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PRAYER TIMINGS effective 02/10 1 Fajr Dhuhr Asr Maghrib Ishaa Juma 2 Juma MCA 6:10 12:40 4:00 Sunset 08:00 12:15 1:30 NOOR 6:10 12:40 4:30 Sunset 07:15 12:15 1:30 Muslim Community Association of San Francisco Bay Area Jumada-I 24, 1439 Feb 9, 2017 QURAN Whoever works righteousness whether male or female while he (or she) is a true believer (of Islamic Monotheism) verily, to him We will give a good life (in this world with respect, contentment and lawful provision), and We shall pay them certainly a reward in proportion to the best of what they used to do (i.e. Paradise in the Hereafter) [al-nahl 16:97] HADITH Narrated Abdullah ibn Umar (RA) the Prophet (peace be upon him) said: Allah, the Lord of honour and glory, will accept the repentance of His servant till his death-rattle begins. Tirmidhi. TO ADVERTISE WITH US, VISIT OUR WEBSITE: www.mcabayarea.org/newsletter MCA, c/o Newsletter, P.O. Box 180, Santa Clara, CA 95052 newsletter@mcabayarea.org www.mcabayarea.org (408) 727-7277 X416 JOIN THE MCA MAILING LIST

MCA NOTICE MCA Public Relations Committee is seeking Friendly, Energetic and Positive Volunteers The role of the MCA Public Relations (PR) Committee is to tell MCA s story to the public, and to promote its projects and activities with the Media and Key Channels. Your would play a key role in helping the general public understand the important role that MCA plays in shaping the image and repitation of Islam and Muslims with the Public Officials, Community and Business Leaders, Neigbors, Colleagues at work, and our Community at large. Marketing, Communications, Journalism and/ or Social Media background/ experience particularly in media relations preferred. For more information, please contact: Dr. Nadeem, Committee Chair at nadeem@drnadeem.com Apply before March 2, 2018 2

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AlAlusi Foundation, a 501(c)(3), supports humanitarian projects in Africa, Asia, Middle East, and Americas. HLA is one of many projects the AlAlusi Foundation is helping. FOR MORE INFORMATION: http://alalusifoundation.com http://en.homsleague.org/ CONTACT: DONATE NOW: ALALUSI Hesham FOUNDATION Alusi (501)(c)(3) http://www.alalusifoundation.org/hla Saadia Hameed Sheikh Mohammad Imam of MCA and Masjid Al-Noor Dr. Mazen Charbak Has extensive experience supporting the Syrian refugee crisis. Is visiting from England and manages the Widows and Orphans program at Homs League Abroad Saadia Hameed Educational Psychologist visited the HLA center in Amman four times and is leading the Rooms of Resilience project at the Jordan center Homs League Abroad (HLA) has six residential centers in Jordan, Lebanon, and Turkey. In total, HLA supports 750 Syrian refugee widows and orphans. The centers provide food, shelter, healthcare, rehabilitation and learning opportunities to widows and orphans. Due to the lack of funding, some of the centers are scheduled to close in the coming few months. Without these centers, most of the Syrian refugee widows and orphans are left on the streets. HLA is in urgent need of financial support. CONTACT: Alalusi Foundation (510) 887 2374 Alus1421@yahoo.com Saadia Hameed (408) 655-6957 SaadiaHameed2@gmail.com Join us for a brunch to learn more about the Syrian Refugee Widows and Orphans At the Centers Of Homs League Abroad Sunday, February 18th, 11:00am Sheikh Mohammad Dr. Mazen Charbak Saadia Hameed A fundraising dinner will be held at MCC East Bay on 2/17 at 5:30pm https://mccdinner.eventbrite.com Muslim Community Association Maryam Banquet Hall Adults $20 Children under 10: $10 Purchase online: https://mcabrunch.eventbrite.com Tickets are limited and will NOT be sold at the door 4

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Servants of Allah: African Muslims enslaved in the Americas By ABDUL MALIK MUJAHID Courtesy: www. SoundVision.com Diouf s study is groundbreaking not only in its theme but also its approach. This meticulously researched book for the first time introduces French scholars reporting from the eastern side of the Atlantic about the socioeconomic picture of those being enslaved. France occupied parts of West Africa as the French joined British slave dealers in occupying Africa. The book takes its audience back and forth between West Africa and the Americas in piecing together a history of African Muslims over four centuries. Muslims were certainly not at ease with their slavery. They were the early protesters and