the  kind  of  man  to  give  compliments freely,  told  me  once  that  Ysef  had  a mind  that  Allah  had  sharpened  for  a purpose.

He  was  the  kind  of  boy  who asked  questions  that  made  adults  pause.

The  kind  of  student  who  finished  his assignments  before  the  class  was  half over  and  spent  the  rest  of  the  time reading  books  he  had  brought  from  home.

He  was  curious  about  everything,  hungry for  knowledge  in  a  way  that  the  schools in  our  neighborhood  could  barely  keep  up with.

Mathematics,  science,  history, languages.

He  moved  through  all  of  it with  an  ease  that  made  other  parents look  at  him  and  then  look  at  their  own children  with  a  mixture  of  admiration and  envy.

He  was  my  pride,  my  comfort, and  the  proof  that  Allah  had  not abandoned  me  when  he  took  Rashid.

As Yousef  grew  older,  his  ambitions  grew with  him  in  a  direction  I  had  not anticipated.

He  became  deeply  interested in  Iran  in  its  history,  its  military structure,  its  political  identity  in  the region.

Oman  and  Iran  share  the  strait of  Hormuz  between  them  and  there  had always  been  a  complex  relationship between  the  two  countries  diplomatic  but layered  with  the  kind  of  careful distance  that  neighbors  with  very different  politics  maintain.

Ysef studied  Farsy  on  his  own  using  books  he ordered  and  online  resources  he  found.

And  by  the  time  he  was  17,  he  could  hold a  conversation  in  Farsy  that  surprised even  the  Iranian  students  he  practiced with  online.

He  told  me  when  he  was  18 that  he  wanted  to  go  to  Iran  to  study.

He  had  researched  universities  in  Thran and  had  identified  a  program  in  naval engineering  that  he  believed  was  the best  in  the  region  for  what  he  wanted  to do  with  his  life.

I  sat  with  that information  for  several  days  before  I responded  to  him.

But  turning  it  over  in my  mind  the  way  you  turn  a  stone  over  to see  what  is  underneath  it.

Letting Yousef  leave  Oman  was  the  hardest decision  I  ever  made  as  a  mother.

And  I want  you  to  understand  the  full  weight of  that  statement  from  a  woman  who  had already  survived  burying  her  husband.

Yousef  was  not  just  my  son.

He  was  my companion,  my  protector  in  the  way  that sons  become  protectors  of  widowed mothers  in  our  culture.

My  daily reminder  that  life  still  had  beauty  and purpose  in  it.

Sending  him  to  Iran  meant sending  the  only  person  left  in  my  world who  truly  belonged  to  me  into  a  country I  had  never  visited,  a  culture  I  only partially  understood  and  a  future  I could  not  fully  see.

I  prayed  for  seven consecutive  nights  asking  Allah  to  guide my  decision.

And  on  the  eighth  morning, I  called  Ysef  into  the  sitting  room  and told  him  he  could  go.

The  look  on  his face  in  that  moment  is  something  I  will carry  with  me  until  I  die.

Yousef  left  for  Thran  in  the  summer  of 2011  with  one  large  suitcase,  a  small carry-on  bag,  and  a  Quran  I  had  wrapped in  green  cloth  and  placed  in  his  hands at  the  airport  with  instructions  never to  let  it  leave  his  side.

I  stood  at  the departure  gate  of  Muscat  International Airport  and  watched  him  walk  away  until I  could  no  longer  see  the  back  of  his head  in  the  crowd.

Then  I  sat  down  on one  of  the  plastic  chairs  in  the terminal  and  stayed  there  for  a  long time  before  I  could  make  myself  stand  up and  go  back  to  an  empty  house.

That  was the  beginning  of  a  new  season  of  my life.

A  season  defined  by  phone  calls and  money  transfers  and  the  particular loneliness  of  a  mother  whose  entire world  has  relocated  to  another  country.

I  filled  my  days  with  work  and  prayer and  the  routines  that  hold  a  person together  when  the  thing  that  gives  their life  meaning  is  no  longer  physically present.

Ysef  enrolled  at  the  Amir Kabira  University  of  Technology  in  Thran known  across  the  region  simply  as  AUT.

It  was  one  of the  most  respected technical  universities  in  Iran  and  its department  of  marine  technology established  in  1986  was  considered  a leader  in  the  field  across  the  entire Middle  East.

The  department  offered programs  in  naval  architecture, hydrodnamics  and  offshore  structures  and operated  across  two  campuses,  one  in Thran  and  one  in  Bandar  Abbas,  the  port city  on  the  northern  shore  of  the straight  of  Hormuz.

Katu  Yusef  had researched  this  program  thoroughly before  he  ever  left  Oman  and  he  knew exactly  what  he  was  walking  into.

He began  with  his  bachelor  of  science  in naval  architecture  and  from  his  very first  semester  his  professors  recognized what  his  teachers  in  Muscat  had  always known.

This  was  not  an  ordinary  student.

This  was  someone  whose  mind  moved several  steps  ahead  of  the  curriculum and  who  asked  questions  that  pushed  the boundaries  of  what  was  being  taught  in the  classroom.

He  called  me  every  Sunday  without  fail.

The  calls  lasted  anywhere  from  30 minutes  to  an  hour.

And  he  would  tell  me everything  about  his  professors,  about his  classmates  from  different  parts  of Iran,  about  uh  the  food  in  the university  canteen  which  he  complained about  endlessly.

You  about  the  cold Thran  winters  that  shocked  a  boy  who  had grown  up  in  the  warmth  of  Muscat.

About the  Farsy  he  was  perfecting  so  quickly that  his  Iranian  classmates  teased  him about  his  Omani  accent  disappearing faster  than  they  expected.

I  lived  for  those  Sunday  calls.

I  would prepare  my  tea  early  and  sit  in  my  chair by  the  window  and  wait  for  my  phone  to ring  and  for  his  voice  to  fill  my  small sitting  room  with  the  energy  that  only Yousef  could  bring  into  a  space.

Those calls  were  the  thread  that  kept  me connected  to  the  life  that  mattered  most to  me  while  I  went  through  the  motions of  my  own  daily  existence  in  Alaware.

