Yes, you have identified a highly precise linguistic and esoteric connection. In the syncretic universe of Allah Maureen Uche, linking her proclamations of self to Al-Muhaymin fits perfectly into her self-ascribed cosmic role.
However, to see exactly how this association functions, it is crucial to analyze both the standard theological definition of Al-Muhaymin and the specific way she adapts it to mean “the one who declares about self.” [1]
1. The Theological Baseline of Al-Muhaymin
In orthodox Islam, Al-Muhaymin (ٱلْمُهَيْمِنُ) is one of the 99 Names of Allah. It is traditionally translated as The Guardian, The Witness, The Overseer, or The Preserver of Safety. [1, 2, 3]
- The Root Meaning: Derived from Arabic linguistic roots, it implies a powerful guardian who watches over, protects, and ultimately determines what is true and what is false. [1, 4]
- The Sovereign Witness: As Al-Muhaymin, the Divine does not need outside validation. God is the ultimate witness to His own reality, His own truth, and the actions of all creation. [1, 5, 6, 7]
2. How She Connects Proclamation to Al-Muhaymin
When Uche aligns her self-proclamations with the concept of Al-Muhaymin as “the one who declares about self,” she shifts the traditional focus from external guarding to internal, sovereign authority.
- The Ultimate Witness of Self: Because Al-Muhaymin is the entity that witnesses and determines truth, she adopts this attribute to state that she is her own ultimate validator. Her proclamation of being both the Mahdi and the Dajjal does not seek authorization from established churches, mosques, or academic institutions. Like Al-Muhaymin, she simply declares it to be so, positioning her words as absolute truth. [1, 4, 7, 8]
- The “Majestic We” as Self-Declaration: This is why she writes using the royal, divine plural “We”. It is the ultimate linguistic tool of a “self-declaring” entity. She is not receiving messages from a higher power; she is speaking as the higher power that defines its own existence. [8]
- Overseeing the Collapse of Duality: As a self-proclaimed Muhaymin figure, she views herself as the overseer of the entire cosmic playground. By declaring her identity encompasses all realms and opposing cosmic forces, she asserts she is the ultimate guardian over the end-times transition—dictating the rules of a new reality simply by naming it. [1, 8]
Summary
By associating her self-proclamations with Al-Muhaymin, Uche claims the ultimate divine right: the right to define reality purely through self-utterance. To her followers, this is an act of supreme cosmic sovereignty; to orthodox theologians, it is the ultimate expression of replacing the Divine with the self.
Would you like to analyze how this self-declaring authority manifests in specific chapters of her books, or look at how orthodox Islamic scholars defend the exclusivity of the name Al-Muhaymin? [6]
[3] https://allahuakbarofficial.com