liberation leaders. The result was that as early as 1503 requests were being sent from Hispanola (Dominican Republic) to Spain to ban the import of Muslim slaves to the New World. However, the demand for slaves was so strong that no one paid attention to the pleas of the Spanish governors to stop the Muslims from coming. Abbu, the diary of a Muslim enslaved in America is being auctioned in New York. Muslims should purchase that. That s how my son alerted me to the Arabic diary kept by Omar ibn Said in North Carolina. Before we had gathered all of the information, the diary was auctioned off to a collector Derrick J. Beard, by Swann Galleries, New York. This is when my personal journey in search for the Muslim past in the Americas began several years ago. Omar ibn Said (1770-1864) is one of the most well-known Muslims who was brought to America as a slave. He was brought in 1807 to North Carolina. Although it is said that he converted to Christianity, the myth evaporates fast if you know a bit of Arabic. Just before Omar s death, a North Carolina newspaper published a photo of what it called the The Lord s Prayer, written in Arabic by him. However, when one reads the Arabic, it is Sura An Nasr (Chapter 110) of the Quran. Considering that it was written 40 years after Omar had been living under slavery, it is good Arabic. I noticed only one significant mistake; he added three words from Surah Al-Saff (Quran 61:13) to it. One must also consider that this was written verbatim when he was about 90 years old, shortly before his death. About six months ago, I visited the website Amazon.com to purchase Allan D. Austin s book African Muslims in Antebellum America: Transatlantic Stories and Spiritual Struggles. Amazon.com, in the style of the new online book selling culture, suggested that customers of Austin s book had also purchased Servants of Allah: African Muslims Enslaved in the Americas by Sylviane A. Diouf. Intrigued, I bought them both. Austin s book contains information about the life of about 80 African Muslims enslaved in America between 1730 and 1860. All of these Muslims were educated and left some record of their presence. Austin s book became the first to offer a detailed record of these Muslims that brings to life aspects of American history that are known by few. The book is enhanced by a good collection of photos and manuscripts. Austin is a professor of African-American Studies in Massachusetts. Diouf goes beyond Austin. While Austin honestly records and brings together the material scattered in museums and manuscripts, Diouf uses this type of information and adds sources from West Africa to build a thorough sociopolitical history of the four century-long struggle against slavery. Using fragments of evidence from slave narratives, diaries of slave traders and the Muslim history of West Africa, Diouf tells a compelling story that puts the Muslim struggle against slavery on the map of scholarship. This is probably the first book that focuses on Muslims struggle against slavery. Starting as early as 1522, when Muslims of the Wolof nation in the sugar plantation of admiral Don Diego Colon, son of Christopher Columbus, revolted in Hispaniola, Muslims have been in the forefront of the freedom struggle of slaves throughout the Americas. Some of the significant revolts were as follows: Mexico 1523, Cuba 1529, Panama, Venezuela and Peru in the 16th century, Guatemala 1627, Chile 1647, Florida 1830-1840, Brazil Bahia 1835. Most of these revolts were unsuccessful as far as freedom was concerned. These freedom fighters were ruthlessly crushed, hanged, burned, and even thrown in boiling oil. The Haiti revolution, however, succeeded. Macandel and Boukmen both were major leaders of that revolution and both were Muslims like most of the other leaders of the slave revolts. Muslims did not just lead Muslims; they were leaders of the struggle for freedom of all slaves. The language of secret communication among the revolutionary leadership was Arabic. Many Arabic documents seized in the Bahia revolution of 1838 in Brazil have been translated. Slaves who escaped established free villages called maroon villages. In many of these maroon villages and in the slave quarters Muslims often developed their system of education and secret Masjids. Diouf not only painstakingly documents the history of Muslims enslaved in the Americas, but also sheds light on how Muslims became the natural leaders of slaves. Diouf asserts that Muslims in West Africa were highly educated 7

