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Project Pearl: The Bravest Class in
Town
Will a dogged group of college students in
D.C. solve the grisly murder of journalist Danny
Pearl before the FBI does?
Marie Claire, September 2008
Interview by Abigail Pesta

Jessica Rettig, a 20-year-old
journalism student wearing a bright blue cotton
sundress and flip-flops, is sitting in her
professor's office at Georgetown University,
dialing a number in Pakistan. She's hoping to
interview a man with possible ties to
terrorists.
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The man answers the phone and says he'd be glad
to talk, but asks: Could they do it by e-mail
instead? Rettig takes down his e-mail address,
hangs up the phone, and sends him a quick note.
Almost immediately it bounces back: address
unknown. The e-mail is a fake.
It's a hard lesson -- one of many -- in what might
be the toughest class in town.
Rettig and 20 other students are trying to track
down the killers of Danny Pearl, the Wall Street
Journal reporter who was kidnapped and beheaded
by Islamic radicals in Pakistan in early 2002, a
few months after the 9/11 attacks. The murder --
which was the subject of the 2007 movie A Mighty
Heart, starring Angelina Jolie -- shocked the
world and marked a new era of peril for
reporters. The images of Pearl, a |

Members of the Pearl
Project, which includes graduate
students as well as undergrads, at
Georgetown University's School of
Continuing Studies in Washington, D.C.
From left: Caitlin McDevitt, Jill
Phaneuf, Mary Cirincione, Professor Asra
Nomani, Shilpika Das, Katie Balestra,
Erin Delmore (seated on floor), Kira
Zalan, Jessica Rettig, Sakshi Jain.
Douglas Adesko |
handsome,
38-year-old father-to-be, with a gun pointed at
his head set the precedent for the sort of
brazen kidnappings that have since become common
in Iraq.
Leading the class is Asra Nomani, a journalist
and activist who teaches alongside associate
dean Barbara Feinman Todd. Nomani wants to
finish the work the FBI started. "The FBI says
this is an open investigation, but in talking to
officials, it's clear there's no work being done
on the ground," she says. "You can argue over
whether it's right or wrong, but the FBI has
moved on to other priorities." (The FBI says it
can't comment on the status of the case.)
Called the Pearl Project, the investigation, now
entering its second year, draws mostly female
students from as far away as Qatar and Lebanon.
Says Erin Delmore, a 21-year-old from New
Jersey, "We're not studying history in this
class; we're trying to make history."
And maybe they will. So far, the students have
figured out the real identities of 15 of the
estimated 19 suspects still at large, many of
whom were previously known only by aliases. The
next task is determining their whereabouts.
For Nomani, there are deeply personal
motivations behind the project. She was a close
friend of Pearl's; the two worked together for
nearly a decade at the Journal. "Danny and I
were always scheming to get unconventional
stories into the paper," she says, while sitting
in her office amid maps of Pakistan, a basket of
plastic dinosaurs, and a DustBuster. "He
believed in breaking the mold." Indeed, Pearl
made a name for himself by writing quirky
front-page features about things like the
world's largest Persian rug.