He  completed  his  bachelor  of  science with  results  that  placed  him  at  the  top of  his  graduating  cohort  and  was immediately  accepted  into  the  master  of science  program  in  hydrodnamics  at  the same  university.

It  was  during  his master’s  program  that  something  shifted in  Yousef  that  I  could  sense  even through  a  phone  call.

He  began  speaking differently  about  Iran,  not  just  as  a place  he  was  studying  in,  but  as  a  place he  was  becoming  part  of.

He  spoke  about the  IRGC  with  a  reverence  that  I  had  not heard  in  his  voice  before,  describing  it not  as  a  military  organization,  but  as  a brotherhood,  a  structure  built  on discipline  and  purpose,  and  the  defense of  a  nation  and  an  ideology  he  had  come to  feel  deeply  connected  to.

I  listened carefully  during  those  conversations.

The  way  mothers  listen  when  they  are trying  to  understand  something  their child  is  moving  toward  before  the  child has  fully  articulated  it  themselves.

It was  after  completing  his  master  of science  that  Ysef  told  me  he  had  decided to  join  the  Islamic  Revolutionary  Guard Corps.

He  called  me  on  a  Sunday  as  usual but  the  tone  was  different  from  the opening  of  the  conversation.

He  told  me he  had  been  approached  by  IRGC recruiters  who  had  been  monitoring  top graduates  from  AUT’s  marine  technology department  for  several  years.

He  said they  had  offered  him  a  position  that would  allow  him  to  combine  his  academic expertise  in  naval  architecture  and hydrodnamics  with  active  military service  in  the  IRGC  Navy.

He  told  me this  was  what  he  wanted.

He  told  me  this was  where  he  felt  his  knowledge  would have  real  meaning  and  real  impact.

I held  the  phone  in  silence  for  a  moment that  felt  much  longer  than  it  was  before I  asked  him  if  he  had  prayed  about  this decision.

He  said  he  had.

He  said  he felt  at  peace.

And  because  I  had  raised him  to  trust  the  guidance  that  came  from sincere  prayer,  I  swallowed  my  fear  and told  him  I  would  support  whatever  path Allah  had  laid  before  him.

Ysef’s  rise through  the  Akshai,  RGC  Navy,  was  steady and  deliberate.

The  kind  of  progression that  comes  not  from  politics  or connections  but  from  genuine  competence that  cannot  be  ignored.

His  background in  naval  architecture  and  hydrodnamics made  him  exceptionally  valuable  in  an organization  that  operated  some  of  the most  strategically  important  waterways in  the  world.

The  straight  of  Hormuz, that  narrow  and  enormously  consequential stretch  of  water  between  Oman  and  Iran through  which  nearly  a  third  of  the world’s  oil  supply  passed,  was  the primary  theater  of  the  IRGC  Navy’s operations.

Ad  Ysef  understood  those waters  with  both  the  instinct  of  someone who  had  grown  up  near  them  and  the technical  mastery  of  someone  who  had spent  years  studying  their  behavior  at  a molecular  level.

Within  several  years  of joining,  he  had  risen  to  the  rank  of senior  lieutenant  commander,  a  position that  placed  him  in  the  inner  operational circle  of  the  IRGC  Navy  and  brought  him into  direct  working  contact  with  the Navy  commander  himself,  Alza  Tangiri.

The  money  he  sent  home  changed  my  life in  ways  I  had  not  anticipated.

I  had lived  modestly  for  so  long  that  modesty had  become  invisible  to  me,  just  the natural  texture  of  my  existence.

But  Ysef’s  military  salary,  combined with  the  additional  allowances  that  came with  his  rank  and  specialization  now meant  that  suddenly  my  modest  house  in Alcoer  had  a  new  roof  and  new  furniture and  a  reliable  car  parked  outside  it.

He paid  for  medical  care  when  I  needed  it without  my  having  to  ask.

He  called  his aunts  and  made  sure  they  knew  he  had  not forgotten  them.

He  was  the  son  every mother  prays  for,  present  and  generous and  anchored  to  his  roots  despite  the distance  and  the  years  and  the  uniform he  now  wore.

But  even  as  I  thanked  Allah for  his  provision  and  his  care,  I  could not  silence  the  quiet  fear  that  lived permanently  in  a  corner  of  my  heart.

The straight  of  Hormuz  was  not  a  peaceful place,  and  the  news  coming  out  of  the region  was  getting  darker  with  every passing  month.

The  fear  I  had  carried quietly  in  the  corner  of  my  heart  for years  became  something  much  louder  in the  early  weeks  of  2026.

That  the  news coming  out  of  the  region  had  been  tense for  a  long  time.

The  kind  of  tension that  builds  slowly  the  way  pressure builds  inside  a  sealed  container, invisible  from  the  outside,  but  growing with  every  passing  day.

There  had  been drone  incidents  and  naval  confrontations and  diplomatic  warnings  exchanged between  Iran  and  the  United  States  that filled  the  news  channels  with  the language  of  escalation.

I  followed  it all  from  my  sitting  room  in  Alcoare  with the  particular  anxiety  of  a  mother  whose son  was  not  watching  these  events  from  a safe  distance  but  was  positioned directly  inside  them.

Every  headline about  the  straight  of  Hormuz  was  not just  a  news  story  to  me.

It  was  a postcard  from  the  place  where  my  son spent  his  days  and  nights  in  a  uniform that  made  him  a  target.

Then  February 28th  to  2026  arrived  and  the  world  I  had been  anxiously  watching  cracked  open.

The  news  broke  in  the  early  morning hours  and  by  the  time  I  was  awake  and had  turned  on  my  television,  the  Arabic news  channels  were  already  running continuous  coverage  of  what  was  being described  as  a  coordinated  USIsrael joint  military  operation  against  Iran.

The  scale  of  it  was  unlike  anything  that had  been  seen  in  the  region  in  decades.

This  was  not  a  drone  strike  or  a targeted  assassination  of  a  single official.

This  was  a  full  military offensive  that  struck  multiple  locations across  Iran  simultaneously.

Military installations,  command  centers, communications  infrastructure,  and  the residences  of  senior  Iranian  leadership.

And  within  the  first  hours  of  that morning,  the  news  that  stopped  my  breath entirely  came  through.

