 Palestinian Abdullah Jinzawi, 20, who befriended 16-year-old
Michigan girl Katherine Lester through the Myspace.com Web site and
invited her to join him in the West Bank town of Jericho pauses during an
interview with the Associated Press at his family's house, Sunday, June
18, 2006. Jimzawi said he is heartbroken by US authorities' decision to
send her back home before she could reach the West Bank. [AP
Photo] |
The Palestinian man who had an Internet
romance with a 16-year-old US girl in Michigan is a music-loving
computer buff who says he loves the teen and is heartbroken she was sent home.
Abdullah Jimzawi, a 20-year-old high school dropout who lives with his
parents in Jericho, said he and Katherine Lester had planned to marry and she
intended to convert to Islam.
Lester was en route to Tel Aviv airport when she was intercepted in Amman,
Jordan, by US authorities who seized her passport and put her on a flight back
to the United States.
The couple still speak to each other at least five hours a day via Internet
phone calls, said Jimzawi, a shy soft-spoken young man with close-cropped hair
and a two-day beard.
"We love the same things, the same songs and we have similar dreams. I fell
in love with her because she is innocent and goodhearted. We found ourselves to
be soul mates," he said in Jericho, a town of 17,000 that is largely immune from
the violence plaguing the rest of the West Bank.
Jimzawi and Lester met through MySpace.com, a social networking Web site
whose popularity with teenagers has raised concerns among US authorities, with
scattered accounts of sexual predators targeting minors on the site.
Jimzawi, who works in his father's business delivering goods to minimarkets,
said his love for Lester is pure. Had she made it to Jericho, he said, she would
have shared his sister's bedroom.
The couple would have walked together through the tree-lined streets of
Jericho, he said, and he and Lester would have celebrated her 17th birthday
Wednesday.
"When I realized she wasn't coming, I felt my whole world collapse," he said
in the interview Sunday at his family's home. "My tears didn't stop and I
couldn't sleep for three days."
Lester, who boarded a flight to Israel after slipping out of her mother's
house in Gilford, Mich., has not spoken to reporters since returning to the
United States on June 9. She has taken refuge at an undisclosed location with
her father to escape the media frenzy.
Lester's older sister, Mary, said Monday she believes Jimzawi loves her
sister and wanted to marry her. But, she said, she can't understand why he
arranged for the teen to travel to the Middle East.
"If you love this girl like you say you do, then why don't you come up here?"
Mary Lester asked.
She said her sister also denied promising to convert to Islam, saying that
was a lie made up by the media.
"I don't think she realizes how serious this is," Mary Lester said. "We've
all tried talking to her, but talking to a 16-year-old is like trying to bend
steel."
Jimzawi was initially reluctant to talk to the media because of what he said
was unfair treatment following Lester's ill-fated trip. However, he eventually
agreed to be photographed in shorts and sandals, showing AP reporters the
computer on which he said he met Lester eight months ago.
Chickens roamed the front yard outside his middle-class home, which has a
small swimming pool, a large porch with a table and many nearby date palms.
In a sitting room with pink curtains, Jimzawi clicked his computer mouse to
play a song from Staind, one of his favorite heavy metal bands. Six framed
posters of Quranic verses and Islamic prayers adorned the walls, including one
depicting the 99 names of God.
Jimzawi, the second of five children, said he explained to Lester that she
should convert to Islam to marry him.
"She said, 'No problem because I love you and I love your religion,'" he
said.
Jimzawi's mother, Sana, said Lester intended to sign a marriage contract in
Jericho. Jimzawi said the couple planned to wait for Lester to turn 18 before
getting married.
Jimzawi said he had little interest in going to the US. However, 19-year-old
Tarek Ali, who said he was Jimzawi's friend, said Jimzawi "wanted to take the
SAT exam and study computer engineering in the US. That is his dream."
Mahmoud Bali, the owner of a Jericho Internet cafe where Jimzawi once worked,
said the young man spent 10 hours a day in Internet chat rooms or listening to
music on the Web.
"I can describe him as a dreamer and romantic person," Bali said. "He loves
songs and to chat with people outside of the country and doesn't like to talk to
people here."
"Most of the young people who come to my Net cafe, like Abdullah, are people
obsessed with Western life and the opportunities there. They like freedom,
dancing, listening to music, those things that you can't do here in Palestine,
particularly in Jericho."
Jimzawi said his next step will be to apply for a visa to visit Lester.
His mother said she was sorry about the pain Lester's mother must have gone
through when her daughter left. "She had the right to be worried," she said.
But she insisted she and Abdullah had the girl's best interests at heart.
"He met a lot of girls on the Internet, but he loves her and he made everyone
in the family love her," she said.