American Islamic hostage Kayla Mueller confirmed dead
The family of Kayla Mueller, an American woman held captive by the Islamist terror group ISIS, said Tuesday it has received confirmation that she is dead.
"We
are heartbroken
to share that we've received confirmation that Kayla Jean Mueller has lost her life," a statement from the family reads.
to share that we've received confirmation that Kayla Jean Mueller has lost her life," a statement from the family reads.
"Kayla
was a compassionate and devoted humanitarian. She dedicated the whole
of her young life to helping those in need of freedom, justice, and
peace," the family said.
On Friday,
ISIS claimed that Mueller -- captured in northern Syria in 2013 -- had
been killed in a building hit during a Jordanian airstrike on Raqqa, the
militants' de facto capital in Syria. At the time, ISIS offered no
proof to back up its claim, other than an image of a building in rubble.
Over the weekend, ISIS sent the family a private message, National Security Council spokeswoman Bernadette Meehan said Tuesday.
"Once this information was authenticated by the intelligence community, they concluded that Kayla was deceased," Meehan said.
The
new information does not clarify how Mueller died, a law enforcement
source familiar with the case said on condition of anonymity.
President Barack Obama offered his condolences to the young woman's family.
"Kayla's
compassion and dedication to assisting those in need shows us that even
amongst unconscionable evil, the essential decency of humanity can live
on," Obama said in a statement released by the White House on Tuesday.
Obama has spoken with Mueller's family, Meehan said.
"He
committed that we will relentlessly pursue the terrorists responsible
for Kayla's captivity and death, and underscored that his team stands
ready to help the family in the difficult weeks and months ahead," she
said.
Mueller's relatives on Tuesday also released a handwritten letter that they say she wrote while in captivity in spring 2014.
At one point, the letter reads, "I will never ask you to forgive me as I do not deserve forgiveness."
Read a letter written by Kayla Mueller last year
"It's
hard to know what to say," the letter also reads. "Please know that I
am in a safe location, completely unharmed + healthy (put on weight in
fact); I have been treated w/the utmost respect + kindness."
She
said that she could only write the letter a paragraph at a time. "Just
the thought of you sends me into fits of tears," the letter says, and
"all in all in the end the only one you really have is God."
Taken hostage in 2013
Mueller
fell into the hands of hostage-takers in August 2013 in Aleppo, Syria,
her family said, after leaving a Doctors Without Borders hospital.
Her
family said ISIS contacted them in May with proof that she was alive.
The militants eventually said they would kill her if the family didn't
pay nearly $7 million by August 13, according to a source close to the
family. What happened after that deadline is unclear.
A life serving others
Mueller,
26, made it her life's work to help others. She graduated from Northern
Arizona University in 2009, and worked with humanitarian groups in
northern India, Israel and Palestinian territories, a family spokeswoman
said.
In Israel, she volunteered at the African Refugee Development Center.
Carol
Thompson, one of Mueller's former professors, said Tuesday that her
family has endured "18 months of anguish and tears and hell."
It's
also been hard on "those of us who were trying to come up with an
alternative outcome to not only Kayla, but the other hostages -- to
James (Foley) and Steven (Sotloff) and Peter (Kassig) who were killed,"
she said, referring to three others who have been slain by the terror
group.
There is a resolution, said
Thompson, to be inspired by Mueller's work to "try to overcome some of
the horrors that are going on right now."
She
would "want us to say what actions, how can each one of us do a little
part?" Thompson added. "She had no illusions that she was going to
transform the world, but she went trying to do whatever small thing she
could do to change maybe a couple of relationships, a small corner of
the world."
Mueller went back to
Arizona in 2011, volunteered in a women's shelter and worked at an
HIV/AIDS clinic, helping to facilitate events and providing local
coordination for World AIDS Day, the family spokeswoman said.
After
a year as an au pair in France, she traveled to the Turkish/Syrian
border to work with the Danish Refugee Council and the humanitarian
organization Support to Life, which assisted families forced to flee
their homes due to the civil war in Syria, the spokeswoman said.
In
a YouTube video produced in October 2011, before the rise of ISIS,
Mueller said she supported a sit-in that protested the Syrian regime.
"I
am in solidarity with the Syrian people," she said. "I reject the
brutality and killing that the Syrian authorities are committing against
the Syrian people."
Remember her work
Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-South Carolina, said Mueller should be remembered for her altruistic work, not for how she died.
"Her
family's got to be heartbroken, but my God, this is the best example,
this young lady, of being an American, being a decent human being that
one could imagine. I believe very strongly she is in God's hands," he
said on CNN on Tuesday.
"Those who captured her, and in my view, killed her -- I think God will judge them differently."
U.S. Rep. Paul Gosar, a Republican from Mueller's home state of Arizona, said it feels like a "very, very sad day."
"Here's
a beautiful girl, young person that gave her life to helping others,"
he said. "I hope everybody will reach out to their respective religions
with thoughts and prayers on behalf of Kayla and her family."
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