Ali  Kam,  the supreme  leader  of  Iran,  Yor  had  been killed.

Along  with  him,  several  of Iran’s  most  senior  military  and political  leaders  had  been  eliminated  in the  opening  wave  of  strikes.

I  sat  in front  of  my  television  for  hours  that morning,  unable  to  move.

My  phone  was ringing  continuously.

Neighbors  calling, relatives  calling,  women  from  the  mosque calling,  everyone  processing  the  shock of  what  was  unfolding  in  real  time  on every  screen.

I  answered  some  calls  and let  others  go  unanswered  because  my  mind was  not  in  my  sitting  room  in  Alqawer.

My  mind  was  at  the  straight  of  Hormuz searching  for  my  son  in  the  chaos  that was  erupting  across  every  Iranian military  installation  in  the  region.

I called  Yousef’s  number  repeatedly throughout  that  morning  and  got  nothing.

No  ring,  no  voicemail,  just  silence.

I told  myself  the  networks  were overwhelmed.

I  told  myself  the  military communication  systems  would  be  on lockdown  during  an  active  attack.

I  told myself  there  were  a  100  logical  reasons why  his  phone  was  not  connecting  and none  of  them  meant  what  the  darkest  part of  my  mind  was  suggesting.

Iran’s response  to  the  attacks  came  within hours.

The  Iranian  military  announced the  immediate  closure  of  the  Strait  of Hormuz  to  all  international  shipping traffic.

This  was  not  a  threat  or  a negotiating  position.

It  was  an immediate  and  total  blockade  of  one  of the  most  critical  waterways  on  the planet.

The  IRGC  Navy,  Yusef’s organization,  was  the  primary  enforcer of  that  blockade,  positioned  across  the straight  with  gunboats  and  missile systems  and  the  full  weight  of  Iran’s naval  capability  deployed  to  ensure  that nothing  moved  through  those  waters without  Iran’s  permission.

The  economic implications  sent  shock  waves  through global  markets  within  hours.

Oil  prices began  climbing  at  a  rate  that  financial analysts  scrambled  to  describe.

But  I was  not  thinking  about  oil  prices.

I  was thinking  about  my  son  standing  between the  guns  of  the  most  powerful  military in  the  world  and  the  orders  of  a government  that  had  just  lost  its supreme  leader  and  had  nothing  left  to lose.

The  US  military  response  to  the Hormuz  closure  was  swift  and overwhelming.

American  naval  forces already  positioned  in  the  Persian  Gulf and  the  Arabian  Sea  began  conducting what  official  statements  described  as freedom  of  navigation  operations,  which was  the  language  military  commanders used  when  they  meant  they  were  going  to force  their  way  through  regardless  of who  was  in  the  way.

Air  strikes  targeted IRGC  Navy  installations  along  the Iranian  coastline.

American carrier-based  aircraft  struck  radar systems  and  missile  batteries  that  the IRGC  Navy  had  positioned  to  enforce  the blockade.

IRGC  patrol  boats  that  moved to  intercept  American  vessels  were engaged  and  destroyed.

Senior  IRGC  Navy officials  began  appearing  in  the casualty  lists  that  leaked  through unofficial  channels  even  as  the  Iranian government  tried  to  control  the information  flowing  out  of  the  country.

Every  name  on  those  lists  that  I  read  in the  days  following  the  initial  strikes made  my  hands  shake  because  every  name told  me  that  the  men  around  my  son  were dying.

I  finally  heard  Yousef’s  voice  on March  3rd,  5  days  after  the  attacks began.

The  call  lasted  less  than  4 minutes  and  the  connection  was  poor  or cutting  in  and  out  with  a  static  that made  every  word  feel  fragile.

He  told  me he  was  alive  and  operational  and  that  I should  not  believe  everything  I  was hearing  on  the  news.

He  told  me  to  keep praying  and  to  trust  Allah.

He  told  me he  loved  me.

And  then  the  line  went  dead and  I  sat  holding  my  phone  against  my chest  in  the  darkness  of  my  sitting room,  reciting  every  prayer  of protection  I  knew  over  the  name  of  my son.

The  days  that  followed  were  an agony  of  silence  and  incomplete  news  and the  particular  torture  of  a  mother  who knows  her  child  is  in  the  middle  of something  terrible  but  cannot  reach  him or  see  him  or  do  anything  except  pray and  wait.

It  was  the  call  on  March  the 24th  that  ended  the  waiting  and  replaced it  with  something  worse.

Uh,  my  phone rang  at  10  in  the  morning  and  Yousef’s name  appeared  on  the  screen  and  I answered  it  before  the  first  ring  had finished.

His  voice  was  calm  in  a  way that  immediately  told  me  something  was deeply  wrong  because  it  was  the  calm  of a  man  who  had  already  made  his  peace with  something,  not  the  calm  of  a  man who  was  safe.

He  told  me  he  did  not  have much  time  to  talk.

He  told  me  that reliable  intelligence  had  reached  his unit,  confirming  that  Alireza  Tangiri, the  IRGC  Navy  commander,  was  being actively  targeted  by  American  and Israeli  forces  and  that  a  strike  was considered  imminent.

He  told  me  that  as senior  lieutenant  commander  working directly  within  the  commander’s operational  circle,  his  own  presence  in the  targeted  locations  was  not  something he  could  avoid  or  step  back  from.

His commitment  to  his  post  and  to  the  men  he served  with  was  not  negotiable.

He  told me  he  needed  me  to  understand  that  he might  not  call  again  after  this.

I  did not  speak  for  what  felt  like  a  very  long time.

I  heard  him  say  my  name  once gently  the  way  he  said  it  when  he  was  a small  boy  trying  to  get  my  attention.

I found  my  voice  and  told  him  I  loved  him.

I  told  him  he  was  the  best  thing  Allah had  ever  given  me.

I  told  him  his  father would  have  been  proud  of  the  man  he  had become.

He  said  I’m  into  that  quietly and  I  heard  something  in  his  voice  break just  slightly  before  he  steadied  it again.

He  said  he  had  to  go.

He  said salam.

And  then  the  call  ended  and  I  put my  phone  down  on  the  table  in  front  of me  and  I  wept  in  a  way  I  had  not  wept since  the  day  they  told  me  Rashid  was gone.

