Ilmseeker

Trying to follow the straight path of the strangers.

Archive for March, 2009

The Dormant Jinn: An Exorcism Experience

Posted by ilmseeker On March - 31 - 2009

I was talking to a friend in London, UK recently and he told me a brief eye witness account of a jinn possession and exorcism. He said Shaykh Yasir Qadhi was showing them a scene from a Saudi documentary about magicians and magic where the religious police arrested a magician in Riyadh. They told him to do what he does when doing his magic, the magician then started whipping himself! At this point when the Shaykh showed this video clip a sister in the audience screamed and ran out of the room, and it took 5 big brothers and about 45 minutes of reciting ruqyah (Quran and duas) to hold this small sister down.

You can check out the video below, the sister started screaming and ran out at around 1:45:50 of the video (when the magician whips himself). What happened was that, the jinn was already in her body from before, magic had been done on her for years and it was just lying in her dormant. But things can kick it off or “activate” it, such as Quran, dhikr and in this case the jinn didn’t like the video that was being shown.

The video is entirely in Arabic, called “Kaydu Saahir”, meaning “The Plot of the Magician”. Its two hours long and they show a lot of stuff the magicians use and explain how they do what they do. But if your just interested in the part where the sister was affected its at 1:45:50 when the guy starts whipping himself.

May Allah (swt) make us steadfast and sincere in His remembrance to help us to protect ourselves from the Shayateen, ameen.

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Money Scam at Islamic Center of DC

Posted by ilmseeker On March - 31 - 2009

So sad to read a story like this. kalorama-islamic-center-largeMay Allah (swt) guide the Muslims to the straight path and keep us steadfast upon it, ameen.

Alleged Money Scam Roils Islamic Center of Washington, D.C.
Charges, Countercharges at Mosque

By Del Quentin Wilber and Michelle Boorstein

In the Islamic Center of Washington, beneath the 160-foot minaret that towers over Embassy Row, a tale of intrigue has simmered for years. It is marked by bitter recriminations between two men who are credited with rehabilitating its reputation as a prominent symbol of Islam in the United States.

The center’s business manager has been accused of stealing $430,000 from the mosque in a complicated check scam. The key witness against him is the center’s director and imam, a Saudi who says he noticed the crime when he spotted too many checks being written to a gardener.

The Iranian-born business manager has a different story. He says the imam told him to take the money. About half was used to pay off debts and living expenses of two women who were close to the imam, and the rest was used to pay informants for tips about the mosque’s security, he said.

It was enough to confound a jury, which deadlocked 9 to 3 after the business manager’s three-week trial last May.

Now prosecutors are attempting to retry him, and the manager is firing back. He has accused the imam of committing perjury and obstructing justice. A federal judge is expected to rule in coming weeks on whether to drop the charges or prevent the imam from testifying.

Muslim community leaders say the controversy has remained mostly out of the public eye because the center, built in the 1940s by ambassadors of majority-Muslim nations, is not a typical mosque. The center enjoyed a relatively peaceful existence until the 1979 Iranian revolution, when it underwent an acidic struggle for control between the mosque’s board and a dissident group of worshipers, mostly Iranians opposed to the shah of Iran.

There were protests, arrests and other clashes. The board, composed of ambassadors from Muslim nations, locked down the mosque for a time.

In 1984, hoping to put the disputes in the past, the board hired Abdullah Khouj, a professor teaching in his native Saudi Arabia, to be its director and acting imam.

That same year, the board also hired Farzad Darui, who was born in Iran but became a U.S. citizen, as its director of security. Khouj later promoted Darui to be the mosque’s manager.

Khouj did not respond to interview requests made at the mosque and by telephone. Darui declined to comment.

Trial testimony and interviews with worshipers indicated that the men were dedicated to improving the mosque, which today is mostly a gathering place for the diplomatic community. It was this mosque that President George W. Bush chose to visit the day after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. Its Northwest Washington location, far from the large Muslim population clusters in the suburbs, draws a largely transient base of worshipers that includes commuters, students, travelers and a steady flow of taxi drivers.

Several worshipers who were approached at the mosque said they were surprised by the charges and countercharges, because the two men seemed to genuinely like and respect each other.

Both men echoed those sentiments on the witness stand.

“I trusted him like my own brother,” Khouj testified.