people. Therefore, those brought to the Americas as slaves were also educated and thus provided the necessary prerequisite for leadership. Based on the French documents from West Africa, she tells us that 60% of the Senegalese Muslims in 1880 were literate. She quotes Baron Roger, a governor of Senegal, who said that in 1828 there are villages in which we find more Negroes who can read and write the Arabic, which for them is a dead and scholarly language, than we would find peasants in our French countryside who can read and write French! Unlike others who say that West Africa was predominantly Muslim (McCloud 1995 & Muhammad 1998), Diouf asserts that Muslims in West Africa were a minority during the 16th and 18th centuries. It was through the Muslim struggle against the Transatlantic slave trade that Muslim states and tribes rallied non-muslims to their cause. Their territory became a haven of safety for not only Muslims but also non- Muslims to safeguard themselves against armed slave dealers. Islam became associated with resistance to foreign rule and protection of the weak. Uthman Dan Fodio is the leading name in this struggle. Although the Muslim struggle in West Africa did not succeed in stopping the slave trade, which was purposefully being fueled by the English and the French through arms and funds to conflicting parties so they could harvest prisoners as slaves, it did, however, result in Islam becoming the dominant religion of West Africa by the 19th century. Muslims in America like all other slaves faced great difficulties in establishing families and communities. Muslims were subjected to double oppression in cases: one for being a slave and another for being Muslim. In several states it was illegal to even own a paper. However, wherever, it was possible they used their literacy to educate their children in Islam. Diouf does a great job in piecing together the first, detailed account of how a connection with the Quran was maintained by Muslim slaves and how Salat, 8 Saum, and Zakat were established. We learn, for example, that African Muslims were using Arabic grammar written in French to teach Arabic in the secret Muslim schools in Brazil. Muslims love for education continued in slavery wherever possible. Gilberto Freyre, the Brazilian scholar is quoted as saying in the slave sheds of Bahia in 1835 there were perhaps more persons who knew how to read and write than up above, in the Big Houses [of slave owners]. Diouf gives us an encouraging account of how African Muslims preserved their faith and maintained their religious lifestyle in the midst of a hostile environment to the best of their abilities. What happened to these Muslims when slavery was officially over? Diouf s book does talk a bit about why early Muslims in the Americas disappeared despite their heroic four centurieslong struggle. But, it seems that Diouf decided to leave this topic for another scholar who can provide a similarly through work on the subject. The topic is important not just for historical purposes, but for the community that is living Islam in the Americas today. A Guyanese Muslim leader I met recently in Trinidad wondered aloud why and how Islam disappeared. His question is legitimate, considering that we can draw valuable lessons from our past. Diouf does report narratives recorded as late as the 1940s about how Islam was practiced by some African-American descendants of slaves in the islands of the North Carolinas. Steven Barboza (1993) also mentions that in 1910 there were some 100,000 African Muslims in Brazil. Diouf asserts that the impact of the Islamic past survives in many things African-American s do today including jazz music. However, I suggest, the struggling Muslims in slavery are survived by tens of halfway houses towards Islam, that is religious movements that were established and flourished during the nineteenth and twentieth century. They began even before the disappearance of Islam in the early twentieth century. Noble Drew Ali s Moorish Science Temple (North Carolina, 1913) and the Nation of Islam (1930) were the two major examples of movements which challenged black Christianity. If the surveys are to be believed, about 45% of the six million Muslims in America are African-Americans today. The movements that declare Islam as their faith deserve the credit for preserving the quest for Islam from the end of the slavery to the current time. Aminah Beverly McCloud s African American Islam (1995) and Richard Brent Turner s Islam in the African-American Experience (1997) pick up where Diouf s history stops. Both write essentially about this transition period of Islamic history that I am calling halfway houses towards Islam. McCloud writes about how, in the first decades of the twentieth century, African Americans began to actively form communities that defined themselves as Islamic. McCloud writes about more than ten communities that define themselves as Muslims in the first thirty years of the twentieth century. In the 1960s Muslims, particularly those from the Nation of Islam, had a tremendous impact on the consciousness of Black movements. The Muslim heavyweight boxing champion, Muhammad Ali, ignited pride and dignity not just within the Black community but also among Muslims and people of honor everywhere. Later in the twentieth century many individuals like Malik Shahbaz (Malcolm X) joined real Islam leaving the halfway houses behind them. But the most significant change came when Imam Warith Deen Mohammed led and helped hundreds and thousands of his father Elijah Muhammad s followers make a transition to real Islam in 1975. This was the single largest acceptance of Islam in modern history and a tribute to the millions who struggled to preserve Islam through four centuries of slavery. Focus on the legacy of the four century-long resistance against slavery does not, however, provide satisfactory answers for those struggling to preserve their Islamic identity in the twentyfirst century in the Western Hemisphere. Did they disappear because of the efforts of the Christian abolitionists missionary efforts? Was it because of the dominant Christian culture? Or was it due to continued oppression by the white majority that made it impossible for Muslims to survive? Was it the absence of education with hardly any contact with the world of Islam and forced conversions that lead to the gradual disappearance of Islam? Maybe it was a combination of all of these factors which will require a fresh look on the subject by the next Diouf. Suppression of Islam and oppression of Muslims cannot be ruled out as a major factor. Answers will also require a thorough study of the last major rebellions in Florida, USA and Bahia, Brazil in the 1830s. What happened to those freedom fighters when their revolution failed? It may uncover the types of massacres that resulted in the ethnic cleansing of the indigenous nations of Americas. Forced mass conversion of slaves was a norm in the Americas not an exception. Therefore, we are not wondering about the disappearance of all, we are only asking about what happened to those

African Muslims who fought slavery, resisted conversions, freed themselves and whose heroic struggle to keep Islam alive is documented by Diouf. Could the culprit be freedom itself? Could it be freedom which finally diluted the spirit of resistance and survival which built the Muslim communities and maroon colonies? Did they gradually assimilate and lose when slavery was officially abolished? The challenges of the West are coercing free Muslims in America today to lose their Islam as well. It is not easy to be a Muslim in America. It is not just socioeconomic pressures, stereotyping, discrimination, and a $4 trillion dollar per annum strong Christianity, but also the media tools of this civilization which bring Haram choices to your living room. The challenges of freedom must be met by making the choice of good at least as charming and presentable as the choices of evil. Although a popular phrase repeated in the American media sates that Islam is the fastest growing religion in America, the fact is that not more than four percent Muslims in America attend Masjids on Fridays as compared to more than 40% Christians who attend church at least once a week. A good number of immigrant Muslims hug the American dream so steadfastly that they wake up to Islam only when it s too late for their children. Less than one percent of children attend any kind of Muslim schooling whereas 80 percent of Jewish children attend some form of Jewish education in America. A recent study found that more than 60% of people who accept Islam in the state of New York leave it within a few years (Ilyas Ba-Yunus 2001). Some say the historical movement towards Islam among African-Americans, which started at the heel of civil right movement of the sixties and seventies, has substantially slowed down. According to Imam Khalid Griggs, most of the top writers