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Calgary, Between The Soccer Practices and The Hours at Her Accounting Job
Calgary, Between The Soccer Practices and The Hours at Her Accounting Job
and the potlucks with the neighbors, Christianne Boudreau spent every spare
minute watching Islamic State videos, her nose pressed up against the
computer screen.
Christianne Boudreau
Damian
She sat in the basement of her middle-class home in her middle-class suburb,
a bare room that once belonged to her eldest son, Damian, and watched men
posturing with big guns like teenagers. She watched firefights. She watched
executions. But Boudreau barely registered any of the bloodshed. She was
focused on the faces behind the balaclavas, trying to spot her son’s eyes.
In Copenhagen, Karolina Dam was wild with fear. Her son Lukas had been
in Syria for seven months. Three days earlier, she received word that he had
been injured outside Aleppo, but she was convinced that he was dead. Sitting
alone that evening, nervously puffing on a vaporizer, she couldn’t stop
herself from sending a Viber message into the ether. “Lukas,” she wrote, “I
love you so much my beloved son. I miss you and want to hug and smell you.
Hold your soft hands in mine and smile at you.”
Karolina Dam
Lukas
There was no reply. A month later, someone wrote back to her. It wasn’t
Lukas.
Dam had no idea who might have gained access to her son’s phone or Viber
account, but she was desperate for information. Trying to stay calm, she
wrote back: “Also yours, sweetie, but mostly Lukas’s.”
1
All chats and messages in this story have been reproduced with original spelling and punctuation.
The person asked, “Can you handle some news?”
“Yeah, honey,” Dam wrote. A few seconds, and then the response.
Torill
Thom Alexander
In Norway, Torill, who asked that her last name not be used, learned of the
death of her son, Thom Alexander, from the recruiter who had sent him to
Syria to fight. She wanted proof, so her daughters, Sabeen and Sara (not their
real names), met the recruiter in the Oslo train station. He casually flipped
through some photos on his iPad until he arrived at the image meant for
them: a photo of Thom Alexander shot in the head with one eyeball hanging
out of its socket.
When she got the news, Torill simply lay down. She hardly moved for a
week. When she finally summoned the strength to take a shower, she
removed her clothes and faced her reflection in the bathroom mirror. She
found that she looked exactly the way she felt: “Broken, like a vase.”
Sabri
In Brussels, Saliha Ben Ali, the modern, European-born daughter of
Moroccan and Tunisian immigrants, was at a humanitarian aid conference
when she began to feel wrenching pains in her stomach. She hadn’t felt that
kind of pain in years. “It was like when you have a baby and this baby has to
come out,” she says. She went home early and cried through the night.
Three days later, her husband received a phone call from a Syrian number. A
man told them that their 19-year-old son Sabri, their boy who loved reggae
and chatting with his mother about world events, had died on the same day
Ben Ali had fallen ill. She realized those pains in her stomach were the
inverse of giving birth to Sabri: They were her body telling her that her child
was dying.
These women are just four of thousands who have lost a child to the Islamic
State, also known as ISIS. Since the Syrian civil war began four years ago,
some 20,000 foreign nationals have made their way to Syria and Iraq to fight
for various radical Islamist factions. Over 3,000 are from Western countries.
While some go with their families’ blessing, most leave in secret, taking all
sense of normalcy with them. After they’ve gone, their parents are left with a
form of grief that is surreal in its specificity. It is sorrow at the loss of a child,
it is guilt at what he or she may have done, it is shame in the face of hostility
from friends and neighbors, and it is doubt about all the things they realize
they did not know about the person whom they brought into the world. Over
the last year, dozens of these mothers from around the world have found each
other, weaving a strange alliance from their loss. What they want, more than
anything, is to make sense of the senselessness of what happened to their
children—and, perhaps, for something meaningful to come from their deaths.
