I ran the transcript of Rifqa's interview with FDLE here. It was devastating. The audio is ....worse. How could this young girl's testimony fail to move these statist monsters?
Dalia Mogahed, Obama's Muslim Outreach adviser
Rifqa Bary: Uh, I am sorry but aren't I supposed to have like lawyers here or anything like that
Agent DL: You're the victim (chuckle)
Rifa Bary: Oh, really? Okay.
Agent David Lee: You know the difference in a victim and a subject?
Rifqa Bary: Yeah, I do. I do.
Agent: Okay.
[....]
Rifqa Bary:.... I have people that want to testify ...my friends.
[...]
Rifqa Bary: Here's the thing you need to understand. I almost feel like I had two lives. I was straight A, a lot of people knew me at school, the cheerleader, the good student, the goody two shoes kind of girl that did nothing wrong.
DL: Okay.
RB: But at home it was a
very different lifestyle. I have two groups of friends. One at school
and one that knew the truth about me.
And that was my faith and how I was hiding and those are church affiliated people.
DL: Okay, your friends at school the first group, why are they different from the ones ....
RB: Because they did not know my home life. They did not know what I faced. They didn't know the truth about me and I was a believer and I couldn't express it.
The agent David Lee then asked about her religious upbringing. To say that these guys are clueless is being too kind.
RB:
My family is originally from Sri Lanka so you need to understand that
all the traditions, all the culture, everything is from Islam.
[...]
They were really fixated on not being too westernized.
"All the laws are very different than here, it's allowed there um, so they could do whatever they wanted and that, I was in very much fear of," she said.
- Rifqa said she thought the threat against her was real because she had heard of other Muslims being killed for similar reasons.
"I had heard of cases like mine so similar that is was scary to me,"
She goes on to describe her life growing up in Sri Lanka. She grew up in an Islamic community where they "took her to the mosque a lot".
RB : It was not just religion, it was everything. It was political, social, it was everything. There is nothing outside of it.
[...]
David Lee: You may have to help me out here because I don't know a lot about the Muslim religion.
Atlas: So why was he assigned to this case? Get a friggin cluebat.
But were y'all very what, I guess what you would call Orthodox. you would go
RB: Devout
DL: Devout, devout.
RB: Very devout
DL: Were you very devout
[...]
RB: My brother and I would walk to the mosque and for hours we were there and the day before that we would have to memorize pages from the Koran and then recite it back to Imam.
[...]
And after we came to
Ohio my parents were very fixated on not losing honor, way of life, you
know, even though you are in America, these are our laws. I couldn't
be a normal teenager. I have to follow a lot of dress codes, there were
food codes, there was a code of
Religious laws
[..]
I really want you guys to know, please look into the Noor mosque, because there are ties there I think you should know about
[...]
I
am not only worried about my parents, I am worried about the community
... I am sure you heard my parents weren't the ones that found out
everything, it was the Islamic community that found out
And I am honestly, I am really in fear of that community.
Rifqa goes on to explain about sharia law ...the agents are either clueless or really talented actors acting like morons:
RB: I am an apostate
DL: Apostate, what is?
RB: Apostate. I am an infidel. I mean infidel, basically an apostate is one that leaves, born of the Islamic religion.
Re: The cheerleading outfit - just as Atlas said many times, she lived a double life and her parents never saw her in it. The cheerleading picture of her on the table in the ABC interview with the Bary parents was staged.
And this poignant detail .............
More on her father and the beatings:
Agent: Why did you grow with fear?
Rifqa: My dad ....
Agent DL: What did he do to make you so afraid?
Rifqa: he beat me
And here her father socks her in the face for slouching in the hijab:
When friends noticed her bruises:
On the cheerleading -- the parents never went to one game.
Rifqa tells of her father's rage upon hearing from the mosque of Rifqa's love of Christianity
Here Rifqa is questioned about her eye. She admits her brother was responsible in an accident. When queried if she ever got medical attention for it (the reason Mohamed Bary claims brought him to America) Rifqa says, bo. No nedical treatment. They never got her medical treatment
Apparently the school called Rifqa's parents because of the reoccurring appearance of bruises
Rifqa: It's not my father's decision, it's the law. Sharia law
The reason she chose Florida - to get as far away from Ohio as [possible. She calls the couple of weeks spent with the Lorenzs the greatest of her life
Here Rifqa explains why she had no boyfriends> There was a forced marriage in er future.
This girl .............. must be saved.
Check this out
It ain't funny, clowns.
These are the "agents" that issued the FDLE reprot that said Rifqa was in no danger.The laughing clowns.
These silly agents then ask to read this young girls diaries and journals. Got that? Rifqa says OK. Where was her protection from these ghouls?
Chuckles (below) needs sensitivity training (and no, not from CAIR) and a serious smack upside his head ....




