11 November 2005News
War on Terror Touches Home

A friend forwarded me this story this morning about Moustapha Akkad's death in the hotel bombings in Jordan. What's the big deal, you say? Well, his daughter Rima was also killed in the bombings. Rima Akkad was a member of my tiny 60+ person graduating class at Brentwood School in 1988.

Were Rima and I close? Not really. I don't even think I ever had a class with her, which is hard to believe. We'd probably fall somewhere between friends and casual acquantainces. I haven't talked to her or seen her since graduation and all the news that she was living in Beirut married with 2 sons is all literally news to me.

However when you have a high school class that is as small as mine, whenever something like this happens, it can't help but touch you.

There's a quote in the article from her mom Patricia:

"Rima is a totally American girl. Here's an American who was over there and innocently killed for no reason."

Here's a story about Rima that I remember which belies the quote. When she was 16 and got her driver's license, her parents bought her a new white Audi Quattro. She then proceeded to rack up so many speeding tickets that the car was yanked from her. Did she then have nothing to drive? Of course not. This is Los Angeles we're talking about here. Her parents gave her a black Jeep Wrangler as a replacement. Someone asked her about it and she said that the Quattro was just too fast, taking absolutely no responsbility for the fact that it was her foot on the gas that made the car go. How more American can you get?

Rima was a nice girl. She could have been a horrible stuck snobbish bitch like a lot of my classmates, but she wasn't. She was down to earth and sweet and an asset to our class.

Resquiet in pace, Rima.

Here's the whole story from the Associated Press:

Halloween' Producer Akkad Dies in Jordan

By SHAFIKA MATTAR, Associated Press Writer1 hour, 6 minutes ago

Moustapha Akkad, the Syrian-born filmmaker and producer of the "Halloween" horror movie franchise, died Friday from wounds sustained in the triple hotel bombings in Jordan. He was 75. His daughter, Rima Akkad Monla, 34, also was killed.

Akkad, who lived in Los Angeles, was in Jordan with his daughter to attend a wedding. He died in the Jordanian hospital where he was being treated.

The two were at the wedding celebration at the Radisson SAS Wednesday night when suicide bombers struck it, the Grand Hyatt and the Days Inn in downtown Amman, killing at least 59 people including the three attackers. Rima Akkad Monla, who lives in Beirut, Lebanon, was killed immediately.

Born in the northern Syrian city of Aleppo in July 1930, the eldest of eight siblings, Akkad gained fame as a director and producer in the Arab world and West. After finishing his secondary studies in Syria, he left for America in 1950 to study film making, according to his sister.

He was best known for producing all eight "Halloween" films, starting with the 1979 "Halloween" directed by John Carpenter and starring then-unknown Jamie Lee Curtis. That movie — and the ones that followed — sparked the teen-slasher-horror genre that led to franchises including "Friday the 13th" and "Nightmare on Elm Street."

Akkad also produced and directed "The Message" (1976), a film about Islam's prophet, Mohammed, and "Lion of the Desert" (1981), which tells the story of a Muslim rebel who fought against the Italy's World War II conquest of Libya. Both starred Anthony Quinn.

"The Message" was declared sacrilegious by a group of black American Muslims, who took hostages in three Washington, D.C. locations when the movie opened in the United States in March 1977, demanding it not be shown in America.

Akkad said he was baffled by the reaction to the movie, which he said cost $17 million to make. It also was nominated for an Academy Award for best original score.

"I did the film because it is a personal thing for me. ... Being a Muslim myself who lived in the West, I felt that it was my obligation, my duty to tell the truth about Islam.

"It (Islam) is a religion that has a 700 million following, yet it's so little known about, which surprised me. I thought I should tell the story that will bring this (history) to the West," he added.

Akkad said he turned to the horror genre because it was hard to raise money for religious-themed movies, according to a 1998 New York Times report.

A woman who answered the telephone at Akkad's Los Angeles home early Friday said she was too upset to talk. A telephone message left at the Los Angeles-area home of Akkad's ex-wife, Patricia, was not immediately returned. She left for Lebanon late Thursday.

The couple's daughter, Rima, grew up in Los Angeles an avid polo player who graduated from the University of Southern California in 1995 with a degree in international relations.

She pursued a master's degree in Middle East studies at the American University in Beirut, where she met her husband Ziad Monla, 35. Her husband's family owns the Monla Hospital in Tripoli, Lebanon. The couple, married for six years, has two sons, ages 2 and 4.

"Rima is a totally American girl," Patricia Akkad, 64, said Thursday in a phone interview from Los Angeles. "Here's an American who was over there and innocently killed for no reason."

She said her daughter loved living in Beirut.

"We all know the problems in the Middle East, and you never think it's going to touch you," she said.

Akkad's sister called for an end to terrorist attacks on civilians.

"I feel sad and the world feels sorrow with us. This kind of incident rarely happens, but it has happened with Moustapha Akkad," Leila Akkad told AP in a telephone interview. "These attacks are chaotic and do not differentiate an enemy from a friend. A solution must be found to this problem."

With the death of his daughter, Rima, Akkad is survived by three sons, Tarek, Malek and Zeido.

Funeral services for Rima Akkad Monla were scheduled for Friday in Tripoli. Services for Akkad were scheduled Sunday in his hometown of Aleppo, his sister.

___

Associated Press writers Shafika Mattar in Amman, Jordan, and Ian Gregor in Los Angeles contributed to this report.

Posted by andrew at November 11, 2005 08:42 AM


Comments

brian Says:

Andrew Breitbart was friends with her family, and wrote about it here:

http://www.rogerlsimon.com/mt-archives/2005/11/terrorism_close.php

So sad.

November 11, 2005 01:47 PM




Remember me?

(You may use HTML tags for style)

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.americanidle.org/MT/mt-tb.cgi/1287

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference:
'War on Terror Touches Home'.