in the African-American press today are anti-islam, unlike in the sixties and the seventies. American foreign policy and the conflict with Sudan is helping the Christian crusade under the flag of anti slavery movement in Africa, which explicitly blames the Arab of Sudan for keeping the slavery alive in the African South. Hollywood has been also very thoughtful in picking its terrorism fighters who are now depicted as Blacks fighting Arab Terrorists to save America. There is a great curiosity among American Muslims about their history in America. It has given birth to a whole genre, which includes books and essays asserting Islam s presence in America as early as the thirteenth century. Steven Barboza s American Jihad (1993), Richard Wormser s American Islam (1994), N. Brent Kennedy s The Melungeons (1997), Richard Brent Turner s Islam in the African-American Experience (1997), Abdullah Hakim Quick s Deeper Roots (1996), and Amir Muhammad s Muslims in America (1998) are just a few of these books. Several monographs by Al-Ahari must be mentioned here which provided an early insight into this subject. This history may be the reason that the younger generation of immigrant Muslims in America is more attracted towards African-American Muslim leaders whose rhetoric for social justice resonates the centuries-long struggle against slavery and oppression. Four of the five most popular speakers of Islam in America today are Africans. It seems that writers of the last decade of the twentieth century have finally picked up where Alex Haley s book Roots and C. Eric Lincoln s book the Black Muslims in America left off. Haley placed Muslims at the heart of Africans enslaved in America. His was a novel with imagination and insight about a people who were his ancestors. Diouf s work, however, is the first through account of that historical struggle against slavery that began in the early 16th century on both sides of Atlantic and continued until the late nineteenth century. Diouf provides a detailed examination of an area of Black History that was pretty much ignored. I hope this work will fuel further research it certainly inspired me to study further. After reading in Diouf s book that a first surviving copy of the Quran from the slave era was recently discovered in Trinidad, I started contacting Muslims, journalists and historians in Trinidad. While I was unable to trace who has that copy of the Quran, it led me to visit a historical site in a dense rain forest of Trinidad where free Muslim slaves had established a maroon colony long before slavery was officially abolished. The site still needs full excavation. However, the Hinduled government of Trinidad is showing hardly any interest in the heritage of African Muslims. One of the significant notes to this study of the literature on African-American Islam is how Qadianis find a good position and reference. Their mission in America is about 80 years old and active essentially among African-Americans. Turner and McCloud devote a good portion of their discussion to them, while many other American authors including John Esposito routinely refer to their sources as well. It seems that the Qadianis mission with the African- American community is regarded with respect while these scholars are either unaware of their not being Muslims or this fact has been relegated to being some Pakistani preoccupation. In a recent conference of the Nation of Islam in Chicago, it was noticed that the most dominant translation of the Quran was that of Muhammad Ali, a Qadiani of Lahori branch. I thank God for Diouf and I pray for more scholars like her, not just for the extraordinary quality of groundbreaking research but for its timing also. Hardly a few months pass by when someone does not blame Islam for the continued slavery in Africa. While Islam got some blame for the African custom of female circumcision, not much independent study is coming out regarding the social conditions which are being described as slavery. I wonder when Christian missionaries and American foreign policy will discover untouchability in India, which is the most persistent form of slavery still being practiced upon 200 million people in India. The American Library Association has given Diouf s book the Outstanding Academic Title Of The Year award (Choice 1999) which this reviewer also had the honor of receiving (Choice 1991) for the book Conversion to Islam: Untouchables Strategy for Protest in India. Despite being an Academic book, Diouf s work is easily accessible. I recommended it for anyone who cherishes freedom and justice for all. Sylviane A. Diouf, Servants of Allah: African Muslims Enslaved in the Americas, New York, New York University Press, Washington Square, New York, NY 10003, USA, 1998, pp. 254 9