“I considered Dr. Khouj a very close friend,” Darui testified.

Federal prosecutors say Darui was anything but a friend to Khouj.

They allege that from 2000 through 2006, Darui stole $430,000 from the mosque’s “special account,” which was funded by the Saudi government to pay mosque expenses. Prosecutors said the theft was devastating: The center had to slash jobs and stop some philanthropic activity because Khouj thought the mosque simply couldn’t meet its bills.

“This is a case about fraud, it’s about theft, it’s about a man who took money that did not belong to him,” prosecutor Tejpal Chawla told jurors during Darui’s trial.

Prosecutors say Darui took advantage of Khouj’s trust and tricked him into signing checks for expenses such as electricity or insurance. After Khouj signed the checks, prosecutors say, Darui altered the payee information, inserting the names of one of his companies, Blue Line Travel or Zaal Inc.

The manager also cashed extra paychecks to staff members, prosecutors say.

Khouj testified that he noticed something was wrong in 2006 when he spotted extra checks being written to a gardener. Later, he testified, he was floored when he saw the bank statements showing unauthorized payments to Darui’s firms.

“My feet were frozen,” Khouj recalled during trial. “I could not even move. . . . Usually I lead the noon prayer. I couldn’t even lead the prayer.”

Normally, the FBI would examine the original checks to see whether they had been altered, but the checks had vanished. Without the originals, federal authorities had to use copies of invoices and copies of checks kept by the Saudi Embassy to introduce as evidence.

The lack of forensic evidence also forced prosecutors to rely on Khouj, who came under attack from Darui’s legal team.

Darui’s attorneys contend that someone doctored the photocopied records to make the manager look guilty. They also say all the checks — more than 200 of them — had been authorized by Khouj to finance the housing of the two women or mosque security expenses. Calling the women “mistresses” in court papers, Darui’s attorneys say Khouj, who has a wife in Saudi Arabia, married both of the women.

At trial, Darui testified that he did not report the arrangement because he thought the money was Khouj’s to spend and did not want to harm the mosque’s image. He testified that he and Khouj created fake invoices in case anyone asked about the unusual expenses.

Khouj acknowledged giving the women money from his personal accounts but said he viewed it as an act of charity.

At a recent hearing, one of Darui’s attorneys, Victoria Toensing, said Khouj lied about a variety of things, including a claim that he donated his salary to the center over a two-year period.

She also said it was difficult to believe that Khouj caught on to the alleged scam only in 2006 after he noticed an extra monthly check for the gardener. He had signed 58 such “extra” checks over the years, she said.

Federal prosecutors countered that they believe Khouj was truthful on the stand and that inconsistencies in testimony are common in trials.

They urged Chief U.S. District Judge Royce C. Lamberth to let a new jury sort it all out.

Source: Washington Post

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Awesome Resource for a Muslim’s Health

Posted by ilmseeker On March - 31 - 2009

I found this amazing resource online the other day - HealthyMuslim.com - A guide for Muslims and anyone interested in maintaining their health, fitness and longevity based off of the Quran and Sunnah of the Prophet (sal Allahu Alayhi wasallam).

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Muslims in the Workplace

Posted by ilmseeker On March - 29 - 2009

Funny video displaying some of the things Muslims run into at the workplace:

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Mercedes Benz Employees Suspended for Sending Anti-Muslim Email

Posted by ilmseeker On March - 26 - 2009

Anti-Muslim e-mail rocks Merc SA

Mercedes Benz SA has suspended two employees after they allegedly sent out an anti-Muslim e-mail, the company said on Monday.

The two - from the company’s Centurion head office - had been suspended pending a full investigation, company spokeswoman Annelise van der Laan told Sapa.

“This goes against our company philosophy and we view this very seriously… we heard about the incident this morning (Monday) and we then suspended them.”

Mercedes Benz SA also apologised to Media Review Network, the muslim website.

The matter arose after the website received an e-mail written in English and Afrikaans, allegedly from a senior employee of Mercedes Benz SA.

“The e-mail is accompanied by a series of horrendous photographs of the arm of a child being run over by a motor vehicle… the photographs are accompanied by Hebrew text,” Media Review Network said in a statement.

It said it found the e-mail “derogatory to say the least”. It sent “very erroneous and inflammatory signals about Islam and Muslims”.

