๐งโ๏ธ Ahmad al-Hassan: A Fabricated Mahdi from Iraq to America
If Dajjal has a final stage, then Ahmad al-Hassan is the shadow director behind it.
๐งญ Introduction: From the Hidden Cave to a Global Movement
When the narrative of the 12th Imam remaining hidden for over 1,000 years could no longer convince the ummah, a new actor had to emerge to continue the script.
Not through war, not through divine revelation, but through a powerful formula of magic — dreams, allegiance (bai'ah), and an unverifiable doctrine of occultation.
Thus emerged Ahmad al-Hassan, a son of Basrah, unknown in the world of hadith, fiqh, or jihad, yet suddenly claiming to be the Representative of the Hidden Imam, and ultimately, the First Mahdi among the 12 Mahdis as mentioned in the fabricated hadith of Bihar al-Anwar.
๐ 1. Background: Who is Ahmad al-Hassan?
Real name: Ahmad Ismail Saleh al-Katthami al-Basri, born around 1968 in the region of Basrah, Iraq.
He had no formal religious education recognized by any reputable Sunni or mainstream Shia institutions. He claimed to have received direct inspiration from the Hidden Imam while residing in Najaf.
His movement began to gain attention around 2002–2003, during the turmoil following the American invasion of Iraq.
While scholars were preoccupied with resisting occupation, Ahmad appeared with a "divine mission" — not to fight enemies, but to build a structure of hidden obedience to himself.
๐ 2. Ahmad al-Hassan’s Dangerous Claims
Ahmad al-Hassan did not merely claim to be a preacher. His claims escalated progressively:
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Representative of the Hidden 12th Imam — communicating through inspiration and dreams.
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Spiritual son of the Hidden Mahdi.
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First Mahdi among the 12 Mahdis — continuing the final message of the end-times.
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Caliph of Allah for the end-times — one who must be obeyed without question.
All these claims are anchored upon a single hadith from Bihar al-Anwar, Volume 36, Chapter 40, Hadith 19, which mentions that after the 12 Imams, 12 more Mahdis would arise.
It is claimed to be a testament from the Prophet ๏ทบ to Ali, hidden atop a stone during the rebuilding of the Kaaba.
None of these hadiths are narrated in Kutub Sittah, Musnad Ahmad, Muwatta’, or any authentic compilation.
They exist only in the fabricated books of Ghulat Shia, written over 1,000 years after the Prophet.
๐ง 3. Movement Structure: From Cult to Mind Control
Ahmad al-Hassan did not establish a madhhab, did not author recognized works of fiqh, nor produce authoritative tafsir or fatwas.
Instead, he built a structure of hidden allegiance based on four elements:
๐ a) Hidden Representatives
He appointed individuals in each country as his representatives called “Ansar al-Imam al-Mahdi”, tasked with delivering his messages of inspiration and collecting pledges of allegiance.
๐ b) Absolute Bai'ah (Allegiance)
Followers were required to pledge loyalty not through knowledge or verified proofs, but through dreams, gut feelings, or mystical encounters.
๐ c) Purification of Character
He claimed to be "the best human after the Imams," "infallible from sin," and possessing direct inspired knowledge from heaven — mirroring classical claims of Shia Infallible Imams.
๐ d) Enemy of All Scholars
He declared all scholars — both Shia and Sunni — as misguided, proclaiming that only he was divinely sent to liberate the ummah from the "darkness of false Shariah."
This is a sectarian protocol, not a religion.
It is not about seeking truth but about building a network of unquestioning allegiance.
๐ 4. From Basrah to the West: A Proxy for the Digital Mahdi
Ahmad al-Hassan laid the groundwork for the project of a false Mahdi in the digital age.
He pioneered the narrative that the Mahdi does not need to be recognized — belief in him only requires a “feeling in the heart.”
He also introduced the idea that the Mahdi would not emerge from Makkah, nor from among recognized scholars or holy lands, but rather from unexpected regions beyond traditional systems.
Thus, when Abdullah Hashem appeared — a fabricated Mahdi from America — bringing a similar script of secret books, dreams of revelation, and claims of being the final savior, the ummah was no longer skeptical.
They had been conditioned.
Without Ahmad al-Hassan, Abdullah Hashem would not have been accepted.
Ahmad was the hidden bridge from extremist thought to the worship of a virtual Mahdi.
๐งจ 5. The Impersonation Protocol: A Mahdi Who Self-Proclaims
The Prophet Muhammad ๏ทบ stated that the Mahdi would not declare himself Mahdi, but rather be recognized by righteous people and pledged allegiance at the Kaaba.
Yet Ahmad al-Hassan:
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Declared himself Mahdi through his writings.
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Publicized his own claim as the end-times savior.
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Built a virtual allegiance system.
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Mandated followers to believe in him through dreams and “inner feelings.”
This is not the Mahdi.
This is a fabricated character filling the void of identity and opening a giant door to Dajjal’s deception.
๐ซ THE SHARPEST CONCLUSION
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Ahmad al-Hassan is not a scholar, not a mujahid, nor an inheritor of the Prophet.
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He is the extender of the false hadith structure of the 12 Mahdis from Bihar al-Anwar.
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He built a cult of followers based on dreams, not on knowledge.
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He prepared the foundation for the acceptance of the digital Mahdi: Abdullah Hashem.
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He established a global hidden bai'ah system — a camouflage protocol for the leader of the end-times.
And whoever accepts Ahmad al-Hassan,
has already opened his chest to receive the final false Mahdi — Dajjal in the long-awaited disguise.
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