This testimony illustrates how a genuine spiritual encounter with Jesus Christ can transform a person's life, even when it leads to persecution and family rejection. The story of Daliya Al-Mansouri, a Muslim nurse in Qatar who converted after experiencing supernatural visits from Jesus, demonstrates that authentic faith can withstand extreme pressure and that divine intervention can provide comfort and strength during persecution. The narrative emphasizes that spiritual transformation often comes through unexpected encounters and that truth ultimately prevails over falsehood, regardless of the cost to the believer.
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The Qatari nurse who survived hell and met Jesus.Added:
Brothers and sisters, when this testimony reached us, we had to stop and pray before we could even finish reading it. This is the story of a young Muslim nurse in Qatar who asked an elderly patient one simple question and received an answer that started a chain of events she could never have prepared for. What followed was weeks of supernatural encounters, a family that turned against her, and something so painful and so violent that we ask you to please listen with a sensitive and prayerful heart.
This young woman lost everything for Jesus. And yet, she is here today with a testimony that will shake you and strengthen your faith at the same time.
We have been praying for her since her story reached us. Please watch this to the very end. Pray for her when you finish and tell us where you are watching from so we can pray for your city too. Now, please listen carefully.
>> My name is Dalia Al-Manzi. I am 29 years old. I am from Doha, Qatar. And I want to start by saying something that I could not have imagined saying 3 years ago. I am a former Muslim. I am a follower of Jesus Christ. And the person who started all of this was an old woman in a hospital bed who had not had a visitor in 4 days. I became a nurse because I wanted to help people. That was always the reason. Not money, not status, just a simple desire to be useful to someone in a moment when they needed help. I trained hard. I worked hard. I built a career in one of Dha's hospitals that I was proud of. I was good at my work and I knew I was good at it and I went to the hospital everyday with the quiet satisfaction of a person who is doing what they were made to do.
I was also a Muslim, a genuine Muslim, not just by name or family background, but by personal conviction. I prayed. I fasted. I believed in Allah and in the prophet and in the faith that had been the structure of my life since I was old enough to understand what structure meant. I was not extreme. I was not the kind of person who argued with others about religion or who saw everyone outside the faith as an enemy. But I was settled. I was certain. I had no questions about what I believed because nothing in my life had ever given me a reason to ask them. Then they admitted the old woman to my ward. Her name was Om Tariq. She was 67 years old. She came in alone. No family member beside her, no friend holding her hand, no one in the chair beside the bed. When I came to check on her the first morning, I did not think much of it at first. Sometimes patients come alone. Sometimes family members are delayed or working or far away. I did my checks and I was professional and I moved on to the next patient. The second day she was still alone. The third day, still alone. By the fourth day, I could not help it.
Something in me that had been trained to notice what patients need beyond the medical began to notice that this woman had not had a single visitor. She was cheerful enough. She smiled when I came in. She thanked me for everything. She had the particular settled quality of a person who has learned over a long life to be comfortable in her own company.
But she was alone in a way that I found myself thinking about when I was not in her room. On the fourth day, I sat down beside her bed after my other checks were done and I asked her about her children. It was a natural question. A woman her age in Qatar in a hospital and no family coming. Where were her children? She looked at me for a moment with an expression I could not read.
Then she smiled, a different smile from the polite, grateful smile she had been giving me all week. something older and deeper in it. She said she had children, three of them, but they had not spoken to her in many years. She said this without bitterness, with a sadness that was real, but that had been lived with long enough to have found a kind of peace alongside itself. I asked why. I probably should not have. It was personal and I was her nurse, not her friend. But something made me ask, she said, "Because I became a Christian 40 years ago. And in this country, in my family, that was not something that could be forgiven. I sat with that for a moment. 40 years. This woman had been alone for 40 years because she had changed her faith. Her children had grown up without her. Or she had watched them grow up from his distance, excluded from the ordinary life of a family because she had made a choice that the family could not accept. I asked her and I want to be honest. I asked this with the genuine curiosity of someone who could not understand the answer, not with cruelty. I asked her how she could have left Islam, a true religion, for something false. I asked this the way I would have asked anyone from inside the certainty that what I had was right and what she had chosen was wrong. She did not get defensive. She did not argue.
She looked at me with those calm eyes and she said, "Let me tell you what happened to me." 40 years ago, um, Tariq had been sick. Not the moderate sickness that responds to treatment, a serious [laughter] sickness, the kind that the doctors had looked at and shaken their heads over, the kind that was taking things from her body that were not coming back. She had prayed. She had asked Allah to heal her with the full sincerity of a woman who had never doubted her faith and had every reason to expect that her faith would be answered. She had done everything she knew to do. She was not healed. She told me this without drama. She was not angry about it. Not anymore. Perhaps she had been once, but 40 years is a long time.
