Mythopoeia- Abu Bakr al Baghdadi

Before we get to the mythical Abu Bakr al Baghdadi lets talk Mythopoeia.

Mythopoeia (also mythopoesis, after Hellenistic Greek μυθοποιία, μυθοποίησις "myth-making") is a narrative genre in modern literature and film where a fictional mythology is created by the writer of prose or other fiction. The authors in this genre integrate traditional mythological themes and archetypes into fiction.

I happened across a myth just today. A story filled with very common archetypes,(PDF) employing evocative language The myth concerned none other then Abu Bakr al Baghdadi. The myth appears to have been entirely generated because of the  appearance in a yet to be authenticated video that appeared on line. This lack of authentication hasn't stopped this story from going viral. And yet, it is completely non credible.

Iraqi officials are working to determine the authenticity of a video...

The White House said on Monday the a video posted on the Internet over the weekend of Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the reclusive leader of the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) is still being reviewed by the intelligence and cannot yet determine its authenticity.

 The video was still being authenticated late Saturday by the Central Intelligence Agency. A spokesman for the Iraqi Interior Ministry, Brig. Gen. Saad Maan, told Reuters that the ministry thought it was fake

The US, of course, wants you to believe it is real. While the video may be a real video. My stance on this is there is NO Abu Bakr al Baghdadi.  Not a living human being. Not one individual. He is a composite. . He moves like the wind through the branches.  You hear the branches, but, not al Baghdadi. He is everywhere. He is nowhere.  He is whoever he is needed to be.The Mythical Abu Bakr al Baghdadi - UnmaskedRadical Islams Mystery Man

For a man so mysterious that there are only two known photographs of him, it was a brazen public debut.

I have four different images of our mystery man in this post- No Iraq invasion unless US homeland threatened? A bit to telling?

The most wanted man in the Middle East, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi is also one of the most elusive, an evanescent figure behind the Islamist insurrection sweeping the Syrian and Iraqi interior. And yet, according to jihadist websites at the weekend, here he was on video openly rallying the adepts of the new Islamic state he had just pronounced in the largest city that his fighters had taken. Clad in black robes that invoked a distant, almost mythical phase of Islamic history, Baghdadi gave a half-hour sermon during Friday prayers in Mosul and led worship inside one of the most important Islamic sites in Iraq in open defiance of the US intelligence officials who have put a US$10 million bounty on his head.

In doing so, he laid down a challenge not only to the authorities in Baghdad and the foreign powers that want stability in the country, (foreign powers do not want stability!) but to the radical Islamist mother ship from which the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) movement, which now calls itself simple the Islamic State, broke al-Qaeda and its current leader, Ayman al-Zawahiri.

Oh yah, ISIS rebranded themselves to IS? Just to add to the confusion, of course.

Those present at the grand mosque in Mosul had no idea who would be preaching on Friday. But as the bearded figure made his entrance, he was introduced to them simply as "your new caliph Ibrahim"."I am not better than you or more virtuous than you," Baghdadi says in the video. "If you see me on the right path, help me. If you see me on the wrong path, advise me and halt me. And obey me as far as I obey God."He is determined to make himself into the one true ruler of Sunni Islam

Baghdadi was born Ibrahim Awad al-Badari in 1971 near Samarra, a city about 80km north of Baghdad. He took a master's degree and a doctorate in Islamic studies at the University of Islamic Sciences in Baghdad. When the US invaded Iraq in March 2003, the pious Baghdadi was still studying and was not thought to be connected to either al-Qaeda or its local offshoot in the early years of resistance.

An ordinary man

But by late 2005 he had been captured as a suspected mid-ranking figure in the anti-US Sunni insurgency. His jailers at Camp Bucca detention centre in southern Iraq have described him as inconspicuous.

After his release he was recruited to the military council of the Islamic State, acting as a key adviser to the then leader, Abu Omar al-Baghdadi. At the time the group was engaged in the intense sectarian war with Iraq's majority Shiite and their militias.

"He wasn't the most impressive guy in the organisation," said another Islamic State member who spent time with Baghdadi in prison. "He wasn't even really a standout. He was a mid-ranking loyalist until he was freed." Six months in detention was a major step in his transformation from devout Muslim to committed jihadist.

