A Florida Culture-War Circus Over Rifqa Bary
Florida has a knack for turning family dysfunction into national spectacle. Ten years ago it gave us the Elian Gonzalez mess; five years later came the Terri Schiavo debacle. Now we have a new domestic dispute that threatens to become another culture-war circus, complete with a clash-of-religions angle to boot: the battle for Rifqa Bary, a 17-year-old girl from Columbus, Ohio, who ran away to an Evangelical church in Orlando, Fla., because, she claims, her Sri Lankan Muslim family has threatened to kill her for recently converting to Christianity.
The saga began in mid-July when Rifqa, after a dispute with her parents, bolted from her home and rode a bus to Orlando. There she took refuge with the Rev. Blake Lorenz, the pastor of a conservative Christian congregation, the Global Revolution Church, and his wife Beverly, whom the cheerleader and honor student had met on Facebook. Almost three weeks later, on Aug. 6, the Lorenzes finally let authorities and Rifqa’s frantic parents know the girl was with them. Then, a few days later, Rifqa dropped a bombshell to an Orlando television station: she had run away, she claimed, because her family, angry about her conversion to Christianity, had “threatened to kill me.”
Wearing a white dress and a silver cross, her dark hair often falling over her scared eyes, the small and slender Rifqa insisted in the TV interview (now on YouTube) that her father Mohamed Bary, a Columbus jeweler, “said he would kill me or send me back to Sri Lanka,” where she said “they have asylums where they put people like me.” She said her death would be a Muslim “honor killing,” the kind of murder that women in deeply conservative Muslim societies are sometimes victims of when they’re deemed to have shamed their families. (The U.N. Population Fund estimates that there are as many as 5,000 worldwide honor killings every year.) Rifqa said that her father, upon discovering her Facebook profile and its declarations of her Christian faith, told her, “If you have this Jesus in your heart, you’re dead to me, you’re not my daughter.” She added, almost hysterically, “They have to kill me … I want to worship Jesus freely. I don’t want to die!”
It’s a serious charge that any law-enforcement or social-services official would have to look into, particularly since there have in fact been some extremely rare instances of honor killings in the U.S. Most recently two Dallas-area sisters were murdered last year, allegedly by their Egyptian-born Muslim father, who relatives say was enraged that his daughters, 18 and 17 years old, were dating non-Muslim boys. (The father is still at large and is believed to have fled the country.) But Mohamed Bary and his wife Aysha adamantly insist it is “completely false” that they ever threatened to kill Rifqa over her conversion. “We love her; we want her back. She is free to practice her religion, whatever she believes in. That’s O.K.,” Mohamed told the Associated Press last week.
Columbus police tell TIME they’re watching the case closely and are in contact with the courts and social-services agencies in Ohio and Florida; so far they have found no evidence or other information to support Rifqa’s accusation. Craig McCarthy, one of two Orlando attorneys appointed to represent the Barys in Florida, says that while they may have been dismayed at first by Rifqa’s conversion, as devout parents of any faith would be, they are hardly the kind of fundamentalist Muslims who would declare a medieval fatwa, or death sentence, on their daughter. “There is a vast, vast difference between not being pleased that your child has not chosen your faith and wanting to kill your child,” says McCarthy. “This is a family with Westernized kids. Their daughter is a cheerleader.”
If Rifqa’s claims are indeed false, that raises the question of whether she may have been prodded by her new friends at Global Revolution Church to make the death-threat accusations, and whether she was somehow lured to Orlando by the Lorenzes via the Internet. The couple, who could not be reached for comment, have denied it to the media. But Beverly Lorenz has acknowledged that she talked by phone with Rifqa before the girl ran away. Blake Lorenz, who insists that Rifqa will be killed if she goes home, earlier this month made clear to reporters his Crusades-era belief that this is part of Christianity’s holy struggle against Islam: “These are the last days; these are the end times,” he said, “and this conflict between Islam and Christianity is going to grow greater. This conflict between good and evil is going to grow greater.”
As a result, says McCarthy, “you wonder if people have been stoking this fear in her head, telling her, ‘This is what the Koran says will happen to you.’ ” The Orlando lawyer who claims to represent Rifqa, conservative activist John Stemberger, head of the Florida Family Policy Council (which fought in 2005 to keep Terri Schiavo on life support), last week wrote in a petition to keep the girl in Florida that she “is in imminent threat of harm from the extreme radical Muslim community in her hometown of Columbus.” He warned that one of the world’s largest “cells of al-Qaeda operatives” once worked from a Columbus mosque the Barys have attended. He bases these sweeping claims on the fact that Salah Sultan, a controversial Islamic scholar who denies that Arab terrorists committed the 9/11 attacks, once had ties to the city’s Muslim community. Stemberger tells TIME he plans to introduce more specific evidence in the coming days. “There are many peaceful, law-abiding Muslims in this country, and they should be embraced, so this is not about Christianity vs. Islam,” says Stemberger. “It’s about what’s in the best interests of Rifqa Bary, whether the threat to her in this particular community is real and she could end up disappearing in the night there. Normally I would be an advocate for parental rights, but not in this case.”
