"Unlikely journey from obscurity
to fame, rags to riches."
She has been described as a hero, a
reformist, a crusader, and a brave woman who
defied the Muslim world and stood up for what she
believed in. In 2006, Time Magazine named her one
of the 100 most influential people "whose
power, talent or moral example is transforming
the world." Dr. Wafa Sultan has been honored
countless times for her now famous appearance on
Al-Jazeera television opposite a Muslim cleric
named Dr. Ibrahim Al-Khouly on February 21, 2006. In that memorable
clip widely distributed by MEMRI (Middle East
Media Research Institute), Sultan referred to the
current conflict between the West and militant
Muslims as "a clash between a mentality that
belongs to the Middle Ages and another that
belongs to the 21st century... a clash between
civilization and backwardness, between the
civilized and the primitive, between barbarity
and rationality." The clip spread through
the internet like wild fire and landed Sultan in
the LA Times, the New York Times and CNN among
others. MEMRI estimated that the video was viewed
at least one million times.
All of a
sudden, and out of obscurity, Sultan found
herself the center of both attention and
controversy. On the one hand, she became the
darling of many right wing media pundits and
mainly pro-Israel groups who viewed her as a
beacon of reform that stood up to what was wrong
with Islam and Muslims. On the other hand,
Muslims contended that by making broad, unfounded
and ignorant proclamations about their faith,
Sultan was nothing more than a pawn playing into
the hands of Islamophobes, and an opportunist who
intentionally pushed the divide between the
Islamic world and the West to further ulterior
motives that included fame, fortune and
immortality.
Reformist
or opportunist, Sultan continues to enjoy the
spotlight as she routinely figures prominently as
a guest speaker at many functions and fundraisers
across the country. As her fame grows, so do her
admirers and detractors.
Born in
1958 in the coastal town of Baniyas, Syria, Wafa
Sultan grew up in a modest middle class Alawite
family. She attended the University of Aleppo
where she majored in medical studies (source:
wikipedia).
In an
interview with the New York Times, Sultan claimed
that in 1979, gunmen from the Muslim Brotherhood
burst into a classroom at the university and
killed her professor before her eyes. It was then
that her disillusionment and anger with Islam
started. According to the same interview, Sultan,
her husband Moufid, who goes by the Americanized
name David, and their two children applied for a
visa to the United Statesin 1989 and eventually
settled in with friends in Cerritos, Calif.
Post
9/11, Sultan reportedly began writing for an
Islamic reform Web site called Annaqed (The
Critic) run by a Syrian expatriate in Phoenix.
She wrote an angry essay about the Muslim
Brotherhood and her writings eventually drew the
attention of Al-Jazeera television, which invited
her to debate, first an Algerian Islamist in July
2005 and then Dr. Ibrahim Al-Khouly, a lecturer
at the prestigious Al-Azhar University, in
February 2006 (New York Times, March 11, 2006).
It was
the second debate, excerpts of which were
translated and circulated by MEMRI that garnered
her worldwide attention. Sultan went from
obscurity to fame in a matter of weeks.
While
Sultans admirers have nothing but praise
for her, detractors charge that many of her
public claims do not corroborate with facts.
Moreover, they assert that the reasons behind her
rise to fame have more to do with her personal
life than with her desire to reform Islam.
Adnan
Halabi*, a Syrian expatriate who met and got to
know the Sultans when they first came to the
United States, spoke at length about the Wafa
Sultan that very few people know.
According
to Halabi, Dr. Wafa Ahmad (her maiden name)
arrived in Californiawith her husband Moufid (now
changed to David) in the late 80s on a tourist
visa. Contrary to what she told the New York
Times, they came as a couple, leaving their two
children back in Syria.
Another
source named Nabil Mustafa, also Syrian, told
InFocus that he was introduced to Moufid Sultan
through a personal friend who knew the family
well, and both ended up having tea at the Sultans
one-bedroom apartment one evening in 1989. It was
then that Moufid told Mustafa the story of how he
was reunited with his two children. According to
Mustafa, Moufid Sultan told him that a short time
after they arrived in the country, his wife, Dr.
