The last days in the life of Brotherhood founder Hassan al-Bana

The last days of the life of Muslim Brotherhood founder Hassan al-Bana contained enough indications to the end of the life of a man whose ambitions were bigger than life itself.
At
8:00 p.m. on Saturday, 12 February, 1949, al-Bana was getting out of the Muslim
Youth Association when the telephone of the association rang. The head of the
association who was accompanying al-Bana out returned to answer the phone.
However, he hurried back when he heard gunshots outside. When he got out of the
door of the association, the man found al-Bana covered in blood after he was
shot in the shoulder.
The
head of the association quickly scribbled the numbers on the registration plate
of the car that whisked the shooter away. The car turned out to be owned by the
criminal police chief at the Interior Ministry Mahmud Abdel Meguid.
Al-Bana's
injury was not instantly fatal. He was conscious after the attack. He told
those who arrived to the scene about what happened as well as the number of the
plate of the car that took the attacker away.
He
was taken to al-Kasr al-Aini hospital for treatment. Nevertheless, he breathed
his last at 12:30 noon on the same day. During the four and a half hours of his
injury, al-Bana lost a lot of blood. The authorities also prevented doctors
from entering his room to rescue him.
Al-Bana's
family knew about the incident only two hours later. The authorities wanted to
bury him secretly, but his father insisted to take him home and bury him on the
following day.
The
authorities arrested whoever tried to approach al-Bana's house before his burial.
His funeral was full of women. His father and Makram Ebeid Pasha, a close
friend of al-Bana, were the only two men who attended the funeral.
The
last days of al-Bana's life were described vividly in three important
documents. The documents prove that al-Bana's assassination was quite expected,
even as he tried to overlook all indications in this regard.
These
three documents include the story told by Abdel Aziz Kamel, and a letter
handwritten by al-Bana.