Skip to content
The Mindanao Examiner Regional Newspaper

The Mindanao Examiner Regional Newspaper

Title

Name

Primary Menu
  • Home
  • Mindanao
  • Visayas
  • National
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Business
  • International
  • SciTech
  • Health & Wellness
  • Sports
  • About Us
    • Regional Advertising Rates
    • Contact Us
    • Profile
  • Home
  • International
  • The young woman slain by ISIS for daring to ‘swim in a sea of dreams’ – CNN News
  • Featured
  • International

The young woman slain by ISIS for daring to ‘swim in a sea of dreams’ – CNN News

Desk Editor January 6, 2016

Ruqia Hassan was 30, a woman who dared to defy ISIS in its stronghold of Raqqa, Syria. She seemed to sense that one day she would pay with her life for her words and prayers. She was right.

According to the social media accounts of citizen journalists from Raqqa, Hassan was killed sometime late last year. But ISIS only informed her family of her death this week, saying she had been “executed” for “espionage.” CNN is unable to independently confirm the circumstances of her death.

It’s believed to be the first time that ISIS has killed a female citizen journalist in Syria.

Hassan was known by the pseudonym Nisan Ibrahim and was one of a number of young activists in Raqqa who tried to get word to the outside world of what was really happening in the city.

Pink lipstick

Her social media photographs show a self-assured, clear-eyed young woman in a head scarf. She has a calm smile that looks like it’s about to break into laughter. She wears bright pink lipstick.

She wrote about everyday life under ISIS rule, about coalition airstrikes as they rocked the city — with humor, sadness and a glint of hope.

Her last postings were in July. They were a mixture of the wistful and defiant, and full of prayers.

Hassan posted a photograph of an old TV antenna, with the caption “A little to the right. Yes, yes, no, now a little to the left… no it’s not working. You come down and I’ll go up. Remember… those were the best days.”

As coalition planes circled overhead on July 15, she offered a prayer: “God protect the civilians and take the rest.”

And she captured life in the city in vivid ways. “People at the souq (market) are like waves crashing into each other… not because of the numbers… but because people’s eyes are glued to the sky… their eyes move above in fear while their bodies move unconsciously below.”

‘Messenger pigeons’

Hassan mocked ISIS’ attempts to ban Wi-Fi hotspots in Raqqa.

“Go ahead and cut off the internet, our messenger pigeons won’t complain,” the post read.

Then on July 21, her Facebook postings abruptly stopped.

On that day, her last posts reveal a reflective mood, yearning for normalcy in a city where she was hunted as a spy.

“Sometimes we think of something and it happens… or thinking of someone and the next day we run into them by chance or get a call from them,” Hassan posted.

“These days I’m thinking about rest… about peace… about safety… about feeling reassured…”

She was never to find that rest and peace. Maybe she didn’t expect to. She wrote the same day: “Our biggest mistake was to swim in a sea of dreams… and we dreamt of the next phase and ignored the current phase… we look at the future and forgot the past… #a mistake we regret.”

Death threats

Abu Mohammed, who founded the activist group Raqqa Is Being Slaughtered Silently, tweeted that among Hassan’s last communications were these words: “I’m in Raqqa and I received death threats, and when ISIS (arrests) me and kills me it’s ok because they will cut my head and I have dignity it’s better than I live in humiliation with ISIS.”

In recent months, several of the Raqqa group have been assassinated in Turkey or killed inside the so-called caliphate established by ISIS, of which Raqqa is the administrative headquarters.

Hassan came from a Kurdish family that was originally from the town of Kobane, Syria, on the Turkish border. The family had at some date relocated to Raqqa.

In a country where education was open to women, Hassan grasped her opportunities, studying philosophy at the University of Aleppo, according to the website Syria Direct. She wanted a free and democratic Syria, and joined opposition protests in Raqqa in 2011. Then ISIS arrived, and she had to go underground, as did so many activists for whom the ideals of the Syrian revolution were the opposite of what ISIS’ caliphate offered.(Khushbu Shah and Tim Lister)

Link: http://edition.cnn.com/2016/01/05/world/syria-isis-woman-killed-ruqia-hassan/index.html

fb-share-icon
Tweet 20

Continue Reading

Previous: Jeb Bush shares his daughter’s struggle with drugs – CBS News
Next: End of the road for Eain Yow at British Juniors – The Star

Related News

Ursula-von-der-Leyen
  • International

EU to ban all Russian fossil fuel imports by 2027, says von der Leyen

Desk Editor May 7, 2025
India-Pakistan War
  • International

3 civilians killed in Jammu and Kashmir in cross-border firing by Pakistan: Indian Army

Desk Editor May 7, 2025
P20rice-PIA
  • Featured
  • Visayas

Tears of gratitude: Elderly Cebuano first to benefit from PBBM’s P20 Rice Program

Desk Editor May 7, 2025

Trending News

Cebu province stocks 11K sacks of rice for P20/kilo program resumption NFA-rice-PIA 1

Cebu province stocks 11K sacks of rice for P20/kilo program resumption

May 9, 2025
PhilHealth and MMDA unveil “Payong ng Kapanatagan” mural along EDSA to celebrate Public Service and Health Protection PhilHealth_MMDA-Mural-Unveiling2 2

PhilHealth and MMDA unveil “Payong ng Kapanatagan” mural along EDSA to celebrate Public Service and Health Protection

May 9, 2025
Self-rated poverty drops to 42%, food poverty to 35% – OCTA Philippines_Poverty_Mel_Hattie 3

Self-rated poverty drops to 42%, food poverty to 35% – OCTA

May 9, 2025
PH to become $2-T economy by 2050 Bonifacio-Global-City_and_Makati_skylines 4

PH to become $2-T economy by 2050

May 8, 2025
Metrobank Tops 2025 PDS Annual Awards Metrobank-Annual-Awards 5

Metrobank Tops 2025 PDS Annual Awards

May 8, 2025
  • Facebook
  • X
  • YouTube
  • Blog
Copyright © 2025. The Mindanao Examiner Regional Newspaper. All Rights Reserved.