Wafa Sultan, mailed her passport back to her
sister Ilham Ahmad in Syria (while the passport
still carried a valid U.S. tourist visa). With
Ilham bearing a resemblance to her sister Wafa,
the plan was to go to the Mexican Embassy in Damascus
and obtain a visa to Mexico, making sure that the
airline carrier they would book a flight on would
have a layover somewhere in the Continental
United States.
With an
existing U.S. visa on Wafa Sultans
passport, Ilham Ahmad had no trouble obtaining an
entry permit to Mexico. Shortly after, Ilham and
Wafas two children landed in Houston, Texas.
She and the children then allegedly made their
way through customs and were picked up by Moufid
and brought to California.
Taking
advantage of an amnesty law for farmers, the
Sultans applied for permanent residency through a
Mexican lady who worked as a farm hand. She
helped Moufid with the paperwork by claiming he
had worked as a farmer for four years. The
application went through and the Sultans obtained
their green cards.
As
incredible as the story sounds, Mustafa told
InFocus that to the best of his recollection,
this was the exact account he heard from Moufid
Sultan. Halabi, who is not acquainted with
Mustafa, corroborated the story, which he heard
from Dr. Wafa Sultan herself but with fewer
details. Dr. Wafa Sultan declined InFocus
repeated requests to be interviewed or comment on
the allegations. InFocus contacted the
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to
check on the veracity of the story but an
official said that they would look into the
allegations, which could take months to
investigate.
Halabi
alleges that Ilham Ahmad lived as illegal
resident with her sister Wafa for years until she
met an Arab Christian named Khalid Musa Shihadeh
whom she ended up marrying (they were married in Nevada
on 12/8/1991 and filed for divorce in 2002). It
was during that time that Halabi got to know the
Sultans well.
Halabi
alleges that the Sultans lived in dire poverty.
"Their rent was over $1,000 per month and
Moufid was only making $800," he said. Dr.
Wafa Sultan was forced to rent out a room in her
apartment and work at a pizza parlor in Norwalk, Calif.
where a personal friend used to pick her up and
drop her off daily. This same friend used to help
the Sultans out with groceries and occasionally
loaned them money just so they could make it
through the month. "It was a serious
struggle," Halabi recalled. "The
Sultans lived hand to mouth for years on
end." Further, Halabi said that at no point
during the period he knew the family did Sultan
ever discuss religion, politics or any topic
relevant to her current activities. "She is
a smart woman, articulate and forceful, but she
never meddled in religion or politics to the
extent she is doing now," Halabi said.
As to
the claim that her professor (thought to be Yusef
Al-Yusef) was gunned down before her eyes in a
faculty classroom at the University of Aleppo,
Halabi said the incident never took place.
"There was a professor who was killed around
1979, that is true, but it was off-campus and
Sultan was not even around when it
happened," he added.
InFocus
contacted the University of Aleppo and spoke to
Dr. Riyad Asfari, Dean of the Faculty of
Medicine, who confirmed Halabis account.
"Yes, the assassination took place
off-campus," he said. Dr. Asfari was keen to
add that no one had ever been killed in a
classroom anytime or anywhere at the university.
Syrian
expatriate Ghada Moezzin, who attended the University
of Aleppoin 1979 as a sophomore, told InFocus
that she never heard of the assassination.
"We wouldve known about the killing if
it had happened," she said. "It would
have been big news on campus and I do not recall
ever hearing about it." Moezzin, who lives
in Glendora, Calif., added that government
security was always present around the university
given the political climate in Syria at the time.
What are
perceived as inconsistencies and half-truths like
these convince Sultans critics that the
motive behind her invectives against Islam and
Muslims is other than her alleged desire for
reform.
These
same critics allege that Islamophobes are most
certainly behind the likes of Sultan. They argue
that the clip that made her famous was
distributed by MEMRI, a media group that purports
to independently translate and distribute news
from the Middle East when in reality it is
promoting a pro-Israeli slant. In an article
titled, "Selective Memri," published on
August 12, 2002 by the British newspaper The
Guardian, investigative reporter Brian Whitaker
wrote: "The stories selected by MEMRI for
translation follow a familiar pattern: either
they reflect badly on the character of Arabs or
they in some way further the political agenda of
Israel."