The website took the matter up with Mercedes-Benz SA and received an apology from the Mercedes-Benz SA president and CEO, Hansgeorg Niefer.

Niefer assured Media Review Network that the employees acted on their own initiative.

“The policy of Mercedes-Benz South Africa, with regard to company resources is zero tolerance.”

Media Review Network said it had been advised that disciplinary action was initiated.

Niefer also gave the assurance that Mercedes-Benz South Africa would ensure that “something like this does not happen again”, according to the website.

Source: Wheels24

PRESS STATEMENT: Expression of ‘Regret’ from Mercedes Benz South Africa

The Media Review Network announces that it has received an apology from the President and CEO of Mercedes-Benz South Africa, Mr. Hansgeorg Niefer.

In his response to our correspondence Vis a Vis the Islamophobic material emanating from staff members, Mr. Niefer articulated his company’s regret and we quote: “I would like to express my deep and sincere regret for this incident….”   Mr. Niefer assured Media Review Network  that the employees acted on their own initiative.

The policy of Mercedes-Benz South Africa, with regard to company resources is zero tolerance and according to Mr. Niefer, “we instantly initiated disciplinary action”. Mr. Niefer also gave the assurance that Mercedes-Benz South Africa will ensure that “something like this does not happen again”.

Mr. Niefer not only spoke on behalf of Mercedes-Benz South Africa but also for Daimler AG in Germany.

Response From Mercedes-Benz South Africa to Media Review Network

We have been made aware, that during the course of last week individual staff members from our company sent out emails with content of which members of the Islamic community may take offence.

The respective employees acted in a private initiative and illegally abused our company email for this purpose.   Mercedes-Benz South Africa has a zero tolerance policy in this regard and we instantly initiated disciplinary action.

On behalf of Mercedes-Benz South Africa as well as on behalf of Daimler AG in Germany I would like to reiterate our pride in our long successful history and tradition as global multi-cultural and multi-national organisations.   In fact, our diversity has always been an integral and elementary contributor to our success.

I would like to express my deep and sincere regret for this incident and promise that we will do everything possible to ensure, that something like this does not happen again.

Dr Hansgeorg Niefer
President & CEO
Mercedes-Benz South Africa (Pty) Ltd.

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Ma sha Allah an excellent initiative has been launched to help our beloved and dear Imam Siraj Wahhaj (may Allah protect and preserve him). Recently Imam Siraj was diagnosed with prostate cancer in March 2009. Since then he has been receiving medical treatment and is in need of help to pay the medical bills.

I’ve met him personally on many occasions, the two most memorable ones were when we invited him to GMU MSA to give some lectures. I remember picking him up at the airport and driving him around town, and subhanAllah he’s just an amazing person, so down to earth and humble, friendly, helpful, I could go on and on, the man is a jewel in the Muslim community and he has helped countless people in many aspects throughout the years of his service.

He was there when we needed him; now he needs us! Please I ask you to check out the website that has been started to help him out and donate whatever you can for this project. And don’t forget to attend the online fundraiser for him as well, Suhaib Webb, Zaid Shakir and Faraz Rabbani will be speaking in sha Allah - Saturday April 25th, 2009 at 7PM EST.

May Allah (swt) cure Imam Siraj of this illness and give him health, give his family patience and make it easy on him and them in this trying time, bless him and his family in this life and the next life with the best, ameen!

www.helpimamsiraj.com

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Yasir Qadhi talks about IlmSummit 2009

Posted by ilmseeker On March - 24 - 2009

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Israeli soldiers use Palestinian boy as “human shield”

Posted by ilmseeker On March - 23 - 2009

The United Nations has stated that Israel has seriously broken humanitarian law by literally using a Palestinian boy as a “human shield”.

UN human rights experts stated that Israeli soldiers used an 11 year old boy as a human shied to protect themselves from shots from fighters in Tel al-Hawa, a Gazan neighborhood.

Radhika Coomaraswamy, (UN secretary general’s envoy for protecting children in armed conflict) said that the Israeli troops commanded the young Palestinian boy to enter buildings before themselves to make sure it was safe for the Israeli troops.

Coomaraswamy also told that Israelis shot innocent Palestinian children, bulldozed down a home that was still occupied by a woman and child and ordered some civilians into a building which they later shelled. She says that violations such as these are being reported daily and are too many to list. The UN verifies that the violations are in the hundreds.