Shortly after his release from the hospital, Damian told his mother that he had
discovered the Quran. Although Boudreau had raised him Christian, she
welcomed his conversion. He got a job and became more social. “It grounded
him, made him a better person,” she recalls. But by 2011, Boudreau noticed a
change in her son. If he was visiting and his new friends called, he would
only answer the phone outside. He wouldn’t eat with the family if there was
wine on the table. He told his mother that women should be taken care of by
men and that it was acceptable to have more than one wife. He spoke of
justified killings. In the summer of 2012, he moved into an apartment with
some new Muslim friends right above the mosque in downtown Calgary
where they all prayed. He became a regular at the gym and went hiking with
his roommates in the wilderness around the city. At the time, the conflict in
Syria was in its infancy, and all Boudreau saw was her often-troubled son
going through another phase, one she hoped he would outgrow. In
November, Damian left Canada, telling his mother that he was moving to
Egypt to study Arabic and become an imam. To Boudreau’s distress, he
quickly fell out of touch.
Most young people who run away to join radical groups in Syria
make takfir—that is, they sever all ties with non-believers, including their
parents, who stand in the way of their jihad. But, starting in February,
Damian called his mother every two or three days, often while he was on
watch. “You can hear all the noises in the background,” Boudreau says. “You
can hear people yelling at each other in Arabic.” Once, Damian told her there
were planes flying low, which he said meant that they were about to drop
bombs. He began to run while Boudreau was still on the phone. Mostly,
though, Damian was careful about what he told his mother, and she still
doesn’t really know what he was doing there. Every possible scenario turns
her stomach.
Christianne
We all still miss you very much and love you very much as well
Christianne
Everyone is still hurt that you would leave us all and put yourself at risk while we guess
every day whether you’re alright or not. It makes it very, very difficult as a Mom to watch all
her children go through the heartache as well as my own…The thought of never seeing you
again or holding you again, has broken my heart in pieces. I guess you’ll never understand
because you’ll never be a mother.
Damian replied that afternoon. He is eating well, he tells her, he has mastered
Arabic, he is in line for a wife and a house—these are the things she should
focus on.
Damian
I do miss you all as well, but as you may have assumed, nothing has changed in terms of
my faith, my intentions or my current situation.
Damian
As for how you worry about me and love me, it is known to me. These are not new pieces of
information.
On the evening of January 14, 2014, a reporter called Boudreau, alerting her
to a tweet that said Damian had been executed by the Free Syrian Army in
Haritan, just outside Aleppo. As everything began to blur around her,
Boudreau held on to one concrete task: She needed to tell Luke before he saw
it on TV. She took him to his psychologist’s office so she didn’t have to do it
on her own.
Late at night on January 30, Luke posted one last message in the Facebook
thread. It said:
Luke
I miss you and wish you were never killed.
There was only one person who seemed to know what she was experiencing.
Shortly before Damian died, Boudreau had made contact with Daniel
Koehler, a German expert on deradicalization. Koehler, who is based in
Berlin, used to focus on helping people leave the neo-Nazi movement, but in
recent years he had also started working with Muslim radicals and their
families. After Damian’s death, Koehler stayed in close touch with Boudreau,
trying to help her understand what had happened to her son.
Koehler told me that there are usually two groups of people who are good at
getting through to young radicals and starting them on a path to reform:
former radicals and mothers. “The mother is extremely important in jihadist
Islam,” he explained. “Mohammed said ‘Paradise lies at the feet of mothers.’
You have to ask her permission to go on jihad or to say goodbye.” He says he
has dealt with fighters who desperately try to set up one last Skype call with
their mothers—either to say farewell or to convert her so that they can meet
in paradise. An Austrian NGO called Women Without Borders is starting
“mothers’ schools” in countries battered by Islamist extremism, like Pakistan
and Indonesia, to teach mothers how to keep their children from being
radicalized. The group is now building five more mothers’ schools in Europe.
And, with a few exceptions, mothers are the ones doing this work. In the
families of children like Damian who convert to Islam, the father is often not
in the picture. In the families of Muslim immigrants to the West, the fathers
are often present but unengaged. Magnus Ranstorp, a Swedish expert who co-
chairs the Radicalization Awareness Network, a European Union working
group, says that Muslim men often feel emasculated by Western society and
fade into the background. “The mother is the pivot,” he says.
The experts that I spoke with also noted that mothers and fathers who lose
children to jihadist movements tend to deal with their grief in very different
ways. The fathers often withdraw into feelings of guilt and shame: They have
a hard time admitting to outsiders that their parenting was in any way
lacking. The mothers do the opposite. They are hungry to share their sorrow
with others, to plunge themselves into the world their child inhabited, to
gather as much information as they can. It is their way of gaining a tiny
measure of control over the unfathomable. “They immerse themselves,”
Koehler told me.
