Name: Ayesha Noor
Profile: Christian family from Pakistan living in Malaysia since 2014.
Advantages: UN-certified, Excellent English skills,
Risk: At risk of being caught and killed by the extremists in Pakistan.
Canadian contact: Stephen Watt
After Ayesha (A Christian woman) and her family were threatened by Muslim Extremists in Pakistan, they fled to Malaysia in 2014. In Malaysia, her husband, who had married her by force years ago, was not truthful to her and her family. He tortured her and injured her wrist with a knife, so her brother helped her get rid of her husband and be safe.
Later on, her brother also turned out to be evil and he kicked her and her daughters out of his house. Ayesha and her daughters are helpless and in need of five Canadian friends who can help them come to Canada where Ayesha’s daughter can get education and live peacefully.
Ayesha Noor was born on October 9, 1974 in Lahore, Pakistan. She belongs to a Christian family.
At the age of 24, on October 1, 1998, a Muslim man Ameen, forcefully married her and made her accept Islam.
“He used to beat me and make me offer my prayers in his way.”
By the time, she had 5 children, 4 daughters and one son. After 15 years of her marriage to Ameen, she was able to contact her parents, and she and her husband started meeting her parents. By the time, they began attending prayer services at Ayesha’s parents' house, and her husband Ameen, made up his mind to convert to Christianity.
When Ameen’s parents came to know about his thoughts, they got extremely angry and warned him not to change his religion otherwise, he would see the consequences. Ameen ignored their threats. Consequently, his parents told Ameen’s friends that Ayesha’s family had been trying to convert Ameen to Christianity. One day, an unknown person shot bullets at Ayesha’s parents’ house and threatened them loudly to leave Pakistan or else, they would be killed or prisoned for the crime of trying to convert Muslims into Christianity and blaspheming against Muslim’s prophet.
“My parents got scared, and they moved to Malaysia. We were also not safe in Pakistan anymore, so we flew to Malaysia on November 5, 2014.”
On November 10, 2014, they were registered at the UNHCR office. Ayesha thought that she was safe in Malaysia and happy with her husband and children, but one day, she heard her husband talking to his mother.
“My husband was telling her that he had been deceiving me and my parents, and he had been doing everything just for being approved by the UNHCR and sent to another country like Canada and the USA. Hearing that, my heart broke into pieces.”
Ayesha then asked her husband the reason and they started arguing. Her husband started beating her and he injured her wrist with a knife.
“My wrist was bleeding and I was crying in pain. My husband kicked me out of the house, so I went to my brother and told him the matter.”
The next day, her children also came to her when Ameen was at work.
When Ayesha’s husband Ameen, came, apologized and promised to live peacefully with his wife again, Ayesha and her family couldn’t trust him especially after listening to his conversation with his mother. After that, her husband left them and she never saw him till now.
After a period of time, Ayesha noticed that her brother was not sincere to her. His evil thoughts had caught her eldest daughter in his trap and they both were in an affair.
“I didn’t like that at all. I told him what he was doing was not right, and he began telling my children bad things about me and turning them against me.”
Ayesha’s children began to hate her except her 3rd oldest daughter Anoosha, and her youngest daughter Abiha.
On March 31, 2021 Ayesha’s brother kicked her and her two daughters out of his house.
They had nowhere to go, so a kind family sheltered them and they have been living there. Ayesha has been helpless, depressed and broken since she is uncertain of what is going to happen with her in the future.
“We have been facing many challenges in Malaysia, and we always live with the fear of Police and immigration as being considered illegal here. On the other hand, being a single mother is twice as challenging to survive.”
“I Dream to resettle in a country where I can live with my children happily and peacefully and have hope for a good future.”
As UNHCR refugees, Ayesha and her children are eligible for Canada’s private sponsorship program. She needs a group of five Canadian friends to support her.
To help support Ayesha and her children as a sponsor, please contact Stephen Watt on Facebook.
You can also reach out to Ayesha directly on Facebook or by Email.
Reach out and discover how wonderful it is to privately sponsor a family to start a new life – with your help – in Canada!
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