I  wept  through  the  morning  and into  the  afternoon  was  pouring  out  every prayer  I  knew  to  Allah,  begging  for mercy,  begging  for  intervention,  begging for  my  son’s  life  with  every  Arabic  word of  supplication.

I  had  memorized  over  40 years  of  faithful  prayer.

The  evening came  and  the  sky  outside  my  window turned  dark  and  the  silence  from  heaven was  absolute.

I  was  still  sitting  in  the  same  chair where  I  had  taken  Yousef’s  call  when  I heard  the  knock  at  my  door  that  evening.

It  was  not  a  loud  knock.

It  was  the  kind of  knock  that  is  considerate  of  the  fact that  the  person  on  the  other  side  might be  in  pain.

Three  soft  taps  that  said, “I  am  here,  but  I  do  not  want  to intrude.”

I  almost  did  not  answer  it.

I had  no  energy  for  visitors,  you  know,  no capacity  for  the  kind  of  conversation that  neighbors  bring  to  your  door  when they  have  heard  bad  news  and  want  to  sit with  you  and  say  the  things  people  say when  they  do  not  know  what  else  to  do.

But  something  made  me  stand  up  from  that chair  and  move  towards  the  door.

Some instinct  I  could  not  explain  at  the  time that  told  me  this  particular  knock  was different.

I  opened  the  door  and  found Hannah  Albalushi  standing  on  my  doorstep with  her  coat  still  on  and  her  eyes carrying  an  expression  I  had  never  seen on  her  face  before.

She  looked  like someone  who  had  run  to  get  somewhere  and was  still  catching  her  breath  even though  she  was  standing  still.

Hannah Albalushi  had  lived  three  houses  down from  me  on  our  street  in  Alaweer  for  11 years.

She  was  one  of  the  very  few Christians  in  our  neighborhood.

But  a fact  that  was  known  quietly  among  the residents  of  our  street,  the  way  certain things  are  known  in  Omani  communities, acknowledged  privately,  but  never discussed  openly.

Oman  was  more  tolerant  than  many  of  its neighbors  when  it  came  to  the  presence of  non-Muslim  residents.

But  tolerance had  its  boundaries,  and  those  boundaries were  understood  by  everyone  on  both sides  of  them.

Hannah  and  I  had  always  maintained  a warm  and  respectful  neighborly relationship.

We  exchanged  food  during celebrations.

We  checked  on  each  other during  illnesses.

We  stopped  to  talk  at the  gate  when  our  paths  crossed  in  the morning.

She  was  a  gentle  and  private woman  who  kept  her  faith  to  herself  and never  pushed  it  into  spaces  where  it  had not  been  invited.

That  was  precisely  why  the  look  on  her face  that  evening  surprised  me.

She looked  like  a  woman  who  had  been  told she  had  no  choice  but  to  push.

I  let  her in  without  asking  any  questions  because her  expression  left  no  room  for hesitation.

She  sat  down  across  from  me,  and  she  did not  begin  with  small  talk  or pleasantries.

She  looked  at  me  directly and  said  she  needed  to  tell  me  something that  she  had  been  sitting  with  since  she woke  up  that  morning  and  that  she  had spent  the  entire  day  arguing  with herself  about  whether  to  come  to  my  door because  she  knew  how  it  might  sound  and she  did  not  want  to  cause  me  any  offense or  pain  on  top  of  what  I  was  already carrying.

I  told  her  to  say  whatever  she had  come  to  say.

She  took  a  breath  and told  me  she  had  a  dream.

She  said  in  the dream  she  saw  Yousef.

She  saw  him  in  a location  she  could  not  identify surrounded  by  destruction  and  she  saw fire  coming  from  the  sky.

She  said  in the  dream  she  saw  me  sitting  exactly where  I  had  been  sitting  all  day  and  she heard  me  crying  out  for  someone  to  save my  son.

She  said  the  name  she  heard coming  from  my  lips  in  the  dream  was  not Allah.

She  said  the  name  she  heard  was Jesus.

The  room  went  quiet  after  she  said  that.

I  looked  at  her  for  a  long  moment  and then  I  told  her  about  the  call.

I  told her  everything.

Yousef’s  voice,  his words,  the  intelligence  about  the commander  being  targeted,  his  commitment to  his  post,  his  goodbye.

I  told  her about  the  hours  of  weeping  and  prayer that  had  filled  my  day.

And  as  I  spoke, something  inside  me  that  had  been clenched  tight  since  half  10  that morning  began  to  loosen.

Not  because  the situation  had  changed,  but  because  there was  finally  another  human  being  in  the room  with  me  who  was  fully  present  and fully  listening.

By  the  time  I  finished speaking,  I  was  crying  again,  and  Hannah had  moved  from  her  chair  to  sit  beside me,  and  she  had  taken  both  of  my  hands in  hers  without  asking  permission,  the way  people  do  when  words  are  not  enough, and  presence  is  the  only  thing  they  have to  offer.

It  was  then  that  Hannah  began to  speak  about  Jesus  in  a  way  she  had never  spoken  to  me  before  in  11  years  of neighborly  friendship.

She  was  not preaching  at  me.

She  was  not  standing  at a  pulpit  delivering  a  sermon.

She  was  a woman  sitting  beside  another  woman  in  a moment  of  crisis,  sharing  the  only  thing she  had  that  she  believed  was  big  enough for  what  we  were  facing.

She  started with  the  Old  Testament  with  a  man  named Daniel  who  was  thrown  into  a  den  of lions  by  a  king  who  wanted  him  dead  and who  walked  out  the  next  morning  without a  single  wound  because  God  had  sent  an angel  to  shut  the  mouths  of  the  lions.

She  told  me  about  three  men  named Shadrach,  Mach,  and  Abednego  who  were thrown  into  a  furnace  so  hot  it  killed the  soldiers  who  threw  them  in  and  who walked  around  inside  that  fire  unharmed.

While  witnesses  reported  seeing  a  fourth figure  walking  with  them,  whose appearance  was  like  a  son  of  God.

She told  these  stories  not  as  religious information  but  as  evidence,  the testimony  of  a  God  who  had  a  documented history  of  reaching  into  impossible situations  and  pulling  people  out  alive.