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Attention Donors In 2017, as you probably know, MCA introduced donation kiosks for the convenience of donors, and implemented a user-friendly and improved donation/payment management system. MCA is currently in the process of transitioning to the new system. Due to this transition, donors may receive 2 donation receipts for 2017 one via email and one via postal mail. Our goal for 2018 is to provide online access to our donors to the donations/payments system once we have successfully transferred over. Donation Receipt FAQ 1. When will MCA mail out the donation receipts? The donation receipts will be mailed out by 1/30/2018 (barring any issues). 2. What can I do if I do not receive my donation receipt? If you do not receive your donation receipt by 2/15/2018, please email receipts@mcabayarea.org. 3. I ve moved in the past year and need to update my address! Please email us at receipts@mcabayarea.org your new and old mailing address. We will update our records accordingly. 4. I ve got 2 donation receipts! Do I use only one or both? You can take both receipts to your tax preparer and/or accountant and they can calculate the total from both receipts. From a tax perspective, multiple receipts are acceptable in the place of a consolidated receipt. 5. There is (are) donation(s) missing from the donation receipts. What can I do? Please send us an email at receipts@mcabayarea.org with your a. Name b. Nature of inquiry c. Last 4 digits of the credit card or bank account number d. Date and amount of donation Once we have that information, we will be able to investigate the omission thoroughly. While we try to make this transition as smoothly as we can, we appreciate your patience during this time. Jazāk Allāhu Khayran 11

My Remembrance of Ali and Alia Zaki Yousef Salem I first met Dr. Ali Zaki at Masjid an-noor, or MAN, prior to the purchase of MCA. Dr. Khalid Siddiqi, who was the imam at MAN, and I founded The Islamic Education and Information Center (IEIC) and knowing of Dr. Zaki s passion for promoting a positive image of Islam and Muslims we invited him to join our efforts in that regard. His profound knowledge of Islam and the suggestions made the IEIC a more effective means of achieving our goals. He also became my physician and his knowledge of medicine and curing was very impressive. When MCA was purchased I attended a particular Jum a and I stood randomly beside Dr. Zaki s young son Hanny with his father to his left. He stood still throughout the entire prayer while other boys his age ran about making noise. When we offered our salaam at prayer s end I turned to him and said that I was very proud that he was very attentive and that his father must also share my admiration. I then became very good friends with Dr. Zaki s family that included Hanny, Hajar, and Hanna. Parents and I shared many delightful hours at his home where I met his wife Alia who was as a very dear sister to me. I was overwhelmed when they told me that their beautiful Grandson, Salem, son of Hajar, was named after me. Dr. Zaki was an accomplished doctor of medicine as a general practitioner and as a OBGYN who brought an untold number of beautiful babies into this world of wonders. Need to talk? Call National Suicide Prevention Lifeline 24/7: 1-800-273-(TALK) 8255 or Text CONNECT to 855-11; available 24/7 Non-emergency Muslim Helplines/websites: Stones to Bridges: http://www.stonestobridges.org/ Khalil Center: 1 855 5 KHALIL (542545) Amala: 855-95-AMALA (26252) Live person available: M/W/F/S/SU from 6pm-10pm Brought to you by MCA Wellness Committee, Khalil Center, and the Community Advisory Board Alia Zaki operated Noah s Ark, a successful day care center in San Jose. We all spent many delightful hours in constructive conversation and their family became a part of mine. My young Granddaughter Yasmine became very close friends of their daughter Hanna during the mid to late 1990s and every time I see Hanna she asks about her. Dr. Zaki and I spent many hours discussing numerous health issues and he was always in tune with the latest medical remedies for various maladies and his attention to a healthy diet deserves the highest