Richard Falk, a UN human rights invesitgator says he also confirms that Israel has breached humanitarian law.

Falk says that if its not possible for the Israeli troops to tell the difference between civilian and military targets in Gaza,  and they keep launching attacks  then this is inherently unlawful, furthermore under international law it is considered a war crime of the largest magnitude.

This is totally disgusting. How low are these Israelis going to go? They have no dignity, no honor, no sense of guilt and the list goes on. Sadly as these events take place, the world stands by witnessing these horrific crimes and no one lifts a finger to stop these terrorists. Shame on the leaders of the Muslim world for not taking a stand. May Allah (swt) help the suffering Muslims through these trials and tribulations, ameen.

Source: PressTV

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Gitmo guard converts to Islam

Posted by ilmseeker On March - 22 - 2009
The Guard Who Found Islam

Terry Holdbrooks stood watch over prisoners at Gitmo. What he saw made him adopt their faith.

by Dan Ephron

guantanamoguard_in01_vl-verticalArmy specialist Terry Holdbrooks had been a guard at Guantánamo for about six months the night he had his life-altering conversation with detainee 590, a Moroccan also known as “the General.” This was early 2004, about halfway through Holdbrooks’s stint at Guantánamo with the 463rd Military Police Company. Until then, he’d spent most of his day shifts just doing his duty. He’d escort prisoners to interrogations or walk up and down the cellblock making sure they weren’t passing notes. But the midnight shifts were slow. “The only thing you really had to do was mop the center floor,” he says. So Holdbrooks began spending part of the night sitting cross-legged on the ground, talking to detainees through the metal mesh of their cell doors.

He developed a strong relationship with the General, whose real name is Ahmed Errachidi. Their late-night conversations led Holdbrooks to be more skeptical about the prison, he says, and made him think harder about his own life. Soon, Holdbrooks was ordering books on Arabic and Islam. During an evening talk with Errachidi in early 2004, the conversation turned to the shahada, the one-line statement of faith that marks the single requirement for converting to Islam (”There is no God but God and Muhammad is his prophet”). Holdbrooks pushed a pen and an index card through the mesh, and asked Errachidi to write out the shahada in English and transliterated Arabic. He then uttered the words aloud and, there on the floor of Guantánamo’s Camp Delta, became a Muslim.

When historians look back on Guantánamo, the harsh treatment of detainees and the trampling of due process will likely dominate the narrative. Holdbrooks, who left the military in 2005, saw his share. In interviews over recent weeks, he and another former guard told NEWSWEEK about degrading and sometimes sadistic acts against prisoners committed by soldiers, medics and interrogators who wanted revenge for the 9/11 attacks on America. But as the fog of secrecy slowly lifts from Guantánamo, other scenes are starting to emerge as well, including surprising interactions between guards and detainees on subjects like politics, religion and even music. The exchanges reveal curiosity on both sides—sometimes even empathy. “The detainees used to have conversations with the guards who showed some common respect toward them,” says Errachidi, who spent five years in Guantánamo and was released in 2007. “We talked about everything, normal things, and things [we had] in common,” he wrote to NEWSWEEK in an e-mail from his home in Morocco.

Holdbrooks’s level of identification with the other side was exceptional. No other guard has volunteered that he embraced Islam at the prison (though Errachidi says others expressed interest). His experience runs counter to academic studies, which show that guards and inmates at ordinary prisons tend to develop mutual hostility. But then, Holdbrooks is a contrarian by nature. He can also be conspiratorial. When his company visited the site of the 9/11 attacks in New York, Holdbrooks remembers thinking there had to be a broader explanation, and that the Bush administration must have colluded somehow in the plot.

But his misgivings about Guantánamo—including doubts that the detainees were the “worst of the worst”—were shared by other guards as early as 2002. A few such guards are coming forward for the first time. Specialist Brandon Neely, who was at Guantánamo when the first detainees arrived that year, says his enthusiasm for the mission soured quickly. “There were a couple of us guards who asked ourselves why these guys are being treated so badly and if they’re actually terrorists at all,” he told NEWSWEEK. Neely remembers having long conversations with detainee Ruhal Ahmed, who loved Eminem and James Bond and would often rap or sing to the other prisoners. Another former guard, Christopher Arendt, went on a speaking tour with former detainees in Europe earlier this year to talk critically about the prison.