And whatever anger had been there had resolved into something quieter. She simply said that she had prayed and prayed and the sickness had continued.
And one night in her room, she had been so low, so completely empty of hope.
That she had done something she had never done before. She had spoken to Jesus, not because she believed in him.
She did not. She had been taught exactly what I had been taught about who he was and what he was not, but because she had run out of everyone else to speak to, and the name was there, and she said it.
She said his name and asked him if he was real to help her. She told me what happened next slowly and carefully. The way a person tells something they have told before, but that has never lost its weight for the telling. She said the room changed. She said a warmth came into it that had no physical source. She said she felt something move through her body, not dramatically, not with pain or noise, but with the quiet thoroughess of something that knows exactly what it is doing and does it completely. She said she fell asleep and woke up and the thing that had been wrong with her body was different. And in the days that followed, the difference became undeniable and the doctors became confused and she became a Christian. She told me this whole account sitting up in her hospital bed with her hands folded in her lap and her eyes steady and her voice completely calm. She was not trying to convert me. She was not performing the story for effect. She was simply telling me what had happened to her. The way you tell someone what happened to you when they have asked.
When she finished, she looked at me for a moment. Then she said something that I have thought about everyday since. She said, "I will say one thing to you, my daughter. If Jesus is real, may he visit you. And if Islam is real, may Allah visit you. Let the truth find you itself." Then she smiled her deep smile and she asked me if I could bring her some water. I brought the water. I went about my shift. I told myself the old woman was sincere but mistaken. That what she had experienced 40 years ago had a natural explanation and that her loneliness had perhaps made her more attached to the story than the story deserved. I told myself this with the confidence of someone who has a settled answer and is not looking to disturb it.
But the words stayed with me. If Jesus is real, may he visit you. If Islam is real, may Allah visit you. I could not put them down. Tarik was discharged 2 weeks later. I helped her with the paperwork. I walked her to the door. She hugged me. The hug of an old woman who has learned that warmth is one of the things worth giving freely because it costs nothing means it's everything. And she told me she would pray for me. I thanked her. I watched her walk out of the hospital alone the same way she had come in and I went back to my ward and I thought I hope someone is kind to her out there. Three weeks passed. Ordinary weeks shifts patience the rhythm of hospital work that fills the days completely if you let it. I had not forgotten but I had filed her story in the part of my mind where interesting things that do not change anything are kept. Then the visits began. The first one came at night. I was in that place between being awake and being asleep.
Not fully in either. The way you float sometimes in the last minutes before sleep takes you. And he was there. Not a dream in the ordinary sense. I know my dreams. I have had them for 29 years.
This was different. This was presence. A figure in light, mere, specific, looking at me with eyes that I cannot describe except to say that they contained something I had never seen directed at me before in my life. Complete knowledge and complete warmth at the same time.
Not one or the other. Both simultaneously, without contradiction, he did not say many words in that first visit. What he communicated was more like an invitation than a speech. An opening, a door shown, the sense of something being made available that had always been available and that I was only now being shown the location of. I woke up with my heart beating fast and lay in the dark of my room and told myself it was a dream produced by the old woman's story sitting in my mind. He came back the next night and the night after that. Each time the same presence, each time slightly more, more clarity, more specific communication, more of the particular quality of being known completely that I had felt in the first visit and that I found that spite myself that I wanted to feel again. He spoke to me about who he was, about what he had done, about what was available on the other side of the door he was showing me. He spoke with a gentleness that was also completely certain. Not the gentleness of someone who is not sure they are right, but the gentleness of someone who is completely sure and chooses gentleness anyway. Because gentleness is what the situation calls for. After many nights of this, I was in a state that I can only describe as shocked stillness. Everything on the surface of my life looked the same. I went to work. I cared for my patients. I came home. I ate. I slept. But underneath the surface, something was happening that was reorganizing everything. The certainty I had carried my whole life. The settled, unquestioned certainty of a woman who has never had a reason to ask the deep questions was not gone, but it had been opened. Something had gotten in through the opening and was moving through it slowly and thoroughly. The way water moves through a space that it has found. I thought about Tariq every day. I thought about what she had said. If Jesus is real, may he visit you? He was visiting me. He had been visiting me for weeks. And whatever I called it and whatever I told myself about it, I knew in the place where honest knowledge lives that it was not a dream and it was not my own mind producing something to comfort itself and it was not the product of suggestion or tiredness or professional stress. It was real. He was real. and and the knowledge of his reality was sitting in my chest like something that had taken root and that I could feel growing whether I wanted it to or not. I accepted Jesus on a quiet night in my room in Doha alone with no one to witness it and no ceremony to mark it. I simply said yes. Yes to the presence that had been visiting me. Yes to the invitation that had been extended. Yes to the truth that Umarik had carried alone for 40 years and that had found its way to me through a hospital bed and a cup of water and one sentence that I could not put down. I said yes and the warmth that had been in the visits filled the room and I wept and I was not the same person who had laid down in that bed. I was not careful enough.