Student Margo Humphries charts her
reporting.
Douglas Adesko |
Nomani, now 43, bonded with Pearl over their
backgrounds. "We were both children of
immigrants. His parents moved here from Israel;
mine came from India," she says. "He was Jewish,
and I'm Muslim, so our stories are different,
but still, he helped me find my identity. He
helped me understand that I could be an American
and a Muslim. When I told him I'd never been to
a prom because I was a good Muslim girl, he
threw me a prom and invited all our friends,"
she laughs. "I wore a ridiculous bridesmaid
dress."
Nomani has an unusual résumé: A former travel
reporter for the Journal, she has also written a
book about tantric sex, in addition to a memoir
about her pilgrimage to Mecca, |
Islam's most
sacred city, as an unmarried Muslim mom. The New York
Times has compared her to Rosa Parks for her
gutsy brand of feminism. For inspiration, she
carries around Nancy Drew's Guide to Life in
her backpack.
"You don't have to be defined by boundaries,"
says Nomani, who received death threats when her
controversial book about Mecca hit shelves.
"I've learned that I can't compromise my voice.
I can't be submissive. I have to be fierce."
Nomani traveled to India in 2000 to write her
sex book, Tantrika, riding a motorcycle through
the Himalayas to interview swamis, gurus, and
scholars. After 9/11, she was reporting on news
from Pakistan when Pearl was kidnapped. In fact,
Pearl and his pregnant wife, Mariane, had been
staying at Nomani's rented house in Pakistan
when he vanished.
Nomani's home then became command central for
the investigation. She and Mariane holed up
there with FBI officials, Pakistani intelligence
officers, and Journal reporters, poring over
e-mails and phone numbers stored on Pearl's
laptop to try to figure out who had kidnapped
him. About five weeks later, a courier delivered
a gruesome video of Pearl's murder to
authorities.
Since that time, only four men have been
convicted in Pakistan. Another man, Khalid
Sheikh Mohammed, an al Qaeda terrorist who is in
U.S. custody for masterminding the 9/11 attacks,
has claimed he personally killed Pearl, and
Nomani's class is looking into whether he's
telling the truth or trying to thwart
investigators. Mohammed's claim has also been
questioned by human-rights advocates, who
suggest it could have been an attempt to
alleviate harsh interrogations while in custody.
On a sunny afternoon, in a classroom plastered
with handwritten charts of sources and suspects,
Mary Cirincione, 22, stands up and summarizes
her reporting on the infamous "shoe bomber"
Richard Reid, whom Pearl had been investigating
before the kidnapping. A couple of students lie
on the floor; others lounge around on tables or
chairs, listening intently. A stack of white
three-ring binders labeled with names like "Asif"
and "Zafar" sits near the door. Cirincione says
she thinks she has found the e-mail address of a
key Pakistani associate of Reid's.
After Cirincione's presentation, Nomani, wearing
an Indian tunic and her signature pink
Timberland boots, starts clapping. Then she
smiles and says wryly, "I bet the FBI guys do
that after their meetings — applaud everyone."
The class breaks into laughter.
Typical course work goes something like this: To
locate a man who may have guarded Pearl in the
kidnappers' hideout, the students started
Googling a name Nomani had obtained from a
Pakistani policeman, trying to determine if the
name was an alias. Progress: They found several
newspaper stories about someone by this name who
had been reported missing by his family. Then
they contacted a lawyer mentioned in one of the
articles; the lawyer, in turn, put them in touch
with the family. Turns out the man in question
is in jail on weapons charges. The class is now
trying to contact him in prison.
A few of the students have only a foggy memory
of the murder they are investigating, since they
were just 13 years old or so when it happened.
Others remember it vividly. Clara Zabludowsky,
20, recalls her high-school friends watching the
murder video on the Internet after terrorists
circulated it. "I couldn't look at it myself,"
she says. Shilpika Das, 26, a graduate student
from India, watched the video and felt
"horrified."
Nomani watched it herself with one of her
graduate students, 27-year-old Kira Zalan. "I
felt it was necessary in order to understand the
forensic evidence the FBI has," says Nomani.
"It's the ugly truth. To run from it seemed like
doing our mission a disservice."
Among the students' many successes: They have
managed to get their hands on the full-length
version of the video — not the edited version
that the terrorists released. (Nomani and Zalan
got it from a source who can't be named for
security reasons; the FBI has a copy as well.)
On the longer video, the hands and feet of the
killers are visible, along with other details
that might eventually help to identify them.
Some of the students' parents worry about the
grisly nature of what their kids are
researching. Rettig says her folks "weren't
thrilled" when she chased down the brother of
the courier who had delivered the murder video
to officials back in 2002. Rettig knocked on the
man's door in Florida, then talked to him inside
his home. Her younger brother was outside in the
car. "He's a big guy," she says, "so I figured I
could call on him if I needed him."
The students support each other as well. All
praise the class's diversity, noting that the
foreign students give the American ones a fresh
perspective on the world. "We're not all from
democracies," says Haya Al-Noaimi, 18, who is
from Qatar, "so we don't necessarily expect a
system of checks and balances. We know that in
some places, a police chief can do whatever he
wants."
Nomani hopes to kick-start a network of these
types of courses across the country aimed at
investigating journalists' murders. But for now,
she is focused on the job at hand.
"This class is about the spirit of Danny," she
says. "I learned a lot from him, and I always
felt like Danny had my back. Now I have his."
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