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Montgomery Co. mourns community leader Dr. Aquilur Rahman

A “pillar of the community” in Montgomery County, Maryland, has died.

Dr. Aquilur Rahman, a founder of the Montgomery County Muslim Council and Montgomery County Muslim Foundation, passed away on Dec. 22 after he had been diagnosed with leukemia in August.



County Executive Marc Elrich said in a statement on Friday that Rahman had been known for working to support the diversity of his community.

“We will miss him, but use his dedication to community as inspiration for our work,” Elrich said.

In a press release, the MCMF said Rahman was a “devout Muslim, a kind-hearted family man, a generous friend, an educator, a leader in the community, and overall, revered as a pillar to all who knew him.”

In his profession, Rahman led groundbreaking cancer therapeutics at the Lombardi Cancer Center at Georgetown Hospital and patented a cancer chemotherapy drug.

“Dr. Rahman supported most any cause that came his way,” the MCMF said. “From protecting the under-privileged and undereducated, to fighting for minority rights and equality in politics, to interfaith working groups, he was known to give his arm if he was asked for a lending hand.”

43 years later, convicted rapist pleads guilty to 2 Montgomery Co. attacks

Forty-three years after raping one woman and sexually assaulting another in 1981, convicted sex offender Marion Edward Pearson told a Montgomery County judge and his two victims that he was pleading guilty “because I am, in fact, guilty.” Pearson, now 67, pleaded guilty on Friday to one count of second-degree rape and one count of second-degree sex assault for the attacks that happened in 1981 in Silver Spring.
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