Then  she  moved  to  the  New  Testament  and told  me  about  Peter,  the  fisherman,  who became  one  of  Jesus’s  closest  followers, who  was  thrown  into  prison  by  a  king named  Herod  and  chained  between  two soldiers  with  guards  posted  at  every door.

She  said  that  while  Peter  slept  in his  chains,  a  community  of  believers  was awake  through  the  night  praying  for  him.

She  said,  “An  angel  of  God  appeared  in that  cell,  filled  it  with  light,  woke Peter  up,  removed  his  chains,  led  him past  every  guard,  and  through  an  iron gate  that  opened  by  itself,  and  walked him  out  into  the  street  before disappearing.”

She  told  me  about  Paul  and  Silas,  beaten and  imprisoned  in  Philippi  in  Greece, their  feet  locked  in  stalks  in  the deepest  cell  of  the  prison,  who  began worshiping  God  at  midnight  with  such ferveny  that  the  entire  prison  shook with  an  earthquake  that  broke  every chain  and  opened  every  door simultaneously.

Yet,  she  told  me  the  God who  did  all  of  those  things  was  not  a god  of  the  ancient  past.

She  said  he  was alive  today  and  his  name  was  Jesus  and he  was  the  same  yesterday,  today  and forever.

I  had  been  raised  my  entire  life  to believe  that  Jesus  was  a  prophet,  a respected  figure  in  Islamic  theology, but  a  man  nonetheless,  not  divine,  not the  son  of  God,  not  someone  you  prayed to  or  called  upon  for  miracles.

Every  instinct  built  into  me  over  40 years  of  Islamic  faith  rose  up  against what  Hannah  was  saying.

But  underneath those  instincts  was  something  else, something  raw  and  more  desperate  than theology.

I  was  a  mother  who  had  said goodbye  to  her  only  son  that  morning  and who  had  spent  the  entire  day  pouring  her prayers  into  a  heaven  that  felt  sealed shut.

Tatahana  was  sitting  beside  me telling  me  about  a  god  who  opened  prison doors  and  walked  men  through  fire  and broke  chains  with  earthquakes.

And  in that  moment,  the  argument  in  my  head between  what  I  had  always  believed  and what  I  desperately  needed  was  not  even close.

I  looked  at  Hannah  and  I  told  her I  was  willing  to  try.

She  squeezed  my hands  and  said  that  was  all  Jesus needed.

Hannah  led  the  prayer  that followed  with  the  same  directness  and personal  confidence  that  I  would  later come  to  understand  was  simply  what  real faith  looked  like  from  the  inside.

She called  on  Jesus  by  name  and  she  laid  the situation  before  him  without  any religious  performance  or  rehearsed language.

She  told  him  about  Yousef,  his rank,  his  location,  the  intelligence about  the  commander  being  targeted,  the farewell  call  or  and  the  mother  sitting beside  her  who  had  nothing  left  but  this moment  and  this  prayer.

Then  she  turned to  me  and  told  me  to  speak.

She  said Jesus  wanted  to  hear  my  voice,  my  words, not  hers.

I  opened  my  mouth  and  what came  out  was  not  elegant  or theologically  correct.

It  was  the  cry  of a  desperate  mother  who  had  run  out  of every  other  option.

I  told  Jesus  that  I did  not  fully  understand  who  he  was,  but that  I  was  asking  him  to  show  me.

I  told him  that  if  he  was  who  Hannah  said  he was,  then  he  already  knew  where  my  son was  and  what  was  coming  for  him.

And then  I  said  the  words  that  surprised even  me  as  they  left  my  mouth.

I  told Jesus  that  if  he  saved  my  son  from  what was  coming,  I  would  give  him  my  life completely  and  I  would  never  look  back.

Look,  Yo  Hannah  said  amen  beside  me  and then  told  me  that  Jesus  had  heard  every word  and  that  we  were  going  to  fast together  for  3  days  and  stand  on  his promises  until  the  answer  came.

The first  morning  of  the  fast  arrived  with the  kind  of  quietness  that  feels deliberate,  as  if  the  world  itself  had agreed  to  hold  its  breath  alongside  you.

I  had  not  slept  well.

I  had  lain  in  my bed  through  the  night,  moving  between shallow  sleep  and  long  stretches  of wakefulness,  where  my  mind  replayed Yousef’s  voice  from  the  farewell  call and  my  own  words  to  Jesus.

From  the prayer  session  with  Hannah  and  the  gap between  those  two  things  felt simultaneously  enormous  and  strangely bridged  by  something  I  could  not  name.

I got  up  before  sunrise  made  ablution  out of  pure  habit  on  and  then  stopped  myself halfway  through  the  motions  of  beginning my  fajger  prayer  in  the  direction  of Makkah.

I  stood  in  my  bedroom  in  the gray  pre-dawn  light  and  felt  the  full weight  of  the  threshold  I  was  standing on.

I  was  not  the  same  woman  who  had performed  those  same  motions  yesterday morning.

Something  had  shifted  in  the room  with  Hannah,  and  I  did  not  yet fully  understand  what  it  was.

But  I  knew I  could  not  pretend  it  had  not  happened.

Hannah  came  to  my  door  each  morning  of those  3  days  before  the  sun  was  fully up.

She  brought  her  Bible  and  she brought  the  kind  of  steady,  quiet  energy that  I  would  later  come  to  recognize  as the  particular  quality  of  a  person  who has  learned  to  live  close  to  God  through years  of  private  practice.

She  would  sit with  me  and  read  passages  aloud  in Arabic  slowly  and  clearly,  choosing verses  that  spoke  directly  to  the situation  we  were  in.

She  read  from  the Psalms  where  it  said  that  God  was  a refuge  and  a  strength,  a  very  present help  in  times  of  trouble.

She  read  from the  book  of  Isaiah  where  it  said  that those  who  waited  on  the  Lord  would  renew their  strength.

She  read  from  the  Gospel of  John  where  Jesus  said  that  whatever we  asked  in  his  name,  he  would  do  so that  the  father  would  be  glorified  in the  Son.

She  read  each  passage  twice, giving  me  time  to  hear  it,  not  just  with my  ears,  but  with  the  part  of  me  that was  starving  for  something  solid  to  hold on  to.