Looking back I can see the moments where I made choices that sped the discovery.
stopping the morning prayer. The absence of the routine that my family had watched me perform my whole life. The particular distance that comes over a person who is carrying something they have not yet shared. My mother noticed first. She asked questions. I gave careful answers that were not quite lies but that were not the truth either and that she could feel were not the truth because mothers feel these things. My father found out on a Friday. I do not know exactly how whether my mother told him or whether he had been watching and had reached his own conclusion. He came to my room and he asked me directly and I told him directly because I had decided that the truth was the only thing I had that was worth protecting. I told him what had happened. The old woman, the words, the visits, the yes I had said alone in my room. He looked at me for a long time when I finished. Then he said words that I will carry for the rest of my life. Not because they were kind, but because they were said by my father and because the weight of a father's words on a daughter, does not depend on whether the words are kind. He said I was dead to him. He said I had betrayed everything and everyone. He said my name would not be spoken in this house again. My brother was worse than my father in the way that young men who have been told their whole lives that honor requires action are worse than fathers who have lived long enough to know that action has consequences. He tied my hands. He and my father took turns trying to force the words out of me. The renunciation, the return, the statement that what I had experienced was false and that Jesus was not who I had said he was. They wanted the words.
They needed the words because without the words the situation was unresolved and a situation like this in a family like mine in a community like ours cannot be left unresolved. I did not give them the words. Not because I was particularly brave. I want to be honest about this. I was frightened. I was in pain. I was sitting in my father's house with my hands tied and my brother's voice raised and everything I had grown up inside pressing down on me from every direction simultaneously.
But I could not say that what I had experienced was false. I could not say that the presence in my room had not been there. I could not look at the face of my father and say that Jesus was not real when Jesus had been in my room for weeks. And I knew with the knowing that comes from direct experience that he was the realest thing I had ever encountered. The more they pressed, the more something in me that I did not know was there became clear and strong. Not defiance, not the stubbornness of a person who is refusing to back down because backing down would feel like losing. Something calmer than defiance and more solid. a knowing that what I had was worth what it was costing, and that the one who had visited me in my room had not left when my father said I was dead to him. He was present in the tied hands and the raised voice and the pressure, just as he had been present in the quiet of my room at night. He was present in all of it. They came for me on a Thursday morning, five men. I did not know all of them. Two of them I recognized from the community. Three of them were strangers. My brother handed me to them with the expression of a person who has decided something and has finished deciding it and does not want to look at it anymore. They put me in a vehicle. They drove. I knew what was happening. I am not going to pretend I did not understand where this was going.
I had grown up in an environment where I knew what happened to people in my situation. And I understood from the direction we were traveling and the silence in the vehicle and the faces of the men around me that I was being taken somewhere outside the city for a reason that had a clear and specific end. What happened when they stopped the vehicle is something I am going to tell you about with honesty and without hiding from it because it happened and it is part of the story and the women who have experienced what I experienced deserve to have it spoken about rather than kept in silence. But I am also going to tell it the way that honors what it was rather than describing it in detail that serves no purpose except to cause pain.
They did not kill me. What they did instead was something that I believe they thought was worse than killing. A destruction of a different kind intended to break something in me that the beating and the tying and the pressure had not broken. Five men outside the city. And I want to tell you what I experienced in those moments because I think it is important and because I believe other women who have been through something similar need to know that they are not alone in what they felt. I felt everything. The first minutes were terror and pain and the particular horror of complete powerlessness of a body that belongs to you being treated as if it does not belong to you as if you are not in it as if the person inside it has no standing or authority or worth. I want to say clearly that this is a lie. It was a lie then and it is a lie now. My worth was not in that field outside Dha. My worth was in the room in Doha where a presence had visited me and known me completely and looked at me with warmth. My worth was established there and what happened in that field could not reach where my worth was established. But I felt it. I felt the terror and the pain and the powerlessness. And then and this is the part I need to tell you about because it is the most important part. Something else came. The same warmth, the same presence. In the worst moment of the worst thing that has ever happened to my body. The one who had been in my room was in that field. He was there. He did not remove me from what was happening.
