Mother Jones – July-August 2019

(Sean Pound) #1
JULY  AUGUST 2019  MOTHER JONES 35

her to gather her things. The family got
into a white van. Samantha says she soon
realized they weren’t heading to the air-
port to go to Morocco. They stopped in
the middle of nowhere, near a stretch of
the Syrian border with heavy  pres-
ence. Moussa grabbed their daughter
and Samantha’s handbag, which held her
passport and their cash. Then he walked
toward the frontier. “Do I go or do I stay?”
she asked herself. She grabbed her son, got
out of the van, and followed her husband.
This story seems ishy to me. If
Samantha couldn’t aff ord knee surgery,
why was she fl ying around the world de-
positing cash? Did she really have no idea
Moussa was planning to head into  ter-
ritory until this Sophie’s Choice moment?
Samantha is not the only American
woman to have survived her time inside
 territory who now says she didn’t
know what she was getting into. “Once
I look back on it, I can’t stress how much
of a crazy idea it was,” Hoda Muthana, a
young woman from Alabama who’d run
a pro- Twitter account from inside
Syria, told the New York Times earlier this
year. Kimberly Polman, who has Amer-
ican and Canadian citizenship, said she
entered the Islamic State “as a humani-
tarian.” “How do you go from burning a
passport to crying yourself to sleep be-
cause you have so much deep regret?” she
asked. At least seven American women
are known to have traveled to join 
and other jihadist groups in Syria and
Iraq; at least 57 American men have.
Samantha has good reason to be cagey
as she talks to me. Two months later,
she was fl own back to the United States,
where she was charged with aiding her
husband’s eff ort to join  and provid-
ing material support to a terrorist group.
Federal prosecutors have described her
as “an adventure-seeker, prone to reck-
lessness and...willing to lie and use
people and relationships to advance her
goals.” Many of the things she told me
are contradicted by the government’s ac-
count of her journey. Prosecutors assert
that Samantha told the  that Moussa
had told her about his desire to join 
months before they went to Syria. When
one of Moussa’s relatives in Morocco
confronted her about her husband’s in-
terest in , she allegedly said she would
“follow him anywhere.”

   or coerce Samantha
to come to the Islamic State or did she
come of her own free will? Sitting with her
in the refugee camp, it’s hard to fathom
what could have motivated her. She does
not seem to be driven by religion, ideol-
ogy, or any fi rm beliefs. Much of her ac-
count of her time in Syria is impossible to
confi rm, but it’s clear she wasn’t prepared
for what she encountered.
She says that soon after her family
crossed the Syrian border, she and her
kids were separated from her husband.
They drove to Raqqa, where she was
confi ned in a house with women from
France, Germany, and Arab countries
while their husbands were taken off to
training. The women scolded her for
not praying. “Nobody knew that I wasn’t
Muslim,” she tells me.
After three months in the house, she
saw Moussa again. “I didn’t even recog-
nize him,” she says. He was grimy, with
a beard, a gun, and a huge smile. He
hugged his daughter.
“I’m leaving,” Samantha told him. “You
can’t keep us here.”
“You can try and go,” she recalls him

saying. “But you’ll never make it.”
Moussa rented an apartment in Raqqa,
then went off to fi ght. “I was terrifi ed of
living in this city,” Samantha says. “Ter-
rifi ed.” Armed men were everywhere.
“These guys wearing long beards, and
women in niqab, and everybody is just
so angry.” After Moussa left, she bought
a small house outside the city. “I moved
as far away from the city as I could get to
where there’s no security checkpoints.”
When Moussa came back about a month
later, he was mad that she hadn’t con-
sulted him. Samantha told him that if
she was going to accept her new life, she
needed her space, and he relented.
Now that he was an  soldier, Moussa
“was confused on whether he wanted to
die or if he wanted to live,” Samantha
says. Should he be a martyr and go to
heaven or live and provide for his family?
In between his stints at the front, Moussa

Qamishli

SYRIA

Aleppo

Deir Ezzor

Raqqa

Damascus

Homs

LEBANON

ISRAEL
JORDAN

IRAQ

TURKEY

Conoco gas fi eld

Gas and oil fi elds Euphrates River

Tigris River

DEMOCRATIC
FEDERATION OF
NORTHERN SYRIA

R O J AVA

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Go to motherjones.com/syria to read
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