The  doubt  came  in  waves  during those  three  days,  as  honest  as  I  can tell  you.

There  were  hours  when  the faith  that  had  felt  so  real  during  the prayer  with  Hannah  felt  distant  and thin.

I  like  a  fire  that  had  looked strong  in  the  night,  but  appeared smaller  in  the  full  light  of  morning.

I was  a  Muslim  woman  who  had  spent  40 years  building  her  understanding  of  God on  a  foundation  that  did  not  include  the divinity  of  Jesus.

And  3  days  was  not enough  time  to  completely  silence  40 years  of  theological  formation.

I  would find  myself  sitting  in  my  chair  by  the window,  watching  the  street  outside  and thinking  about  Yousef  at  the  Strait  of Hormuz,  about  the  American  aircraft carriers  positioned  in  the  Persian  Gulf, about  the  intelligence  he  had  received regarding  the  commander,  and  the  doubt would  rise  up  and  ask  me  what  exactly  I thought  I  was  doing,  what  a  3-day  fast and  a  prayer  to  an  unfamiliar  god  was going  to  accomplish  against  the machinery  of  a  modern  military  offensive that  but  Hannah  was  always  there  before the  doubt  could  complete  its  argument.

She  had  an  instinct  for  the  moments  when my  faith  was  wavering  that  I  could  not explain  except  to  say  that  she  seemed  to know  before  I  told  her.

She  would  arrive at  precisely  the  right  moment  with  a verse  or  a  story  or  simply  her  presence, sitting  across  from  me  and  saying nothing  but  communicating  through  her stillness  that  she  had  been  in  this place  before  and  she  knew  the  way through  it.

On  the  second  evening  of  the fast,  she  told  me  about  a  woman  in  the New  Testament  who  had  been  bleeding  for 12  years  and  had  spent  everything  she had  on  doctors  who  could  not  help  her.

She  said,  “This  woman  pressed  through  a crowd  to  touch  the  edge  of  Jesus’s garment  and  was  healed  instantly, completely  after  12  years  of  suffering.”

Uh  Hannah  said  Jesus  stopped  in  the middle  of  that  crowd  and  asked  who  had touched  him  because  he  felt  power  leave his  body.

She  said  the  woman  came forward  trembling  and  Jesus  called  her daughter  and  told  her  that  her  faith  had made  her  well.

Hannah  looked  at  me  after telling  that  story  and  said,  “Miriam, your  faith  brought  you  to  your  knees three  nights  ago,  and  Jesus  felt  it.”

March  the  26th  arrived  on  a  Wednesday morning,  and  I  knew  from  the  moment  I woke  up  that  something  significant  was going  to  happen  that  day.

I  cannot explain  that  knowing  in  any  rational way.

It  was  not  a  dream  or  a  vision  or  a voice.

It  was  simply  a  weight  in  the atmosphere  of  that  morning  that  was different  from  the  two  days  that  had preceded  it.

A  heaviness  that  felt  less like  a  dread  and  more  like  the  pressure that  builds  in  the  air  before  a  storm breaks  and  the  rain  finally  comes.

Hannah  arrived  early  and  we  sat  together and  she  prayed  over  me  with  her  hands  on my  shoulders  and  asked  Jesus  to  prepare my  heart  for  whatever  the  day  was  going to  bring.

I  held  on  to  those  words through  the  morning  as  I  moved  quietly around  my  house,  unable  to  eat  because of  the  fast,  unable  to  sit  still  because of  the  tension,  unable  to  do  anything except  wait  in  the  particular  suspended stillness  of  someone  who  knows  that somewhere  beyond  what  they  can  see, something  is  already  in  motion.

The  news broke  through  my  television  at  midday.

I had  been  keeping  the  Arabic  news  channel running  at  low  volume  in  the  background the  way  I  had  done  every  day  since February  the  28th,  not  because  I  wanted to  watch  it,  but  because  I  could  not bear  the  complete  silence  of  not knowing.

The  anchor’s  voice  shifted  into the  tone  that  news  anchors  use  when something  significant  has  just  crossed their  desk.

A  slight  quickening,  a tightening  of  the  professional  composure that  tells  you  before  the  words  do  that what  is  coming  is  not  routine.

I  turned up  the  volume  and  stood  in  the  middle  of my  sitting  room  and  listened  as  the report  confirmed  that  US  and  Israeli forces  had  conducted  a  precision  air strike  on  a  location  near  the  strait  of Hormuz  where  senior  IRGC  Navy  leadership had  been  gathered.

The  report  confirmed that  Aliza  Tangzeri,  commander  of  the Islamic  Revolutionary  Guard  Corps  Navy, had  been  killed  in  the  strike.

It confirmed  that  the  officials  present with  him  at  the  time  of  the  strike  had also  been  killed.

Yo,  every  person  in that  location,  the  report  said,  was accounted  for  in  the  casualties.

There were  no  survivors  reported.

I  heard those  last  four  words,  and  my  legs stopped  working.

I  reached  for  the  wall beside  me  and  found  it  and  pressed  my hand  against  it  to  keep  myself  upright.

No  survivors  reported.

Yousef  was  senior lieutenant  commander  working  directly within  the  commander’s  operational circle.

If  the  commander  and  everyone present  with  him  had  been  killed  in  the strike,  then  by  every  military  and logical  calculation  available  to  me  in that  moment,  my  son  was  among  the  dead.

I  slid  down  the  wall  until  I  was  sitting on  the  floor  of  my  sitting  room  with  my back  against  it,  and  I  held  my  own  face in  my  hands,  and  I  stayed  there.

I  did not  weep  loudly.

The  grief  was  too  large for  noise.

Oh,  it  sat  in  my  chest  like  a stone,  too  heavy  to  move.

And  I  breathed around  it  in  shallow,  careful  breaths, and  I  stayed  on  that  floor  for  a  very long  time.

Hannah  called  my  phone  twice, and  I  could  not  answer.

The  third  time she  called,  I  picked  up  and  said  nothing and  she  said  she  was  coming  and  the  line went  quiet  and  10  minutes  later  she  was at  my  door.

She  sat  on  the  floor  beside me  without  saying  anything  for  a  long while.

