Terrorism Through The Eyes Of A Terrorist

If you were to ask what my favorite type of fiction was, I couldn’t narrow it down to one category. I enjoy suspense, true crime, and mysteries. One could only imagine what a pleasure it was for me to read a fictional account of 9/11 told through the eyes of a terrorist.

Aram Schefrin penned Marwan, An Autobiography of a 9/11 Terrorist in such a way that it made terrorist seem like “human beings” with real lives. Make no mistake, the book does not create sympathy for them. It shows us that even the most evil individuals can be “just like us” in some ways. Mr. Schefrin recently shed some light on his purpose for writing the novel:

“In Chapter 23 of Marwan: The Autobiography of a 9/11 Terrorist, as the hijackers meet in a Las Vegas hotel room to discuss which planes they are going to take, there is an unexpected knock at the door. Everyone’s afraid they’ve been discovered. But it turns out to be a man from Domino’s with two thin-crust pizzas Marwan has ordered up. This completely fictional incident is a key to understanding my approach to Marwan. For one thing, it illustrates that people do not stop living their normal lives while they, for instance, plot mass murder. We tend to think of these men as monomaniacs. But even monomaniacs have to eat. But, more importantly, it illustrates another point.

Although some of them were highly educated in Saudi Arabia, most of the Saudi muscle brought in to handle the rough details of the hijacks had never been in the West before. Like bin Laden himself, all they knew of America was what they had seen on TV or what they had been told by others and the effect of American policy in their own region. So they could not understand, and were indifferent to, what they saw here.

But the pilots were a very different matter. Nawaf al-Hazmi and Khalid al-Midhar lived in San Diego. Hani Hanjour had spent a lot of time in California, Arizona and Florida. Ramzi al-Shibh, Mohammad Atta, Marwan and Ziad Jarrah were living in sophisticated Hamburg, Germany, and Jarrah came from a westernized Lebanese family. Atta, Marwan and Jarrah spent over a year in Florida. All of them had a great deal of exposure to Western ways. They knew very well what they were attacking.

Al-Shibh, because of his religion, his personality and his politics, was immune to the attractions of the West. Atta had consciously rejected them, out of outrage at Western doings in the Middle East. But al-Hazmi and al-Midhar immersed themselves in some Western behavior particularly involving sex shows, alcohol and prostitutes (much like the Saudi princes on the French Riviera). Jarrah was nearly an American kid: he had been educated in a Christian school, he played basketball, and his romance with a Turkish girl was very un-Islamic. The perception that these men were from an alien culture is, therefore, only partly true.

That was the point which interested me most about these people and the reason I felt I could approach them from Western eyes and turn them into characters Westerners could understand because of their somewhat Western behavior. And I wanted to make one of the characters almost completely Western in the way he thinks and the things he does and believes so that the story rang true to American readers. With the actual histories of these characters, I didn’t think that was farfetched.

I knew that in Germany Marwan had rented fancy red sports convertibles to make the club circuit. And there were other details I knew about him plus the fact that there were many, many details completely unknown that made him the perfect nearly blank-slate candidate to illustrate this point of view. Although he was raised in an Islamic backwater, he was influenced by American TV and very aware of what was happening in Europe and America and went to Germany because he wanted to play a part in that. I suspected that his personal weaknesses and flaws had led a kid who might have become another Silicon Valley clone to become, instead, a killer or, as he saw it, a soldier of Islam. He was the perfect character to illustrate the process by which your perfectly sane neighbor boy might find himself doing insane things.

The point of Marwan, and of the book, being: some of these people were not so different from us. To understand what they did and what others like them may yet do I think it’s important to look at them as we would at any other sad case and try to learn what it might take to stop the continuing creation of people like them.

And that’s what Marwan is about.”

 

If you’re up for an entertaining and insightful story, pick up a copy. The book is available on the web at Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and at Podiobooks.com.


Comments
4 Responses to “Terrorism Through The Eyes Of A Terrorist”
  1. Great review, Lorraine! Isn’t that book something? Amazing writer…I couldn’t put the book down. Thanks for hosting him on his virtual book tour and glad you enjoyed the book!

  2. ccmal says:

    This sounds like a fascinating and powerful book. I haven’t been able to read anything about 9/11 or watch any of the documentaries, because I was home with our newborn that day and literally glued to the TV for days on end. My brother-in-law was supposed to be at the WTC that day, and at the last moment his meeting was changed to an alternate location. I’m hoping this book will help me break free of that fear of reliving those things again.

    Cheryl

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  1. [...] Well LorMarie wrote an interesting post today on Here’s a quick excerpt Terrorism Through The Eyes Of A Terrorist Posted on February 25, 2008 by LorMarie If you were to ask what my favorite type of fiction was, I couldn’t narrow it down to one category. I enjoy suspense, true crime, and mysteries. One could only imagine what a pleasure it was for me to read a fictional account of 9/11 told through the eyes of a terrorist. Aram Schefrin penned Marwan, An Autobiography of a 9/11 Terrorist in such a way that it made terrorist seem like “human beings” with real l [...]



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