Sheikh Yahya Hussein, who has had incontestably a position of his own in Tanzania and East Africa generally, has died at the age of 79. This ripe old age is a mark of blessing in his life on the basis of what Scripture says about length of life, and it is clear it was also related to his career. Whatever precautions he is said to have taken, for instance walking barefoot several kilometers each morning, it was part of a wider anchor of things, not its cause.
It is hard to place the late scholar of Islam, who was well versed with the history of the worldwide club of the powerful, namely Freemasonry, to which he devoted his final years to teach the public about its nature, depth and influence.
His main activity, however, for many years was to predict events, in a camouflaged manner definitely, but more often than not, quite correctly. For instance, he talked about kidnappings of important people; the year isn’t out yet but there has been the ill-fated capture of Osama bin Laden, and then of course Dominique Strauss-Kahn.
Sheikh Yahya served as a sort of prophet in our midst, but as these are secular times, he did not assume the role he could otherwise have, in days gone by. He reached the zenith of his influence during the second phase presidency, as among the key personalities behind the wave of building mosques and teaching youths to learn the Quran by heart, though he wasn’t known to work with or support the groups bent on shouting: “Jesus is not God!” His position was moderate, like that of the late Mufti Hemed bin Jumaa bin Hemed, that the debate is faulty.
In the past year he chalked up some notoriety by predicting first that a person (not any person as it was apparently understood in some quarters) who would stand up to challenge the reigning president in the October 31, 2010 General Election would die.
At least one important person did not stand, whose position of influence he owed to JK, as if he had decided to campaign against him it could have put him in divine disfavour. So nothing was proved of that prediction; he also predicted that the polls could be postponed. He was wrong.
Towards his final years the Sheikh Yahya wrote extensively, especially about the Freemasonry and their links with the Sabbatic Goat, that is, the angel Lucifer. At page 30 of his coming book there is a conversation between King Solomon (a great figure in the Masonic tradition) and Lucifer.
All this contributed to a dimension of enlightenment that could only be discovered by some youth working on the Internet, or joining nefarious clubs of adepts of Satanism. With the old sheikh, it became a sort of pastime.
Still, many would be advised to stay clear of his advice on contacting djins and befriending them; the Quran warns on that, as djins are unpredictable, vengeful.
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