Become a Member
Opinion

'Sister Aafia' and the antisemitic attack in Texas

Aafia Siddiqui's name may not be known to most people, but to some she has been notorious for thirty years

January 31, 2022 16:58
GettyImages-459026390
Pakistani protesters carry portraits of Aafia Siddiqui, a Pakistani scientist who is currently serving a prison term in the US,as they stage a demonstration for her release in Lahore on November 15, 2014. Siddiqui was sentenced to 86 years in jail by a US court who found her guilty of the attempted murder of US military officers in Afghanistan in 2008. AFP PHOTO/Arif ALI (Photo credit should read Arif Ali/AFP via Getty Images)
4 min read

Many people in the West will not have known the name Aafia Siddiqui until the terrible incident at a Texas synagogue earlier this month, when the British terrorist Malik Faisal Akram asked to speak to his “sister” Aafia and demanded her release, before being shot dead by US police.

But I, along with thousands of my generation, have known Aafia’s name for 30 years. During the early to mid-1990s, I was on an international Muslim students’ email list, dominated by Islamists, with Aafia Siddiqui, then a student at MIT. A close British friend of mine was also studying for his PhD at MIT at the same time and knew her personally. His recollections of her, he once told me, were that she was very active in da’wah (proselytising for Islam), handing out free Qur’an translations on campus.  My own recollections of her via electronic media are that of a student activist, who posted many times per week to an audience of thousands. 

These recollections are borne out by rare footage of one of her Islamic talks from her student activist days in 1991. This talk reveals someone intelligent, articulate and well-versed in Islamic tradition, mixed with Islamist utopian ideals, coming from an erudite Pakistani family. But by the mid-1990s, her views became firmly jihadist: she wrote several times on our online forum that military jihad was the main solution to Muslim problems worldwide.  This was at the time of the Bosnian war, and several years before 9/11, so the danger of such views was not readily apparent.

The next time I heard her name was in 2003, when I was teaching at a university in Pakistan. Dr Aafia, for she had completed her PhD in the US by this time, had gone missing with her children in Pakistan, and the national newspapers were reporting that she had been arrested by the country’s intelligence services and handed over to the US, which was fighting Al-Qaeda in neighbouring Afghanistan. I had known her name for a decade, but it was clearly new to many Pakistanis: a medic friend, who had helped set up an Islamic primary school in Islamabad, told me that she had met him in Karachi, only days before her disappearance: she had offered to write a modern primary-to-secondary Islamic school curriculum for a range of subjects, with Qur’anic verses introduced in relation to every major topic.  “Sounds just like Aafia,” I remember thinking.