When I visited her, Boudreau took me along to a local Catholic high school
where most of the students were refugees. She showed them a video she had
made about Damian. It ends with a close-up of Boudreau’s tear-streaked
face, addressing her dead son. “When those final moments came, were you
scared?” she asks. “Did you want me to hold your hand?” And, in a calmer,
almost scolding voice: “What did all of this have to do with God?”
There was a stunned silence in the auditorium as the lights came back up.
Before climbing onto the stage and fielding the students’ questions with an
assurance she has acquired after dozens of presentations, Boudreau took a
moment to compose herself. Though she had seen the film countless times,
she had been crying in the dark.
Lukas had been a withdrawn child, and his social interactions often ended in
conflict. When he was ten, he was diagnosed with Asperger’s syndrome and
attention deficit disorder, but in adolescence, his problems became more
serious. He was stopped driving a stolen scooter; he stole a friend’s mother’s
engagement ring. Dam suspected he had joined a gang.
But then there was a break in the darkness. Lukas got an apprenticeship at a
local garage where most of the employees were Muslim. They took the boy
in and introduced him to their religion. Dam only learned that he had
converted some months later, when she realized that that her son wasn’t
eating during the day. He was observing Ramadan.
In May 2014, just after Lukas turned 18, he disappeared. A few days later, he
called Dam from the Turkish border, saying he needed a vacation. “I was
scared,” Dam recalls. “He’s still a boy, he’s still vulnerable, he’s still
manipulatable. And the fact that he went by himself, without saying goodbye
or anything, that’s scary shit! If a boy doesn’t say goodbye to his mother,
there’s something wrong.”
In the months after Lukas left, he was in constant contact. “He didn’t want to
let me go, kind of,” Dam says. He told her he was working in Turkish refugee
camps, packing clothes, ferrying water, preparing food. But according to
Jakob Sheikh, a Danish journalist who is writing a book about Lukas and
other Danish jihadis, he eventually crossed into Syria and joined Ahrar al-
Sham, an Islamist faction based in Idlib province. Yet, in his correspondence
with his mother, Lukas sounds more like a homesick college
freshman."Please call me back,"Lukas wrote to Dam on August 15. "I love
you very much, my only mom.""Lots of kisses, wherever you are,"Dam
responded, peppering her messages with emoji. He asks about the cat; Dam
sends him sound files of its purr. She asks if she should put some more
money in his bank account, partly to make sure he hadn’t given his card to
anyone else. In a photograph of Lukas in Syria from this period, he has just
washed up for prayer, his face and hair still wet. He looks happy.
In late September, Lukas went silent. Though Dam didn’t know it, around
this time Ahrar al-Sham’s leadership was annihilated in an ISIS attack, and in
the ensuing chaos, Lukas joined up with the Islamic State. When he
resurfaced two months later, Dam, chatting with him on Viber, tried to entice
him to come home. She told him that she’d refurbished his bedroom—plaster
on the fist-sized holes and a fresh coat of paint—and had money set aside for
his plane ticket back to Denmark.
Dam presses him: “You need to tell me when you’re coming home.”
It was their last conversation. On the night of December 28, 2014, Dam
recalls, Adnan Avdic, one of Lukas’ Muslim friends from Copenhagen, rang
her doorbell. “He was taking forever to go up the stairs, and there are only
four steps,” says Dam. “He was hemming and hawing in the hallway, so I
pulled him inside. He was crying, he wouldn’t look me in the eye.” Alarmed,
Dam started looking for a knife in case she needed to defend herself. “I began
shouting at him and grabbed his neck,” she recalls. Avdic blurted out that
Lukas was wounded. “Right then and there,” Dam says, “I knew he was
dead.”
Karolina
this is MY SON, is he dead?
Karolina
CONTACT ME and tell me!!!!
