In Sha Allah, If God Wills It
The Real-Life Story of an Afghan Combat Interpreter
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Pre-order Now for £14.79
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Narrated by:
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By:
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Ron Farina
“Abdul Atah’s service and sacrifice for America makes a moving and meaningful story. His dedication to our nation—its ideals of freedom and justice—should reaffirm our own.” — United States Senator Richard Blumenthal
Wounded twice in service to America, Afghan combat interpreter Abdul Atah Wahedi is one of America’s unknown heroes, but to the Taliban, he is considered the “Voice of the Infidel.” As America began to exit Afghanistan, Abdul, hunted by the Taliban, must flee with his wife and family, but his escape is blunted by the closure of the American Embassy in Kabul during COVID. With less than a handful of days before his Special Immigration Visa (SIV) and the visas of his family are about to expire, the mother of Abdul’s former commanding officer intervenes. Working with an American senator and an American SIV coordinator from Keeping Our Promise, she orchestrates Abdul’s escape to America with his wife and children, getting them out with only hours to spare.
Born as his family returned to their ancestral village following years living as nomads in the caves of the Hindu Kush mountains during the Russian invasion, the story begins in the centuries-old village of Mata in the Panjshir Valley, and chronicles Abdul’s life from his earliest memories, the drowning of his older brother in the Panjshir River, his education, life on the battlefield, his marriage, the births of his children, and finally his escape to America.
©2026 Ron Farina (P)2026 Blackstone PublishingCritic reviews
“Read this story and open your hearts; humankind was born to love.”
“In a world where we are bombarded with soundbites and seconds-long video clips disguised as entertainment and news, Ron Farina delivers a true gem of a story with the power to change how we think about people, cultures, places, and institutions. No angle—just experience. Truth. Life is complicated. Ron doesn’t simplify it; he dives in deep so the reader can understand how circumstances and decisions guided—and impacted—Abdul Atah’s life. From before his birth to the present day, this is not simply the story of an Afghan interpreter; it is a story of the Afghan people, a story of the U.S. military, of brotherhood and family, and of friendship and empathy from people halfway around the globe. Once again, Ron Farina opens our eyes to a world unfamiliar to most. If we are open to listening—to learning from the stories Ron chooses to tell, like In Sha Allah—we are better for it. Ron’s telling of Abdul’s story is not sensational; it is remarkable.”
“Ron Farina, an award-winning novelist and short story writer, has brought all his narrative skills to bear in this remarkable nonfiction portrait of one Afghan man, Abdul, from a remote village in Afghanistan, a translator for a decade for U.S. troops. In a time when so many Americans stereotype immigrants, Farina zooms in to show us the humanity of this one resilient individual who served with bravery and distinction. The reader watches Abdul grow from a boy to a man, from an Afghan to an Afghan-American, each step a harrowing challenge that he meets every time. By focusing on his individual story, Farina shows us Abdul’s personhood and asks us to see him for what he is—a man who served, not who we imagine he might be.”
“In Sha Allah follows Abdul Atah from the early days of his life as a boy in a remote Afghan mountain village to a new life in America. His path is shaped by faith, family, and unwavering loyalty. When he leaves the village as a young man and becomes a combat interpreter for the United States military, he walks a dangerous line—one that demands courage and sacrifice at every turn. Guided by award-winning author Ron Farina, this powerful narrative invites you into a world where trust is fragile, freedom is never guaranteed, and one man’s journey becomes a testament to resilience. Through moments of danger, heartbreak, and unexpected hope, readers walk beside Abdul, seeing what he sees, smelling the air of each village, feeling the weight of every sacrifice. It is a story that reveals the complexity of family ties, the cost of standing by one’s beliefs, and the quiet heroism woven into everyday survival.”