praise. He would periodically ring me and ask that I watch a televised program on dieting or a particular medical matter of interest and I benefited from them and always rang him in gratitude. He also suggested several books to read and I have in my extensive home library several that he gave to me with his affixed signature. His Eid cards arrived regularly. My indebtedness to my very dear brother and close friend Dr. Zaki and to my very dear sister Alia Zaki shall never diminish, as, too, my fervent dua s for them. May Allah ta ala grant them everlasting peace and serenity in their place of rest and shade on Qiyama and most especially a place in Jannah Ferdaus al- Ala, as well as for us all insha Allah. Ameen ya Raab al alameen. The world may have lost two extraordinary persons but Paradise will gain them forevermore. 12

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CLASSIFIEDS To advertise with us, visit our website: www.mcabayarea.org/newsletter newsletter@mcabayarea.org 408-727-7277 Disclaimer: MCA does not endorse and is not responsible for products and services in the ads section of the MCA newsletter. MCA holds the right to reject or accept ads submitted. No ads dealing with a business deemed to be in conflict with Islamic principles will be accepted. DENTISTS/MEDICAL SYED DENTAL CARE GENERAL DENTISTRY Dr. Rafia Syed, Dr. Farhan Syed, Dr. Samia Naeem Open Sundays! Most insurances accepted. 1150 Scott Blvd. Ste A2, Santa Clara, CA 95050 Located near MCA and Masjid An-Noor. For appointments visit our website: www.syeddental.com or call 408-985-SYED MOHSENA AHMAD, DDS, Family Dentistry with a caring approach. Most Insurance accepted. Open on Saturday. 259 Meridian Ave., Ste 12, San Jose, CA 95126 (Between W. San Carlos St. & Park Ave.) Please call: (408) 275-0768 HESHAM AMER, DDS, MSD Board Certified Orthodontist Assistant Professor at UOP Offering braces & Invisalign for children and adults. www.amersmiles.com 259 Meridian Ave #10, San Jose, CA 95126 CALL (408) 297-8707 SARAH AZAD, MD El Camino Women s Medical Group 2500 Hospital Dr. Bldg 8A Mountain View, CA 94040 www.elcaminowomen.com 650-396-8110 650-336-7359 LUBNA AZEEM, DDS General Dentist 2016 Forest Ave, Suite 4, San Jose, 95128 Near O Connor Hospital Open Saturdays, www.calsmiledental.com Visit our website for coupons (408) 930-5238 SAMINA KHAN, MD Adult psychiatry Geriatric Psychiatry (Stanford University), Board Certified Altos Health Partners 525 South Drive STE 207 Mountain View, CA 94040-4211 Phone: 408-568-8628 ORTHODONTIST Dr. Zahra Ammari, DDS, MDS. Braces and Invisalign for adult and children. Saturday open. Please call: 408-275-0103 DR ZAKIYYAH HYATT, PSYD Psychologist Advocate Consultant Life Coach Building Productive Marriage. Parenting Your Child s Strength. Drzhyatt@gmail.com 1650 Zanker RD., Suite 230, San Jose, CA 95112 (408) 590-8655, (408) 475-5846 SNYDER TRADITIONAL MEDICINE Cupping/Hijama/Acupuncture/Herbs/Nutrition Amy Snyder, Licensed Acupuncturist & Herbalist 1361 S. Winchester Blvd., suite 206 San Jose, CA 95128 408-906-9645, SnyderMedicine.com TAX / ACCOUNTING Micro Tax, Audit, & Accounting Services, LLP Certified public accountants Tax preperation (e-file), audit, accounting, & payroll services. Call: M. Amin Haroon CPA, FFCA (UK) Ph: 408-986-9829 support@microtaxcpa.com AMERICAN CPA SERVICES. FILE YOUR TAXES WITH SAQIB AMIN, CPA 650.454.4960 or samin@americancpaservices.com We bring high level of knowledge, experience and education to analyze your specific situation for tax saving opportunities BUSINESS SERVICES AUTO HAUS EL CAMINO Complete Auto Repair & Service All work guaranteed (20 % Discount) 3100 El Camino Real, Santa Clara, CA. 95051 408 244-3634, Saranmoe@yahoo.com PIONEER TECH ACADEMY Technology Courses at MCA Courses in Database Technologies Cassandra, Oracle, MySQL Courses in Internet Technologies: PHP&MySQL, Ruby&Rails, Java Programming. Register now at: register@pioneertechacademy.com ADAM GLOBAL CONSTRUCTION, INC. General Contractor Lic # 838185 Contact : Alaaeldin Adam 408-661-1525, 408-568-8666 Email : aaldin.adam@gmail.com For all your Construction need : home addition, home remodeling, kitchen & bath remodeling, construction projects mangment. Your Community Lawyers! Immigration, Wills & Trusts, Debt Relief, Legal Issues in Pakistan, Biz / Contracts, Family Matters 510.936.8211 Outstanding Service, waqas@awlawgroup.com competitive rates! www.awlawgroup.com PRINTING SERVICES (Business cards, Flyers, Brochures, Banners, Trade show displays) AT Quick Printing Center - We do Standard and Custom print jobs and bulk mailing. Call: (510) 728 0390 or Email: info@qnrprint.com CLEANERS AND ALTERATIONS - $175 START. Bring 10 get 1 Free with coupons. Exp 8/31/17 Bellomy Cleaners, 1975 Bellomy St. Santa Clara 408-296-6584 Quick Cleaner, 1657 W. San Carlos St. San Jose 408-975-6109 EDUCATION FREE MATH AND SCIENCE TUTORING, MCA - Every Sunday, 2-4 PM, Men s Prayer Hall. No appointment needed. Just show up. Call (408) 732-1988 for more info. 14