But he was in it with me in a way that I felt physically. A warmth that held me underneath the pain. That told me without words that I was seen and that this was not the end and that he had not left. I lost consciousness. I do not know exactly when. The last thing I remember clearly is the sky above me and the warmth that was in me that should not have been there. And then nothing. I woke up in a room I did not recognize.
Clean, quiet, a ceiling I had never seen before. And a young man sitting in a chair nearby who stood up quickly when he saw my eyes open and said said words that I could not immediately process because my mind was still finding its way back from wherever it had been. His name was Samir. He was 26 years old. He had been driving on the road outside the city, a road he did not normally use. He told me later one he had taken that day for a reason he could not fully explain except that something had directed him that way. He had seen the men leaving.
He had seen me on the ground. He had not been able to leave me there. He had waited until they were gone. And then he had picked me up and brought me to his home and called a doctor he trusted. I was there for many days. The recovery was physical and it was other things as well. The kind of recovery that does not have a medical name and that does not show up in any test but that is as real as the physical damage and that takes its own time. Samir was patient. He did not ask me questions I was not ready to answer. He brought food and made sure I had what I needed and gave me the space to return to myself at the pace that returning required. When I was well enough to talk properly, I told him what had happened. Not everything, not all at once, but enough. I told him about the old woman and the hospital and the visits and the yes I had said in my room. I told him what my family had done. I told him what the five men had done outside the city. I told him all of it and he listened with the full attention of a person who is receiving something serious and treating it as the serious thing it is. A few days after that conversation, Samir told me that he had been thinking about what I had shared. That something in my account had reached a place in him that he had not known was reachable. He was not a committed Muslim. He practiced in the cultural way the way many people practiced without deep personal conviction. But he had never been interested in Christianity. What I had shared had made him interested. He asked me to tell him more about Jesus. I told him everything I knew, which was not much. I was new to this myself. I was still learning. I was still in the early days of understanding what I had said yes to. But I told him what I had experienced and what the old woman had told me and what the visits had communicated to me. And a week later, Samir gave his life to Christ. We attended an underground church together.
Quietly, carefully, the way everything must be done in our situation. We grow in faith together the way two people grow when they are learning something new in a difficult place and only have each other and God to learn with. And somewhere in the growing we fell in love. Not dramatically quietly the way real things happen gradually and then undeniably. We are married now. We have a daughter. She is the most beautiful thing I have ever seen. and she was born into a home where both her parents know Jesus and love him and are raising her in that knowledge. She does not know yet the full story of how she came to exist.
She is too young for it, but one day she will know. She will know that her mother was a nurse who sat beside a hospital bed and heard an old woman speak one sentence that could not be put down. She will know that her father drove down a road he did not normally take because something directed him there. She will know that the one who put it all together is Jesus and that he is worth every single thing that was paid for her to be here. I think about Tariq. I have tried to find her. I have not been successful. She is an old woman alone in a city and alone people are not always easy to find. But I pray for her everyday. I pray that she knows what she started in a hospital room in Dha when she told a young Muslim nurse about the night Jesus healed her and left her with one sentence that changed everything. If Jesus is real, may he visit you. He visited me in my room at night and in a field outside the city and in a house where a young man had brought me in from the ground. He visited me in all of those places and he has not stopped visiting. He is in my home now. In the ordinary days of my life with Samir and our daughter in the underground church where we sit with people who are paying their own prices for the same truth. I am a nurse. I still believe I was made to help people in their moments of need.
But I understand now that the most important help I ever received came not from any medical training or professional skill. It came from an old woman who had been alone for 40 years and who chose to tell the truth to the person taking care of her. It came from a presence that visited a young Muslim woman in Doha until she ran out of reasons to say no. And it came from a man who took a road he did not normally take on a day when someone needed him to take it. Jesus arranged all of it. Every piece of it from the hospital bed to the road to the room where I woke up, he arranged it and he was in it. and he is in the life that came out of it. That is my testimony and I am not finished living it yet. My prayer requests for Amtarik wherever she is that she would know what her one sentence did. That the loneliness of 40 years would be met with the fullness of his presence every day and that the children who left her would find their way back to her before it is too late. For Samir, my husband, that his faith would grow strong and deep in the difficult place where we are living it. For our daughter, that she would grow up knowing fully the one who made a way for her to exist. For the women who have experienced what I experienced in that field, that they would know their worse was never there. That it was established somewhere the pain could not reach. And that the one who was with me in that field is with them too. And for every believer praying for persecuted Christians, please do not stop. Your prayers reach us. We feel them. Keep going.
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