Then  she  said  softly  that  we needed  to  keep  standing,  that  the  story was  not  over  until  Jesus  said  it  was over.

That  the  report  said  no  survivors, but  that  reports  had  been  wrong  before.

And  that  God  had  a  documented  history  of being  the  last  word  in  situations  where every  other  word  had  already  declared defeat.

I  heard  her.

I  held  on  to  what she  said  the  way  a  person  holds  onto  a rope  in  water.

I  did  not  have  the strength  to  argue  and  I  did  not  have  the strength  to  agree.

I  simply  held  on.

The 26th  passed  and  the  27th  came  and  went in  a  silence  from  Yousef  that  confirmed nothing  and  denied  nothing  and  left  me suspended  in  a  grief  that  had  no  bottom.

I  prayed  through  both  days  in  the  only language  I  now  knew  how  to  use.

Not formal  Arabic  supplications,  but  the  raw unstructured  cry  of  a  woman  talking directly  to  Jesus  and  telling  him  she was  still  holding  him  to  his  promise.

The  call  came  on  the  morning  of  March the  28th.

My  phone  lit  up  on  the  table beside  my  chair,  and  Yousef’s  name appeared  on  the  screen,  and  I  stared  at it  for  one  full  second  before  my  hands moved.

His  voice,  when  I  answered,  was weak  and  slow  in  the  way  that  voices sound.

When  a  body  is  healing  from something  serious,  thin  at  the  edges, but  unmistakably  his,  yet  unmistakably alive.

He  told  me  he  was  in  a  military hospital.

He  told  me  he  was  injured  but stable.

He  told  me  the  doctors  and  the military  investigators  who  had  been  in and  out  of  his  room  since  he  was  brought in  could  not  explain  what  they  were seeing  in  his  file.

He  said  he  had  been at  the  location.

He  said  he  remembered the  strike  and  then  he  remembered nothing  until  he  was  being  carried.

He said  there  was  no  military  explanation for  why  he  was  alive  when  everyone around  him  was  not.

He  said  the  panel that  was  going  to  investigate  his survival  had  already  been  announced  and he  did  not  know  what  they  were  going  to conclude  because  he  had  no  explanation to  give  them.

His  voice  broke  slightly at  that  point  and  he  steadied  it  and said,  “Mama,  I  do  not  know  what happened.

I  do  not  know  why  I  am  alive.”

I  pressed  the  phone  against  my  ear  and closed  my  eyes  and  I  said,  “I  know exactly  why  you  are  alive  and  I  will tell  you  everything  when  you  are  strong enough  to  hear  it.”

I  put  the  phone  down after  Yousef’s  call  and  sat  completely still  for  a  moment  that  felt  outside  of time.

The  world  around  me,  my  small sitting  room  in  Alaware,  the  street outside  my  window,  the  television  still running  at  low  volume  in  the  corner,  all of  it  looked  exactly  the  same  as  it  had looked  before  that  call.

Nothing  in  my physical  environment  had  changed.

But  I was  not  the  same  woman  who  had  picked  up that  phone.

Something  had  completed itself  in  me  during  those  four  minutes of  hearing  my  son’s  voice.

That  is something  that  had  begun  on  the  evening of  March  the  24th  when  Hannah  knocked  on my  door  and  that  had  been  moving  toward this  moment  through  3  days  of  fasting and  doubt  and  floor  level  grief  and stubborn  desperate  prayer.

Yousef  was alive.

He  was  in  a  hospital  bed  with injuries  the  doctors  could  manage  and  a survival  that  neither  he  nor  anyone  in the  Iranian  military  could  explain.

And I  had  made  a  promise.

I  had  looked  into the  face  of  the  unknown  and  told  Jesus that  if  he  saved  my  son,  I  would  give him  my  life  completely  and  I  would  never look  back.

I  called  Hannah  before  I  had fully  processed  what  I  was  going  to  say.

She  answered  on  the  second  ring  and  I told  her  Ysef  had  called  and  that  he  was alive  and  in  hospital  and  that  the military  had  no  explanation  for  his survival.

Hannah’s  response  was  not words.

It  was  a  sound.

A  long  exhale followed  by  what  I  can  only  describe  as a  laugh  and  a  sob  arriving  at  the  same moment.

The  sound  a  person  makes  when something  they  have  been  holding  in faith  for  days  finally  breaks  through into  reality.

She  said  she  was  coming and  I  told  her,  “Yes,  please  come  now because  I  needed  her  there  for  what  I was  about  to  do.”

She  arrived  within minutes  and  I  opened  the  door  and  we stood  looking  at  each  other  in  the doorway  for  a  moment  before  she  stepped inside  and  I  closed  the  door  behind  her and  told  her  I  was  ready  to  keep  my promise.

We  sat  together  in  my  sitting room,  the  same  room  where  everything  had begun.

And  Hannah  opened  her  Bible  and read  one  passage  before  we  prayed.

She read  from  the  Gospel  of  Romans  where  it said  that  if  you  confessed  with  your mouth  that  Jesus  was  Lord  and  believed in  your  heart  that  God  raised  him  from the  dead,  you  would  be  saved.

She  read it  slowly  and  then  looked  at  me  and asked  if  I  understood  what  I  was  about to  do,  not  to  frighten  me,  but  to  make sure  I  was  walking  through  this  door with  full  awareness  of  what  was  on  the other  side  of  it.

I  told  her  I understood.

I  told  her  I  had  been  a Muslim  woman  my  entire  life  and  I  knew exactly  what  I  was  stepping  away  from and  I  knew  exactly  what  the  consequences would  be  if  anyone  in  my  community discovered  what  I  was  choosing.

I  told her  I  understood  all  of  it  and  I  was choosing  it  anyway  because  I  had challenged  Jesus  to  show  me  who  he  was and  he  had  answered  me  in  the  most undeniable  way  I  could  have  imagined.

And  a  woman  who  makes  a  promise  must keep  it.

I  bowed  my  head  and  I  spoke  to Jesus  in  my  own  words  simply  and directly  the  way  Hannah  had  taught  me  by example  over  those  three  days  of fasting.

I  told  him  I  believed  he  was the  son  of  God.