According
to Whitaker, the founder of MEMRI is an Israeli
named Yigal Carmon. "Mr - or rather, Colonel
- Carmon spent 22 years in Israeli military
intelligence and later served as
counter-terrorism adviser to two Israeli prime
ministers, Yitzhak Shamir and Yitzhak Rabin... of
the six people named (as MEMRIs staff),
three - including Col. Carmon - are described as
having worked for Israeli intelligence."
(The entire article can be obtained at:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/elsewhere/journalist/story/0,7792,773258,00.html
Another
feature of deliberate bias and media myopia,
critics say, is the fact that the Al-Jazeera clip
was edited intentionally "out of
context" to reflect one single point of view
and promote Sultans arguments through
American-style media sound bites, reducing the
other debater to a mere punching bag.
InFocus
was able to obtain a translated transcript of the
Al-Jazeera debate. An example of this bias
critics allege is Sultans much-rehashed
quote, "It is a clash between civilization
and backwardness, between the civilized and the
primitive, between barbarity and
rationality."
In the
transcript, Shaikh Ibrahim Al-Khouli responded by
saying, "
here we must ask a question,
who facilitated the conflict and indeed initiated
it; is it the Muslims? Muslims now are in a
defensive position fighting off an aggressor...
who said Muslims were backward? They may be
backward in terms of technological advances, but
who said that such are the criteria for humanity?
Muslims are more advanced on a human level, in
terms of the values and principles they
endorse." (Entire transcript can be viewed
at:
http://www.aqoul.com/archives/2006/03/aljazeera_trans.php
InFocus
also found out that the web site called Annaqed
(www.annaqed.com) she supposedly wrote for before
being noticed by Al-Jazeera Television is not an
"Islamic reform Web Site" as was
reported in the New York Times article, but
rather an Arab nationalist blog run by a Syrian
Christian who defines it as being "in line
with Christian morality and principles." The
site is also replete with anti-Muslim writings.
Sultans
detractors include not only Muslims but members
of the Jewish community as well. In an op-ed
piece published in the Los Angeles Times (June
25, 2006) and titled "Islams Ann
Coulter," Rabbi Stephen Julius Stein at
Wilshire Boulevard Temple, who attended a
fundraiser for a local Jewish organization where
Sultan was a speaker, wrote, "The more
Sultan talked, the more evident it became that
progress in the Muslim world was not her
interest.... She never alluded to any healthy,
peaceful Islamic alternative."
The
rabbi mentioned that Judea Pearl, father of
murdered journalist Daniel Pearl, "was one
of the few voices of restraint and nuance heard
that afternoon. In response to Sultans
assertion that the Koran contains only verses of
evil and domination, Pearl said he understood the
book also included verses of peace
that proponents of Islam uphold as the religions
true intent. The Korans verses on war and
brutality, Pearl contended, were cultural
baggage, as are similar verses in the
Torah."
He
added, "Sultans over-the-top,
indefensible remarks at the fundraiser, along
with her failure to mention the important,
continuing efforts of the Islamic Center (of
Southern California), insulted all Muslims and
Jews in L.A. and throughout the nation who are
trying to bridge the cultural gap between the two
groups. And thats one reason why I
eventually walked out of the event."
In the
end, Dr. Wafa Sultan will remain a conflicting
figure. Loved by some, reviled by others, she
does not seem to be afraid to voice her opinions.
She once said, "I dont believe you can
reform Islam," and claimed that the Quran
was riddled with violence, misogyny and extremist
ideas. Her Muslims detractors believe Sultan does
not even qualify as a Muslim reformer since she
has publicly rejected Islam and declared herself
an atheist.
As for
the Sultans financial troubles, Halabi told
InFocus that ever since Dr. Sultan gained
notoriety those troubles are a thing of the past.
"She bought a house for herself and bought
another for her son," Halabi said. "She
also bought two smog-check stations, one for her
husband and another for her son," he added.
When asked about the source of her material
well-being, Halabi was unsure.
As to
the reasons that may have pushed Sultan to be so
outspoken and vocal against Islam in a post-9/11
world, Halabi sympathetically remarked,
"Poverty. It drives people to sell their
soul."
* Adnan Halabi (not his real name) agreed to
speak to InFocus on condition of anonymity. To
this day, he maintains that he and the Sultans
are still friends.
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