After its probe of the situation this month, Florida’s Department of Children and Family Services took Rifqa from the Lorenzes and placed her in foster care. At a hearing in Orlando on Aug. 21, a judge ruled that she could remain in Florida until he decides, probably at a later hearing slated for Sept. 3, where she should ultimately go. (McCarthy says the Barys were willing to let Rifqa be placed in Ohio foster care while the case is adjudicated.)
Not surprisingly, Rifqa is turning into a cause célèbre. Conservative websites often accused of anti-Muslim agendas, such as the Jawa Report, Atlas Shrugs and WorldNetDaily, have been lighting up over the Rifqa fight. No doubt conservative and anti-U.S. Muslims will eventually step into the media frenzy. And politicians have already started weighing in. Florida’s moderate Republican governor and U.S. Senate candidate, Charlie Crist, who needs conservative voters to win his state’s closed GOP primary next year, issued a statement on Aug. 21 saying he’s “grateful to Circuit Judge Daniel Dawson for his decision to grant [Rifqa] the right to remain in Florida … We will continue to fight to protect Rifqa’s safety and well-being as we move forward.” Of course, Crist’s conservative primary opponent, former Florida house speaker Marco Rubio, released his own communiqué: “Florida not only has a responsibility to protect [Rifqa's] innocent life, but also to defend her sacred right to worship freely.” True enough. But despite the heated rhetoric once again fueling a Florida fracas, it’s not at all clear that Rifqa Bary’s rights are in danger.
- By TIM PADGETT | Time
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Bronwyn
28 Aug 09 at 6:22 pm
It is a shame that you post an article so one-sided. Many of your countrymen have been brutally murdered for having the courage to proclaim Jesus Christ, THey have been murdered by Muslims who are taught from the cradle that killing apostates is wonderful.Every Muslim country on earth outlaws the conversion of Muslims and punishes them with death. These countries are openly barbaric and would be treated with the contempt they deserve if it were not for oil. The Sri Lankan brand of Islam requires that Rifqa be killed for refusing to renounce her conversion. The evidence of this is undeniable.
Rifqa’s ‘father and mother want to kill her. Her former mosque, which is led by political extremists who follow Islam, present a clear danger to Rifqa. There are numerous and credible reports of her being abused by her father for desiring to have her head uncovered and to lead a normal life. Her desperation led her to run away. She deserves refuge in Florida and all decisions should be in favor of her safety. Muslim girls are killed by the thousands by their fathers. brother, uncles, nothers. Honor killing is a peculialy Muslim evil and it must be stopped.
All your readers are not as gullible as you would wish. We know that you do not have the courage to print the whole story. So you print propaganda instead. It is a shame to serve half lies and innuendos, especially when your cowardice could contribute to the murder of an innocent girl. Courage is required of us all. One day you may run with none to help. It would be poetic justice.
SCott
29 Aug 09 at 8:39 am
Your wrong about your claim that all Muslim countries punish conversion with death, most don’t. However, in most Muslim countries there are cases of extra-legal killing of people who convert, and the murders are rarely prosecuted. This usually happens in the more conservative areas of these countries. You can’t just assume that because Rifqa’s parents are Muslim that her claims are true. However since these allegations are very serious, I hope the judge takes into account what type of Mosque the parents belong to and if they believe in this brand of Islam
P.J.D.
29 Aug 09 at 1:27 pm
Spoken like a true liberal. I’m sure ‘Time’ is proud of you. God forbid you didn’t mention all of the honour killings which have taken place in Texas, Mississauga, Ontario in Canada and other places so numerous but I’m sure you have the ability to find them out yourself. If it were reverse and this girl was escaping from a ‘christian’ situation to a muslim one, I’m sure your support would be the opposite. But then again, wouldn’t ‘Time’ be equally proud of you for your typical rhetoric.
LFW
5 Sep 09 at 1:29 pm
It would seem that all some people need to see is the word “Muslim” for them to believe the worst. Let’s look at some facts: The family in question is not fanatical or conservative in their beliefs. This teen was a cheerleader, worked p/t at a Chinese restaurant, had a laptop (given to her by her father), unresticted internet access and was allowed friends of various faiths. Friends and neighbors (of varying faiths) have said the family has known of the teen’s conversion to Christianity for close to a year; she has proselytized at school and reads the Bible at home with her family’s knowledge. The family, as a whole, did not attend Mosque on a regular basis, and there is no indication that they believe in fanatical interpretations of Sharia Law (which is the basis of “honor killings”). Furthermore, Sri Lanka is not a Muslim nation, and there has never been a reported honor killing there. It is far more likely that this teen has been manipulated by the so-called “Church” to further their own agenda