I help leaders align their life, heart, and decisions with servitude to Allah.
Formation & Profession
Born in the United States and raised in Qatar, I moved alone to Canada at sixteen to study engineering at the University of Toronto.
I later completed a master’s in mechanical and industrial engineering while working full-time and became a licensed Professional Engineer in Ontario.
After returning to Qatar, I founded a systems integration company that continues to operate successfully.
I later spent eight years at Google in California, working within one of the most demanding institutional environments in the world.
Parallel Discipline
Alongside my professional work, I pursued the study of Islam.
I dedicated a year to memorizing the Qur’an and completed a 2-year structured classical beta program in the Islamic sciences sponsored by Ministry of Awqaf in Qatar, in partnership with Umm-Al Qura university. I followed this with several years of focused study of Arabic language.
My technical and spiritual education developed in parallel.
Pattern Recognition
Years inside industries, businesses and high-impact decisions gave me the data. Years of Islamic study gave me the lens.
The most consequential outcomes in life are shaped less by intelligence or opportunity than by organizing intention.
Decisions not rooted in servitude carry a different long-term weight than those made with integrity and accountability to Allah.
Tested Under Pressure
I have faced decisive forks — professional and personal — that required leaving security, accepting uncertainty, or redefining direction.
Outcomes were frequently unpredictable. But over time, decisions grounded in servitude proved structurally sound in ways purely strategic calculation could not anticipate.
Today
I write and advise from that integrated formation of technical rigor, institutional experience, and serious Islamic study.
My work centers on individuals navigating consequential decisions where material success alone is an insufficient measure of absolute success.
The question that guides my work is simple:
Whatever it is we are doing: what is it ultimately in service of?