Holdbrooks says growing up hard in Phoenix—his parents were junkies and he himself was a heavy drinker before joining the military in 2002—helps explain what he calls his “anti-everything views.” He has holes the size of quarters in both earlobes, stretched-out piercings that he plugs with wooden discs. At his Phoenix apartment, bedecked with horror-film memorabilia, he rolls up both sleeves to reveal wrist-to-shoulder tattoos. He describes the ink work as a narrative of his mistakes and addictions. They include religious symbols and Nazi SS bolts, track marks and, in large letters, the words BY DEMONS BE DRIVEN. He says the line, from a heavy-metal song, reminds him to be a better person.

Holdbrooks—TJ to his friends—says he joined the military to avoid winding up like his parents. He was an impulsive young man searching for stability. On his first home leave, he got engaged to a woman he’d known for just eight days and married her three months later. With little prior exposure to religion, Holdbrooks was struck at Gitmo by the devotion detainees showed to their faith. “A lot of Americans have abandoned God, but even in this place, [the detainees] were determined to pray,” he says.

Holdbrooks was also taken by the prisoners’ resourcefulness. He says detainees would pluck individual threads from their jumpsuits or prayer mats and spin them into long stretches of twine, which they would use to pass notes from cell to cell. He noticed that one detainee with a bad skin rash would smear peanut butter on his windowsill until the oil separated from the paste, then would use the oil on his rash.

Errachidi’s detention seemed particularly suspect to Holdbrooks. The Moroccan detainee had worked as a chef in Britain for almost 18 years and spoke fluent English. He told Holdbrooks he had traveled to Pakistan on a business venture in late September 2001 to help pay for his son’s surgery. When he crossed into Afghanistan, he said, he was picked up by the Northern Alliance and sold to American troops for $5,000. At Guantánamo, Errachidi was accused of attending a Qaeda training camp. But a 2007 investigation by the London Times newspaper appears to have corroborated his story; it eventually helped lead to his release.

In prison, Errachidi was an agitator. “Because I spoke English, I was always in the face of the soldiers,” he wrote NEWSWEEK in an e-mail. Errachidi said an American colonel at Guantánamo gave him his nickname, and warned him that generals “get hurt” if they don’t cooperate. He said his defiance cost him 23 days of abuse, including sleep deprivation, exposure to very cold temperatures and being shackled in stress positions. “I always believed the soldiers were doing illegal stuff and I was not ready to keep quiet.” (Navy Cmdr. Jeffrey Gordon, a Pentagon spokesman, said in response: “Detainees have often made claims of abuse that are simply not supported by the facts.”) The Moroccan spent four of his five years at Gitmo in the punishment block, where detainees were denied “comfort items” like paper and prayer beads along with access to the recreation yard and the library.

Errachidi says he does not remember details of the night Holdbrooks converted. Over the years, he says, he discussed a range of religious topics with guards: “I spoke to them about subjects like Father Christmas and Ishac and Ibrahim [Isaac and Abraham] and the sacrifice. About Jesus.” Holdbrooks recalls that when he announced he wanted to embrace Islam, Errachidi warned him that converting would be a serious undertaking and, at Guantánamo, a messy affair. “He wanted to make sure I knew what I was getting myself into.” Holdbrooks later told his two roommates about the conversion, and no one else.

But other guards noticed changes in him. They heard detainees calling him Mustapha, and saw that Holdbrooks was studying Arabic openly. (At his Phoenix apartment, he displays the books he had amassed. They include a leather-bound, six-volume set of Muslim sacred texts and “The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Understanding Islam.”) One night his squad leader took him to a yard behind his living quarters, where five guards were waiting to stage a kind of intervention. “They started yelling at me,” he recalls, “asking if I was a traitor, if I was switching sides.” At one point a squad leader pulled back his fist and the two men traded blows, Holdbrooks says.

