Friday

our honour' our dignity,our sister our aafia siddique...

ASSLAMOALIKM TO ALL OF you

ONE QUESTION TO ALL OF you
WHO IS IN PICTURE ?

DO U KNOW ?

MAY B SOME OF U KNOW HER N SOME MAY B NOT KNOW HER.

SHE IS IZAT UL ISLAM.

SHE IS UR SISTER .

SHE IS MY SISTER.

I WANT TO TELL SOME FACTS ABOUT HER :N ALSO Y SHE IS NOW IN THIS

CONDITION;


Aafia Siddiqui......Do you all know this Lady........She is a neuroscientist.......Accused for Attempted murder......Was in Jail .......Now sentenced for 86years........She is doubted to be in the attack of 9/11......a case which is an inside job.........Please ma brothers and sisters make dua for this sister who is great pain......Taken away from her three children......

Subhana Allah she is not a scientist but a student who was doing a research for her Phd
Siddiqui, after all, wasn't done with school. She entered Brandeis University as a graduate student in cognitive neuroscience. Though media reports in the past year have erroneously given her such technical-sounding titles as microbiologist, geneticist, and neurologist, the truth is that Siddiqui's training didn't lend itself easily to the type of terrorist acts that haunt us in our worst nightmares.

"They started with the whole idea that Aafia was involved in biochemical warfare," says Sharp. "She wasn't taking brain cells and testing how they reacted to gases. But there's all this news in the media about the changing face of Al Qaeda and the neurobiology scare, and now we've got this MIT graduate with a Brandeis Ph.D. who's cooking up all these viruses."

What Siddiqui was actually cooking up at Brandeis was more mundane. Her graduate work was based on a simple concept: that people learn by imitation. To study this, she devised a computer program and used adult volunteers, who came to her office and watched various objects move randomly across the screen, then reproduced what they recalled. The point was to see how well they retained the information having seen it on the screen.

Paul DiZio, a professor of cognitive neuroscience at Brandeis who was on Siddiqui's dissertation committee, laughs when asked if such work could be applied to Al Qaeda operations. "I can't see how it can be applied to anything," he says. "It's not very applied work. It didn't have a medical aspect to it. And, as a computer expert, she was competent. But you know, calling her a mastermind or something does not seem — I never saw any evidence."

What DiZio did see evidence of was Siddiqui's obvious passion for Islam. "She made many references to her faith in scientific conversations," he says. "When presenting a proposal about how some results would come out and whether they would support her theory, she would say, 'Allah willing.'" Though such comments may have seemed strange in an academic setting, DiZio says there was nothing radical about Siddiqui. "She just seemed like a very kind person."

She was also a person whose life was rapidly changing. DiZio recalls asking Siddiqui what she would do after earning her Ph.D. "She said something about how she had commitments to her children and her family, and that this is the way it was," he says. Somehow, Siddiqui's plan for a career outside the home had been lost.
if u want to know then click on this link;
http://www.bostonmagazine.com/articles/whos_afraid_of_aafia_siddiqui/page4


plz remember her in dua..she needs ur prayers.

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