© 2024 Blaze Media LLC. All rights reserved.
Sudanese Christian Woman Who Almost Died for Her Faith Reveals Horrific Experience Giving Birth in Prison
Daniel Wani and his wife (Image source: Gabriel Wani/Facebook)

Sudanese Christian Woman Who Almost Died for Her Faith Reveals Horrific Experience Giving Birth in Prison

"When I was in prison I was only thinking about my children..."

Mariam Yehya Ibrahim, the Sudanese Christian woman who was recently rearrested just one day after a judge threw out her death sentence for apostasy last month, spoke out in an interview with CNN Tuesday, describing the horrific prison conditions under which she delivered her baby girl.

"When I was in prison I was only thinking about my children and how I was going to give birth. I was most scared of giving birth in prison," said Ibrahim, who is now once again out of prison and staying at an undisclosed location. "I gave birth chained — not cuffs but chains on my legs. I couldn't even open my legs, so the women had to lift me off the table."

In addition to that traumatic experience, her baby girl might never walk due to the horrific circumstances under which she was born.

FILE - In this file image made from an undated video provided Thursday, June 5, 2014, by Al Fajer, a Sudanese nongovernmental organization, Meriam Ibrahim, sitting next to Martin, her 18-month-old son, holds her newborn baby girl that she gave birth to in jail last week, as the NGO visits her in a room at a prison in Khartoum, Sudan. Sudan's official news agency, SUNA, said the Court of Cassation in Khartoum on Monday, June 23, canceled the death sentence against 27-year-old Meriam Ibrahim after defense lawyers presented their case. The court ordered her release. (AP Photo/Al Fajer, File) AP Photo/Al Fajer, File FILE - In this file image made from an undated video provided Thursday, June 5, 2014, by Al Fajer, a Sudanese nongovernmental organization, Meriam Ibrahim, sitting next to Martin, her 18-month-old son, holds her newborn baby girl (AP Photo/Al Fajer, File)

Ibrahim, 27, also pushed back against new legal charges that have been waged against her after she and her family were detained at a Sudanese airport and she was accused of traveling with falsified documents. 

"My paperwork came from the embassy. It's 100 percent correct," she told CNN, admitting that she is miserable in the wake of legal issues that have prevented her from leaving the country.

For now, she and her husband Daniel Wani, an American citizen, are in a safe place in Sudan, waiting to find out what will happen with the latest charges against her.

Listen to her describe what unfolded below:

As TheBlaze previously reported, Ibrahim was first arrested and charged with adultery in August 2013 and was later also charged with apostasy in February 2014 after she said she was a Christian and not a Muslim, according to the BBC

She became a Christian after her father, a Muslim, abandoned her family. Her Ethiopian mother, a Christian, then raised her and she adopted her mother’s faith. Ibrahim later married a Christian man named Daniel Wani, a U.S. citizen.

Shariah law in Sudan requires that children follow their father’s faith, which led to the initial charges against her. Originally, Ibrahim was sentenced to 100 lashes for adultery, since her marriage to a Christian is not permitted under the law, according to the New York Daily News.

Despite the uncertainty and all that has unfolded since her apostasy charges were thrown out, Ibrahim said she's not afraid and that she simply wants to leave Sudan for the U.S.

(H/T: CNN)

Want to leave a tip?

We answer to you. Help keep our content free of advertisers and big tech censorship by leaving a tip today.
Want to join the conversation?
Already a subscriber?