His name is Islam.
You live in Askelkamp.
And this kid is something else.
One day, I tried to do some kind of techniques with him
to do more discipline.
And his reaction was,
okay, you want to make me sit here,
I will show you.
He ran away from our center
and he threatened to kill himself.
This is not right.
I called his parents.
And the father was very honest.
I told him that there was someone from the street,
or from my family, from his brothers and sisters,
who came to his center.
Islam broke his friendship.
The small friendship that was here.
This was a foundation.
This was put here.
And he was the one who put it on him.
His sister, this little girl,
she was a famous woman.
She broke him, she broke him.
Islam doesn't do that.
Islam, when he makes a mistake,
he brings someone with him,
he protects him and brings him.
I see that Islam doesn't live,
but more than you, I don't say.
Islam doesn't live.
It does things.
And so the kid coming to us, showing us that
what else you can do?
What kind of ways you will teach me?
He grew up with that pattern of system
and he expects any system in the world is the same.
The only thing he needs, he needs options.
He needs somebody to believe in him.
And a lot of things change just with one intervention.
He became very interested in the center.
He became a great figure.
He became a Muslim.
He went to school.
From the school he was 12 and a half years old,
he went to school.
He was a center.
One, two, three, four.
What's the problem?
But how do you get in?
How do you get in?
Everyone is teaching them.
This will be like the big haram.
It's like this.
You sit under it.
You hold your hands.
Then you sit under it.
It's like this.
He became very interested in the center.
He said to me,
when you get on the plane, open your eyes,
and when you reach this white part of the sky,
I'll make you get on the plane.
I'll get on the plane because I'll send people.
He was very interested in me.
He changed my life.
He changed my life.
He changed my life.
