"He came
from a poor background but got an education and the next
thing he did was establish the school."
Mr Ali also left behind two
sons Robleh Tinning, 32, a civil servant from South
London and Kenedeed Proctor-Tinning, 34, from Quinton,
Birmingham.
Robleh said: "These people
haven't got support and they can't do things in the day
but they can still do terrible things like this under
the cover of night.
"He wasn't trying to
convert anyone, he was just trying to teach English. He
always had a grand project on the go if something needs
doing, someone has to stand up and say they are going to
do it and that is what he did.
"He was a doer, not a
moaner."
Mr Ali arrived in Britain
from Lebanon in 1967 when he met wife Margaret, who he
married in 1971.
After working in England
until his retirement in 2004 from a position at
Birmingham City Council, he returned to Somalia to
establish a school for 110 pupils on rented property in
his hometown of Beled-Weyne.
Source: The Birmingham
Post, April 15, 2008