Dam found herself tormented by questions. What had her boy really been
doing in Syria? How had he even gotten there? Most of all, she couldn’t
understand how her socially awkward son had deftly hidden so much of his
life from her: The affront of it still brings her to tears. Over the following
weeks, she reached out to dozens of other fighters—anyone who seemed to
have had contact with Lukas, following their social media webs as far as they
would take her. In part, there was a pragmatic element to her quest: Dam has
no proof of her son’s death, and unless she can produce some, she will have
to wait five years to get a death certificate. “I have a fucking Facebook
status!” she says. “There’s nothing else.”
But mostly she wants to know everything she can because she once knew so
little. Dam told me she has developed techniques for striking up
conversations with jihadis and coaxing information out of them. “You have
to play the part of a mom, even though you have a different agenda.” She
reminds them to eat, she calls them sweetie, she scolds them when they’re
rude.
“This guy Aziz I have asked specifically, do you know if my boy has
beheaded anyone?” Dam says. She is almost shouting now. “I need to know!”
The fighters are gentle with her. They tell her Lukas was walled off from the
violence, and there are times when she gladly believes them. Sheikh, who has
checked this with other fighters and Danish intelligence, says it is not quite
true: In his last months in Syria, Lukas was a fighter.
Since her son left for Syria, Dam has aged. Her face has filled out and
furrowed with grief. On the mantle in the living room, she has a little shrine
set up to Lukas, in lieu of a proper grave. At its center is a “mother jar,” a
clay pot with handles that Danes traditionally fill with food and bring to
mothers who have just given birth. As Lukas grew more radical in his faith
before he left, he had asked Dam to remove all the logos on his T-shirts. She
never got around to doing it, but after Lukas died, she discovered that one of
the shirts was unwashed. It still smelled like her boy. She put it in a plastic
bag to lock in the scent, and stored it in the mother jar.
By then, the war in Syria was all over the news and Thom Alexander was
spending his time organizing clothing drives for refugees. Torill made her
son promise that he wouldn’t go to Syria. But before long, he divorced his
first wife and married a Somali, who insisted that they move to a Muslim
country. Within the year, he told his mother he could no longer keep his
promise.
The last time she saw Thom Alexander, it was June 26, 2014. He came to her
house to make pizza, dressed in Western clothes, his beard shaved. Families
sometimes interpret this development as a hopeful one, a sign that their child
is turning back towards a secular life. But Torill had heard that this was
another thing young men did right before going to Syria. She had made
elaborate plans to stop Thom Alexander from going, if it ever came to that.
She could use his history of addiction and crime to have him arrested; she
could go to the airport and throw a fit. But as she watched him roll out the
pizza dough, she was paralyzed. She was so stunned, so terrified, she says,
that she has no recollection of anything else that happened that day.
One day, a bomb fell 150 feet from where Thom Alexander was standing and
killed several children. “If you want, I can send you pictures of children so
you can see,” he wrote to his mother. Torill rolls her eyes as she reads this
message aloud. She’s scrolling through their correspondence, which she
hasn’t done since her son died. I ask her how she feels reading it now. “Oh, I
don’t feel anything, I just lock out,” she says, and passes her hand in front of
her face. In another message, she asks if he has seen any beheadings. “No,”
he responds, “but I have seen the decapitated heads lying around.” This he
punctuated with a smiley face. In late March, Ubaydullah Hussain, leader of
the Prophet’s Umma, called Torill to tell her that Thom Alexander was
dead. 2
2
Her son had been killed in Kobani, in northern Syria, months after ISIS had lost control of the town.
According to some reports, after the defeat, ISIS kept sending waves of foreign fighters to harass the Kurds—
and to certain death. Those who resisted were executed.
We sat on Torill’s balcony in Halden, looking out on the verdant little town.
“I used to be happy, happier than most people,” says Torill, her face perfectly
still behind large sunglasses. “But now I don’t know how to live.” Sometimes
she is floored by what people say to her. Her downstairs neighbor told her she
was a bad mother. “If it were my son,” she recalls the neighbor saying, “I’d
cut his hands off.” There are days, she told me, “that I want a lobotomy, it
hurts so much.”
