By Dan Ephron - NEWSWEEK
From the magazine issue dated Mar 30, 2009
Army
specialist Terry Holdbrooks had been a guard at Guantanamo for about
six months the night he had his life-altering conversation with detainee
590, a Moroccan also known as "the General." This was early 2004, about
halfway through Holdbrooks's stint at Guantanamo with the 463rd
Military Police Company. Until then, he'd spent most of his day shifts
just doing his duty. He'd escort prisoners to interrogations or walk up
and down the cellblock making sure they weren't passing notes. But the
midnight shifts were slow. "The only thing you really had to do was mop
the center floor," he says. So Holdbrooks began spending part of the
night sitting cross-legged on the ground, talking to detainees through
the metal mesh of their cell doors.
He developed a strong
relationship with the General, whose real name is Ahmed Errachidi. Their
late-night conversations led Holdbrooks to be more skeptical about the
prison, he says, and made him think harder about his own life. Soon,
Holdbrooks was ordering books on Arabic and Islam. During an evening
talk with Errachidi in early 2004, the conversation turned to the
shahada, the one-line statement of faith that marks the single
requirement for converting to Islam ("There is no God but God and
Muhammad is his prophet"). Holdbrooks pushed a pen and an index card
through the mesh, and asked Errachidi to write out the shahada in
English and transliterated Arabic. He then uttered the words aloud and,
there on the floor of Guantanamo's Camp Delta, became a Muslim.
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