The Guardian (Nigeria)

On late Saa’du, other martyrs of COVID- 19 ( I)

“Surely, the religion with Allah is ISLAM, complete submission”... Qur’an 3: 19

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Martyrs? Yes. Martyrs they are. Drs Alfa Saa’du, Zaidi, Adil al- Tayar and others who have died since the outbreak of the ongoing global pandemic have become martyrs. "They were devoted family men, committed senior doctors, and dedicated decades of service to their communitie­s and patients; they gave the ultimate sacrifice while fighting this disease”, They are martyrs because that exactly is their representa­tion and descriptio­n in Islamic hermeneuti­cs. He is a martyr- “one who dies in a plague; he who dies of intestinal ailments; he who dies of drowning, he who dies under a collapsed building, and he who dies as a martyr in jihad”. Yes. He is a martyr - ‘ he who dies while defending his own possession­s; he dies while defending his own life or that of others; he who dies while guarding his own faith; he who dies fighting in order to defend his own family”.

Consequent upon a review of the sources from which the above perspectiv­es on martyrdom are evident, Imam Ibn Hajar alAsqalani states: “we can conclude from these traditions that martyrs are of two types: Those who are recognized as martyrs in this world, and those who are recognized as martyrs only in the Hereafter. A martyr recognized in this world is one who has died fighting in the cause of Almighty without having retreated from the battle. But those who are recognized only in the Hereafter are those upon whom the laws of martyrdom are not applicable in this world, although they merit rewards of martyrdom.”

But exactly who are the martyrs of interest to us today? Here are insights from their life history. Dr Zaidi “was a very well- liked and respected doctor and was the embodiment of what everyone looks for in their GP. He was kind, caring, friendly and jolly. The urge and desire to be there for the other in crisis, in distress and in pain constantly drove him to the edge”. He was already ready to put his own life on the line in order to save the lives of others. He sacrificed his own life in order that others may live. He became infected in the process. He died in the process.

One of former patients of his was griefstric­ken when she heard of his transition. She then said: “Dr Zaidi was a dedicated General Practition­er ( GP), and that dedication cost him his life." This statement is reminiscen­t of that of Napoleon Bonaparte. Bonaparte is reported to have said that: “It is the cause, not the death that makes the martyr”. In other words, it is not COVID- 19 that bestowed martyrdom; it is what those who have died stood for. Dr Zaidi and others died for a cause that would outlive them at a time their fellow men would prefer to die in the pursuit of the ephemeral and the chimerical.

What about Dr Adi al- Tayar? He “was an organ transplant consultant who graduated from the University of Khartoum in 1982. He had been working at Hereford County Hospital in the west of England as a volunteer in the emergency department amid the pandemic, where his family believes he contracted the COVID- 19 virus. He began to selfisolat­e when he displayed symptoms but was eventually hospitalis­ed and placed on a ventilator. He eventually gave up the ghost”. What about Dr Alfa Sa’adu? He was our compatriot. He was born in Pategi, Kwara State. He was a product of Ibadan, of the great University College Hospital ( UCH). He belonged to Class- 76. Upon graduation, he decided to travel out. He left for the ‘ centre’. He departed the ‘ periphery’. In the seventies and eighties, the United Kingdom was the Centre of the ‘ Centres’. On arrival London, Alfa Saa’du joined the British National Health Service and began his medical career as a consultant physician in geriatric medicine.

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