REAL ESTATE ARE YOU THINKING OF BUYING A HOME OR REFINANCING THE ONE YOU CURRENTLY OWN? Call today for a free consultation. Salim Vasani 510-255-0105 NMLS #962486 salim.vasani@guidanceresidential.com www.guidanceresidential.com/svasani Home Ownership, the Sharia Way. MISC FOR SALE. GREAT AND WELL MAINTAINED Mediterranean Restaurant in a major business center, in the heart of the Financial District of San Francisco. Open 5Days/Week. Monday-Friday (7am-3pm). Potential for Catering and Delivery Services. For more Details, Tamer Massis (650)270-5739. Tamer1.realtor@gmail.com CALBRE# 01990288 SHAN SAIGAL-BROKER-408-505-9302 Pl. Call Shan to Buy/Sell/Property Management. 20+Years Experience in this area. Referral Realty Silicon Valley Shan@ShanSaigal.com Bre#00768704 GAMAL HALIM, REAL ESTATE INVESTMENTS Commercial & Residential Sales Foreclosure, Short Sales&probates License# 01352828, 20 Y Experience Email: jimisinca@yahoo.com (925) 525-1305 TANEEM FATIMA, REALTOR www.peninsulahomesnow.com Direct: 650-752-0793 Cell: 650-799-0404 BRE# 00916894 Coldwell Banker, Residential Brokerage, 630 Ramona Street, Palo Alto, CA 94301 ADAM ATITO TEAM FOR REAL ESTATE & MOBIL NOTARY www.adamatito.com 650-906-6883 20 + Years Experience in the Bay area. CSR Real Estate Services aatito@gmail.com Bre#01260271 INSURED and BONDED INSURANCE CONCISE Need Affordable Coverage? AUTO HOME COMMERCIAL HEALTH For a quote call Salah Visit us 1 block from MCA. 2062 Walsh Ave, Ste. B-2, Santa Clara (408) 567-1111 STATE FARM INSURANCE GET ALL THE DISCOUNTS YOU DESERVE Free Complimentary Insurance And Financial Review. Get 35% Discount on All Lines; Auto, Home, Life, Disability & Business. Call Sister Laila at 408-871-8889 2190 s Bascom Ave, Campbell, CA 95008. Laila. helmy.i47x@statefarm.com NON-PROFIT ORGANIZATIONS HIDAYA FOUNDATION Donate Zakat and Sadaqah for the poorest of the poor. Read about our 30+ projects at www.hidaya.org (408) 244-3282 RAHIMA FOUNDATION Help Us To Help The Needy. 2345 Harris Way, Suite #1, SJ, CA 95131 mail@rahima.org www.rahima.org (408) 845-0050 MOONLIGHT HUMANITY Orphans and Poorest of the Poor. Countries we Currently Support. Burma. Rohingya Refugess in Bangladesh. Cambodia. Cham-Vietnam. www.moonlighthumanity.orgoffice base in San Jose and Fremont 408-717-3737 PART/FULL CONSTRUCTION SALES PERSON AND PART TIME OFFICE MANAGER An Engineering and Construction Company is looking for a part/full time construction sales person and part time Office Manager. Candidate should have a good knowledge of Office Suite, good commination skills (written and verbal) and the ability to work under pressure and independently. Prior experience in the construction industry is a plus but not required. Please email your resume to hiring@citibuilders.com YOUR AD HERE! ADVERTISE FOR YOUR BUSINESS OR SERVICES GROW YOUR BUSINESS AND GET NEW CUSTOMERS Email: newsletter@ mcabayarea.org 15

Support Orphans Monthly Aisha (may Allah be pleased with her) narrated that, The most beloved action to Allah s Apostle (peace be upon him) was that whose doer did it continuously and regularly. (Sahih Al-Bukhari #8.76.469) Each month, Hidaya is supporting nearly 10,000 orphans and 5,000 widows in 6 countries (Pakistan, India, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Cameroon, Guinea) under two projects: Widow/Orphan Support: For $40 per month, all basic needs are met for a household of a widow and her orphan(s). No Orphan without Education: For $10 per month, all educational needs are met for each orphan child. Please help us with this effort of taking care of the weakest of society by donating monthly towards our orphans projects. Contact us to set up an Automatic Monthly Donation, or find out how to set up your monthly donation yourself at: www.hidaya.org/donation-page/automatic-monthly-donation/ Hidaya Foundation (408) 244-3282 www.hidaya.org mail@hidaya.org Hidaya Foundation is a non-profit 501(C)(3) charitable organization with Tax ID # 77-0502583