Fuladh Al Haami rose through the ranks to become a respected and a Mentor . His specific contributions to the Brotherhood include:
Fuladh had not been born to command. He was the son of a sheepherder from the steppes north of the Oxus, a place where the wind never stopped lying. But he had three gifts: a mind for geometry hidden beneath his rough hide cloak, a tongue that could soothe or slice, and a scar running from his left ear to his jaw—a souvenir from a leopard he’d killed with a dagger when he was fifteen. The Ghuzz called him Burj al-Rimal —the Tower of Sand—because he could not be toppled. fuladh al haami
Fuladh was born into slavery in the city of Adulis, part of the Aksumite Kingdom. His father was a prisoner in the notorious Damascus Gate Prison in Baghdad. Fuladh Al Haami rose through the ranks to
Fuladh al-Hami—herdsman, mercenary, kingmaker, ghost—had done the only thing a true steppe warrior can do: he had made a sultan afraid of the dark. But he had three gifts: a mind for
By the mid-9th century, the Hidden Ones had established a sophisticated network across the Islamic Golden Age. Fuladh Al Haami served as a peer to notable figures like