Yet she cannot afford to give herself over to mourning. After Thom
Alexander left, Torill had called two young Muslims who work to
deradicalize Norwegian youth, Yousef Bartho Assidiq and Faten Mahdi al-
Hussaini. She had heard about them on television. After Thom Alexander
died, the pair essentially moved in with the family to help them cope. Sabeen
was acting out, craving attention. Seeing the gruesome photo of her brother’s
body had triggered something destructive in her. She couldn’t concentrate in
school and had a hard time eating in the cafeteria. “I felt like everyone was
staring at me,” she says. “I like attention, but not that kind of attention.”
Assidiq and Mahdi realized that she was frequently chatting online with
Hussain, the head of Prophet’s Umma. Then the chats veered into flirtation.
The night before Thom Alexander’s memorial service, Sabeen was taken in
for questioning by the police, who then informed Assidiq and Mahdi that she
was days from eloping with Hussain. The activists reached out to the
municipality of Halden, which gave them the funds to whisk Sabeen off for a
vacation in Greece simply to get her away from him. It was only after Sara
pressed charges against Hussain that he cut off contact with Sabeen. Assidiq
and Mahdi took away her passport.
Then, just when Sabeen seemed to be out of danger, Sara fell under the sway
of the Prophet’s Umma. In June, she married the group’s spokesman, Omar
Cheblal. The ceremony took place on Skype, because Cheblal had just been
deported from Norway after being deemed a threat to national security. The
two have since divorced, and Assidiq and Mahdi have taken away Sara’s
passport, too.
More than the others, Torill had some understanding of what she was seeing.
She knew that Thom Alexander was drawn to the fight in Syria, and made
him swear not to go. She called the intelligence services three times. And yet,
as she discovered, in most Western countries it is shockingly difficult to get
the government to intervene. It is not illegal in any European country to
travel to Syria, let alone to Turkey. ISIS recruitment strategies, Ranstorp
says, are moving much faster than ungainly Western bureaucracies. The
group now encourages recruits to break up their itineraries into as many as
four legs to avoid detection. Some European fighters are taking advantage of
the E.U.’s open borders and simply driving to Turkey through Bulgaria.
Even in the cases of minors, governments often fail to exercise their authority
to stop them from going to Syria. After Lukas’ death, Dam founded a group
called Sons and Daughters for Scandinavian mothers. One Danish woman she
regularly speaks to goes by the name Miriam in the press. Miriam is Muslim,
and she had immediately understood the danger when her son Karim (not his
real name) started running with Islamist radicals in Copenhagen. She alerted
the authorities, destroyed his passport and made sure the Danish government
flagged his file so that he could not get another. Within four months, Karim,
who was then 17, was in Syria. He had forged his father’s signature on the
parental consent form in order to obtain a new passport. (Dam would
eventually figure out that Karim and Lukas had been friends, and that it was
Karim who had messaged her to tell her that Lukas was in “bits and pieces.”)
Part of the problem is that the phenomenon of ISIS recruitment is so new that
efforts to counter it are still in their infancy. Many Western countries are only
starting to think about jihadi recruits in terms of prevention, rather than
punishment or rehabilitation. Often, parents like Torill who actually sound
the alarm are treated simply as sources of intelligence. Nor are many
governments eager to bring radicals back once they have left: One American
official told me privately that the U.S. would rather foreign fighters die in
Syria than return home.
In the meantime, the activists fighting radicalization are woefully under-
resourced. The mothers’ schools run by Women Without Borders won’t be
up and running for a year. Assidiq and Mahdi, the Oslo-based activists who
saved Torill’s daughters, receive no government funding for their
organization Just Unity; they are both months behind on their rent. Ranstorp
and his working group are still just a working group. Their discussions, he
told me, are “like Groundhog’s Day.”“We have no legal instruments,” he
says. “We can only delay them.”
On a May morning, two tiny women, Dominique Bons and Valerie, stood
waiting at the Gard du Nord train station in Paris. They were both dressed in
jeans in the warm spring morning, their hair cropped short. People bustled
around them, but the two women were lost in animated conversation. A train
from Brussels arrived, and soon they saw Saliha Ben Ali moving through the
crowd with a small suitcase. The three women exploded in affection, like
childhood friends finally reuniting. For the rest of the day, the three women
moved around a series of cafés—talking, drinking coffee and mojitos, and
laughing almost ceaselessly. Their relief at being in each other’s company
was overwhelming.
