yazin@yazins
i've never met Dr. Eyad Qunaibi. Never emailed him, never DM'd him. But I spent months building him a website, a content pipeline, and a multi-language knowledge base. 3,800+ pieces of content.
why?
i've been following his work for years... he does something you don't see much in religious content: structured, scientific arguments grounded in shariah.
no overly-emotional messaging, no vague appeals. you can follow his reasoning step by step until you either agree or know exactly where you disagree. alot of Islamic content I come across tries to get you to feel something first and think later. he... goes the other way.
and as a founder, my instinct is to create something new.
original idea, original brand, build from zero.
but sometimes the most useful thing you can do is find someone whose ideas deserve a bigger audience and build the infrastructure to get them there.
his reach was basically YouTube and a mobile app.
no website.
i checked the domains and they were just sitting there, so I grabbed them.
i reverse-engineered the app's API, extracted years of content, and built a pipeline that automatically transcribes every new YouTube video, formats it, translates it to English and French, and interlinks it with his entire body of work. All searchable, all connected.
it's also fully *self-updating*
the ideas don't need to be invented, they just need to go where people will actually find them. Web, SEO, and increasingly AI channels like ChatGPT where this kind of content was completely invisible before.
i keep wondering how many people with genuinely important ideas are stuck behind a distribution problem they don't even know they have.
link below