Who transformed himself? After six months in US detention.

However, it was another four years before he would assume the leadership of the movement, taking over from Abu Omar al-Baghdadi, who was killed in a US-led raid near Fallujah. He set about turning it from a local branch of al-Qaeda into a distinct, independent force with a clear agenda: to re-establish a Sunni caliphate across Iraq and Syria.

He's on a quest.

Still, Baghdadi remained an unknown quantity until early last year when ISIL started to make real inroads on the battlefields of northern Syria.

Mysterious

By the summer it had ousted a second jihadist group, the al-Nusra Front, and stamped its authority over the northern Aleppo countryside. It then set up a base in the eastern Syrian city of Raqaa, commandeering Syria's eastern oilfields and moving steadily eastwards towards Fallujah and Ramadi in Iraq's Anbar province.

A senior Iraqi intelligence official said that Baghdadi's determination to trump his rivals had led him to twice defy Zawahiri in the past year. The official said the most recent contact between the pair was on June 4, days before ISIL stormed Mosul and Tikrit.

Defies authority

"We intercepted letters between them, and the last one was Zawahiri complaining about Baghdadi writing to him to say he did not recognise his authority," the official said. "They were regularly swapping letters for several months. They were hand delivered and the turnaround was usually around 10 days." The appearance of Baghdadi in the open in Mosul is deeply embarrassing for Iraqi officials who were caught hopelessly unawares when ISIL militants began overrunning swathes of the Iraqi north last month. The fragility of the state military has been exposed regularly ever since, with an 805km stretch of the border with Syria now under control of the insurgents, along with most of Anbar province and many of northern Iraq's military arsenals.

The besieged prime minister, Nouri al-Maliki, has constantly claimed to be making gains on the battlefields, but his forces have yet to claw back any of the losses to the Islamic State And as the national military flounders, Shiite militias are increasingly mobilising, with many members openly fighting out of sectarian motivations rather than a sense of patriotism.

Iraqi officials are scrambling to determine whether the video is genuine. Two people who have met Baghdadi both told The Guardian they were certain he was the man in the video.Hisham al-Hashimi, a senior Iraqi researcher on Islamic militancy, said Baghdadi's choice of attire and language showed he was trying to liken himself to the earliest caliphs, especially those who ruled during the Abbasid period (750-1258), a flourishing but brutal time in Islamic history.

Hisham al Hashimi is quoted quite about regarding Iraq " Military affairs expert Dr. Hisham al-Hashemi"I am trying to find his credentials-- What makes him the go to military expert? He is giving us the narrative someone in power wants us to believe. In this article he is Hisham al-Hashimi, an Iraqi expert on Islamic groups. He feels like a PR guy. A spin doctor. Has anyone else come across this name previously and in what capacity was his alleged expertise being presented? And the myth was quite likely created at some public relations outfit.

Baghdadi had little new to say, relying heavily on verses from the and the words of other caliphs, in particular Abu Bakr Saddiq, the first caliph, who led the Islamic world after the death of the prophet Mohammed.

This guy has a birthright...supposedly

Scholars in Baghdad say the fact that Baghdadi can trace his lineage back to the Muslim prophet gives him significant leverage under sharia law, making it difficult for any senior cleric to contest his legitimacy as an Islamic leader.

"He is trying to seize a moment,"said Hashimi. "He believes he is a man worthy of historical comparison. He has all the criteria and the conditions. He belongs to the family tree."

In recent weeks Iraqi officials have suggested that Baghdadi is a deluded figure overcome by hubris. Some even said he was the contemporary equivalent of a Jonestown cult leader, brainwashing followers into blindly following him in a nihilistic grab for power and influence.

However, the gains that the Islamic State has made over two countries in such a short time suggest that its leadership is highly organised and efficient. "He is rational,"said Hashimi. "He thinks very clearly about what he is doing. He is deeply ideological and committed. He is also very determined to make himself into the one true ruler of Sunni Islam."

In Baghdad, the appearance of the video was met with alarm and curiosity in equal measure. Azima Zahra, a resident of the capital, said Baghdadi's image would give her nightmares. "He is what I thought he would be: a cold, mean and cruel man who thinks he is a prophet,"she said. "He will lead us all to ruin."

Azima Zahra - Savvy!

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