This was the only time I saw the weight of these mothers’ grief lift, when
they were with other mothers like them. It is one of the few times they feel,
Ben Ali told me, “that you are not a bad mother.” Most of the time, they are
beset by misunderstanding and judgment. Torill told me that she went to see
a psychologist, and he advised her to cope with her grief by writing to Thom
Alexander and telling him to “eat shit.” “He said that everyone who joins
ISIS deserves a bullet in the head,” Torill says. Friends turn away, and many
of the women find that their husbands or partners can’t relate to their need to
talk about their children constantly. Boudreau’s partner, for instance, cannot
understand why, a year and a half after Damian’s death, she is still fixated on
it.
With the other mothers, there’s not much you have to explain. They just
know. Torill and Dam have never met, since neither has the money to travel,
but they chat constantly, on Facebook Messenger and Skype. To Torill, Dam
is an expert. “She experienced this before me, and tells me what I’m going to
feel next,” Torill says. Boudreau, too, has found comfort in these virtual
gatherings. “It’s funny, Karolina and I get on Skype, or some of the other
mothers and I get on Skype, and something will come up and, next thing you
know, we’re all crying.” The conversations make them feel, she says, as if
“we’re still human.”
Bons, Ben Ali, and Valerie have formed a deep friendship, though their paths
would never have crossed if it weren’t for their children. Bons, a petite 60-
year-old army retiree from Toulouse with dyed blonde hair and striking blue
eyes, lost two children to ISIS. Her son Nicolas and step-son Jean-Daniel ran
off to Syria in March 2013. Jean-Daniel was dead by August, at age 22, and
in December Bons received a text message saying that Nicolas was dead at
30. Apparently, he had driven a truck packed with explosives into a building
in Homs.
Ben Ali, a plump woman with chocolate eyes that radiate heartbreak, is
Muslim, but wears parachute pants and doesn’t cover her hair. All four of her
children were born in Belgium. “I practice my Islam quietly,” Ben Ali told
me when we first spoke this spring. But practicing quietly wasn’t enough for
her second son, Sabri. In August 2013, he left home without a word. Four
days later, he sent Ben Ali a Facebook message: “Mom, I’m in Syria, and we
will be together in heaven.” She tried for months to reason with him. “There
are seven conditions for it to be jihad,” she explains. “For me, the war in
Syria is not a jihad … It’s a civil war.” Her efforts were consistent with
Koehler’s advice—use Muslim theology to break through the programming.
But Sabri would have none of it. After he was killed, Ben Ali’s Muslim
neighbor in Brussels came to her and said, “Your son is a martyr. Now close
the door and don’t speak about him anymore.” She responded that she would
never stop talking about Sabri, and the neighbor cut off all contact with her.
Sabri (top left) and his family. Photo courtesy of Saliha Ben Ali.
Valerie, who asked that her last name not be used, is the only mother I met
whose child is still alive. Her 18-year-old daughter, Léa (not her real name) is
living somewhere in Aleppo. When Léa was 16, unbeknownst to Valerie, she
met a 22-year-old Algerian man who converted and radicalized her. On June
5, 2013, Léa hugged and kissed her mother after dinner, left the house, and
disappeared. Valerie thought she had been kidnapped, but Léa and the
Algerian eventually made their way to Syria. Valerie wants her daughter to
come home with an almost animal need. But she also understands that in
some sense, Léa is no longer her child. Her phone calls and chats on
WhatsApp sound programmed, robotic. About ten months ago, Léa gave
birth to a baby boy, and her tone softened slightly. She sometimes asks
Valerie for parenting advice, and Valerie believes that her daughter
understands her better now that she, too, is a mother. Still, Valerie knows that
even if she could somehow rescue Léa and her baby, the task of reintegrating
Léa into normal life would be hopelessly daunting. The state of suspension is
exhausting for her. “If they told me my daughter was dead,” Valerie says,
crying, “it might be easier.”
But it wasn’t their children that the mothers wanted to talk about that
afternoon in Paris. It was about their activism and the never-ending media
inquiries, which reporters they’d chosen to speak to, which ones to avoid.