Holdbrooks spent the rest of his time at Guantánamo mainly keeping to himself, and nobody bothered him further. Another Muslim who served there around the same time had a different experience. Capt. James Yee, a Gitmo chaplain for much of 2003, was arrested in September of that year on suspicion of aiding the enemy and other crimes—charges that were eventually dropped. Yee had become a Muslim years earlier. He says the Muslims on staff at Gitmo—mainly translators—often felt beleaguered. “There was an overall atmosphere by the command to vilify Islam.” (Commander Gordon’s response: “We strongly disagree with the assertions made by Chaplain Yee”).

At Holdbrooks’s next station, in Fort Leonard Wood, Mo., he says things began to unravel. The only place to kill time within miles of the base was a Wal-Mart and two strip clubs—Big Daddy’s and Big Louie’s. “I’ve never been a fan of strip clubs, so I hung out at Wal-Mart,” he says. Within months, Holdbrooks was released from the military—two years before the end of his commitment. The Army gave him an honorable discharge with no explanation, but the events at Gitmo seemed to loom over the decision. The Army said it would not comment on the matter.

Back in Phoenix, Holdbrooks returned to drinking, in part to suppress what he describes as the anger that consumed him. (Neely, the other ex-guard who spoke to NEWSWEEK, said Guantánamo had made him so depressed he spent up to $60 a day on alcohol during a monthlong leave from the detention center in 2002.) Holdbrooks divorced his wife and spiraled further. Eventually his addictions landed him in the hospital. He suffered a series of seizures, as well as a fall that resulted in a bad skull fracture and the insertion of a titanium plate in his head.

Recently, Holdbrooks has been back in touch with Errachidi, who has suffered his own ordeal since leaving the detention center. Errachidi told NEWSWEEK he had trouble adjusting to his freedom, “trying to learn how to walk without shackles and trying to sleep at night with the lights off.” He signed each of the dozen e-mails he sent to NEWSWEEK with the impersonal ID that his captors had given him: Ahmed 590.

Holdbrooks, now 25, says he quit drinking three months ago and began attending regular prayers at the Tempe Islamic Center, a mosque near the University of Phoenix, where he works as an enrollment counselor. The long scar on his head is now mostly hidden under the lace of his Muslim kufi cap. When the imam at Tempe introduced Holdbrooks to the congregation and explained he’d converted at Guantánamo, a few dozen worshipers rushed over to shake his hand. “I would have thought they had the most savage soldiers serving there,” says the imam, Amr Elsamny, an Egyptian. “I never thought it would be someone like TJ.”

Source: Newsweek

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Carpet for the Prophet from India

Posted by ilmseeker On March - 19 - 2009

A rather interesting find. 150 years ago the Maharaja of India had a special carpet made to cover the tomb of the Prophet Muhammad (sal Allahu alayhi wasallam), recently it has been brought to attention and will be auctioned off for millions of dollars. The making of this and purchase of this is a total waste of money, so extravagant and there is no basis for such things in the Islamic tradition, as long as the Ummah is caught up in matters such as this our condition will remain the same.

A carpet that was commissioned in India 150 years ago to decorate the tomb of the Prophet Muhammad in Medina is due to be auctioned in Qatar.

The rug, known as the Pearl Carpet of Baroda, was created using an estimated two million natural seed pearls.

It is decorated with hundreds of precious stones, including diamonds, sapphires, rubies and emeralds.

Bidding is expected to start at about $5m but experts say its eventual selling price could be far higher.

Tradition has it that the Pearl Carpet of Baroda was commissioned by India’s wealthy Maharaja of Baroda as a gift to sit at the tomb of the Prophet Muhammad.

The maharaja’s death meant it was never delivered and remained in India, being exhibited as a highlight of the Delhi Exhibition more than 100 years ago.

Later, it was taken by a family member to Monaco.

The tiny natural pearls, known as Basra, were harvested from the waters of the Gulf.

Created in the late 1860s, it is largely red and blue with swirling vines of flowers and three large round rosettes across its centre.

The carpet is to be auctioned in Doha on Thursday by Sotheby’s.

The auctioneers say it is not inconceivable that the carpet could fetch as much as $20m.

Whoever the new owner is, it is unlikely the carpet will sit on a floor - it is expected to be used as a wall hanging.

Audio: Henry Howard-Sneyd from Sotheby’s says the carpet is totally unique

Source: BBC News

Pics of the Pearl Carpet of Baroda:

pearl_carpet_of_baroda _45581023_carpet_466 pearl_carpet_of_baroda2

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