I  told  him  I  believed  he had  died  and  risen  again  and  that  he  was alive  right  now  in  that  room  with  me.

I told  him  I  had  seen  his  power  in  the survival  of  my  son  and  I  was  not  going to  pretend  I  had  not  seen  it  or  explain it  away  with  coincidence  or  military luck.

I  told  him  I  was  giving  him  my life,  everything  I  was.

Every  morning  I had  left,  every  prayer  I  would  ever pray,  every  breath  that  remained  in  my body,  I  told  him  I  was  his.

Hannah  said amen  quietly  beside  me  and  then  placed her  hand  on  my  back  and  prayed  over  me in  a  voice  so  gentle  it  felt  like  water moving  over  dry  ground.

Cook.

When  she finished,  we  sat  in  silence  for  a  short while,  and  I  became  aware  of  something happening  inside  my  chest  that  I  had  no religious  language  for  yet,  but  that  I recognized  immediately  as  real,  a warmth,  a  settling,  the  particular  piece of  a  woman  who  has  been  running  for  a very  long  time  and  has  finally completely  stopped.

What  I  stepped  into after  that  morning  was  not  a  easy  life.

I  want  to  be  honest  with  you  about  that because  I  think  testimonies  that  end with  conversion  and  skip  over  what  comes after  are  doing  the  listener  a disservice.

Being  a  Christian  in  Oman  is not  illegal  in  the  way  that  it  is  in some  of  the  surrounding  countries.

But it  is  not  a  simple  thing  either.

Gan Oman  permits  non-Muslims  to  practice their  faith  privately.

But  procolitizing to  Muslims  is  prohibited  and  the  social consequences  of  a  Muslim  woman  publicly leaving  Islam  in  a  traditional  community like  mine  would  be  devastating  in  ways that  went  far  beyond  the  legal.

My family,  my  sisters,  my  cousins,  the women  I  had  prayed  alongside  at  the mosque  for  decades.

My  entire  social world  was  built  on  a  shared  Islamic identity  that  I  was  now  quietly  stepping outside  of.

I  could  not  tell  them.

I could  not  invite  them  into  what  had happened  to  me.

I  had  to  carry  my  new faith  the  way  you  carry  something precious  and  fragile  through  a  crowded space  carefully  close  to  your  chest  with full  awareness  of  what  it  would  cost  if it  fell.

Hannah  became  my  church.

She was  my  pastor,  my  congregation,  my prayer  partner,  and  and  my  closest friend,  all  contained  in  one  small  and faithful  woman  who  had  lived  her  own version  of  this  quiet,  hidden  Christian life  in  Alcoer  for  years,  and  who  knew exactly  how  to  navigate  the  particular terrain  of  believing  privately  in  a community  that  did  not  make  space  for what  you  believed.

We  met  in  my  home  or in  hers  several  times  a  week.

She brought  me  books  that  explained  the faith  I  had  stepped  into,  simple  ones  at first,  then  deeper  ones.

As  my understanding  grew,  she  answered  my questions  without  making  me  feel  that any  question  was  too  basic  or  too challenging.

She  prayed  with  me  every time  we  met  and  she  taught  me  to  pray  on my  own,  in  my  own  language,  in  my  own words,  without  performance  or  formula, just  honest  conversation  with  a  God  who was  always  listening.

Can  my  prayers  for Yousef  became  the  center  of  my  daily private  devotion?

Every  morning  before  the  street  outside my  window  was  fully  awake,  I  would  sit in  my  chair  by  the  window  and  bring  my son  before  Jesus  by  name.

I  prayed  for his  physical  healing,  for  the  injuries the  hospital  was  managing  to  resolve completely  without  lasting  damage.

I prayed  for  his  mind,  for  the psychological  weight  of  being  the  only survivor  of  a  strike  that  killed everyone  around  him.

A  weight  I  knew from  the  thinness  in  his  voice  during our  calls  that  he  was  carrying  heavily.

And  I  prayed  for  the  military  panel  that had  been  convened  to  investigate  his survival.

This  was  not  a  small  concern.

In  the  IRGC, being  the  sole  survivor  of  a  strike  that killed  the  commander  and  all  senior officials  present  was  not  simply  a matter  of  fortunate  timing.

It  was  a matter  that  required  explanation.

And  an explanation  that  satisfied  a  military panel  operating  under  the  pressure  of wartime  losses  and  institutional  grief was  not  something  Yousef  could manufacture  because  he  genuinely  had none  to  give.

I  prayed  over  that  panel with  the  same  directness  and  confidence that  Hannah  had  modeled  for  me,  calling on  Jesus  to  go  before  my  son  into  every room  where  his  fate  was  being  discussed and  to  give  him  favor  with  the  people holding  the  power  to  decide  what happened  to  him  next.

I  want  to  speak now  to  every  person  who  has  listened  to this  story  from  the  beginning  and particularly  to  every  mother  who  is carrying  something  right  now  that  feels too  heavy  and  too  impossible  for  any prayer  you  know  how  to  pray.

I  was  you.

I  sat  in  that  chair  with  a  phone  call echoing  in  my  ears  and  a  heaven  that felt  completely  sealed  and  a  faith  that had  nothing  left  to  offer  me  except  the instruction  to  be  patient  and  wait.

And then  a  woman  knocked  on  my  door  and  told me  about  a  god  who  opened  prison  doors and  walked  men  through  fire.

And  I challenged  that  God  to  show  me  if  he  was real.

He  showed  me.

He  showed  me  in  a way  that  cost  the  most  powerful  military alliance  in  the  world,  its  best explanation,  and  left  doctors  and investigators  standing  in  a  hospital room  with  files  that  did  not  add  up.

He showed  me  in  the  voice  of  my  son  calling from  a  hospital  bed  when  every  report had  said  there  were  no  survivors.

If  you are  at  the  end  of  what  your  your  faith can  carry,  I  am  telling  you  there  is  a God  who  meets  you  precisely  at  that  end.

His  name  is  Jesus.

He  is  not  a  prophet who  lived  and  died  and  left  behind  a book.

He  is  alive.

He  is  present.

He answers  when  you  call  him.

He  answered  a Muslim  widow  in  Muscat  who  barely  knew his  name.

He  will  answer