They described television crews that invaded their homes for days and
discussed how it was becoming harder to convince their families to
participate each successive time. Going public ended up being vastly more
difficult than any of them had anticipated. They had been called names and
accused of failing as parents. They had thought activism would help them
cope, but each interview submerges them anew in the worst thing that’s ever
happened to them. “I can’t talk about this for 24 hours a day,” Valerie
moaned. “I can’t live like this.”
And yet since their children left, ISIS has become these mothers’ whole
waking universe. They are experts on Syria’s geography, on the factions in its
four-year civil war; they are fluent in the language of jihad. When these
young men and women went to Syria, their mothers went with them, because
how could they not? Sometimes, this entails more than just following them
into the depths of ISIS social media. This spring, Ben Ali and two other
mothers tried to cross into Syria, to witness what their sons had seen in their
final months. They were stopped by Turkish authorities at the border, but Ben
Ali told me that seeing the misery of Syrian refugees there gave her some
insight into why her son had left her. “Now I can say that my son had great
courage,” she says. Her quest is hardly unusual, Ranstorp told me. “There are
a lot of parents looking for their kids in Turkey, or trying to go into Syria
themselves ... Some have even been imprisoned by the Islamic State.”
For now, letting go is not an option for any of the mothers. Letting go means
seeing the children of other mothers fall under the sway of radical imams and
end up as suicide bombers. Letting go means severing the connection to their
own children. Though activism, through the endless search for answers, each
of them has found her own way of keeping her child alive, no matter the
psychic cost. Dam told me that each day when she wakes up, she experiences
a split second of oblivion, a brief moment that resembles her old life. And
then, she says, “I am trawled into a whole new world that I didn’t even know
existed."
Boudreau perched on a high stool at the table in her cramped kitchen, which
also serves as her office. She was talking on the phone with the father of a
young woman named Hoda who had left her home in Alabama to join ISIS
in Syria. Boudreau listened intently as the father described how Hoda had
been preparing him for her own death. Jordan had stepped up airstrikes, and
people all around her were dying.
“I’m just wanting to be here to support you in any way I can,” Boudreau told
him, her voice laden with empathy. “Even if you just need to scream and cry
and yell, or if you want to find different people to connect with for support
and counseling, just let me know and I’ll do whatever I can to reach out and
help you.”
After the call, Boudreau had ten minutes to go to the supermarket and pick up
a couple of cans of tomato soup and packs of dry spaghetti for dinner. Then
she raced across town to pick up her stepdaughter Paige from school. As we
waited in the car, Boudreau gave a long, tearful interview to the BBC on her
cell phone. When Paige, a lanky girl with glasses, bounded into the back seat,
Boudreau’s voice was still congested, her responses to Paige’s patter
distracted. She had to get home and feed the kids before a conference call
with representatives of the Somali community in Edmonton who were
seeking state funding for a deradicalization initiative. And she had to pack:
At 6 a.m., she’d be off to Montreal to do a local talk show and meet with the
mother of the young man who shot up the Canadian Parliament building last
October. Boudreau put the spaghetti on and wandered out of the room on
another press call. Luke and a friend came home from school with giant red
Slurpees and horsed around in the backyard. Paige listlessly watched TV. The
spaghetti boiled on, unattended.
I was about to rescue it when Mike, Boudreau’s partner, arrived home from
his job at a local construction site, dusty and exhausted. When I apologized
for the intrusion, he mumbled that I was far from the first journalist he’d
found in his house. I asked if he’d talk to me for this story. “Oh, I don’t even
want to go there,” he said. “I live in my own bubble.” He opened a beer and
excused himself.
Meanwhile, the impact of her son’s death is still slowly working its way
through the family. Last summer, Hope, Damian’s 13-year-old half-sister, left
to live with her father. She didn’t speak to Boudreau for 12 months. Luke is
in therapy and has been diagnosed with adjustment disorder. A short boy with
a fuzz of blond hair and quick, intelligent eyes, he told me that he feels
ostracized at school. “They say I talk about it too much and that I’m a drama
maker,” he explained. Sometimes he is angry at Damian for violating a pinky
swear to come home after four years in Egypt. Sometimes he blames himself,
wondering whether he was too rough on his brother when they used to
wrestle. “The only time I can be happy is when I’m sleeping,” he says.