DAVID CARUSO, MICHAEL KUNZELMAN and MAX SEDDON, The Associated Press, Boston | World | Mon, April 29 2013, 6:46 AM
In photos of her as a younger woman, Zubeidat Tsarnaeva
wears a low-cut blouse and has her hair teased like a 1980s rock star.
After she arrived in the U.S. from Russia in 2002, she went to beauty
school and did facials at a suburban day spa.
But in recent years,
people noticed a change. She began wearing a hijab and cited conspiracy
theories about 9/11 being a plot against Muslims.
Now known as
the angry and grieving mother of the Boston Marathon bombing suspects,
Tsarnaeva is drawing increased attention after federal officials say
Russian authorities intercepted her phone calls, including one in which
she vaguely discussed jihad with her elder son. In another, she was
recorded talking to someone in southern Russia who is under FBI
investigation in an unrelated case, U.S. officials said.
Tsarnaeva
insists there is no mystery. She's no terrorist, just someone who found
a deeper spirituality. She insists her sons — Tamerlan, who was killed
in a gunfight with police, and Dzhokhar, who was wounded and captured —
are innocent.
"It's all lies and hypocrisy," she told The
Associated Press in Dagestan. "I'm sick and tired of all this nonsense
that they make up about me and my children. People know me as a regular
person, and I've never been mixed up in any criminal intentions,
especially any linked to terrorism."
Amid the scrutiny, Tsarnaeva
and her ex-husband, Anzor Tsarnaev, say they have put off the idea of
any trip to the U.S. to reclaim their elder son's body or try to visit
Dzhokhar in jail. Tsarnaev told the AP on Sunday he was too ill to
travel to the U.S. Tsarnaeva faces a 2012 shoplifting charge in a Boston
suburb, though it was unclear whether that was a deterrent.
At a
news conference in Dagestan with Anzor last week, Tsarnaeva appeared
overwhelmed with grief one moment, defiant the next. "They already are
talking about that we are terrorists, I am terrorist," she said. "They
already want me, him and all of us to look (like) terrorists."
Tsarnaeva
arrived in the U.S. in 2002, settling in a working-class section of
Cambridge, Mass. With four children, Anzor and Zubeidat qualified for
food stamps and were on and off public assistance benefits for years.
The large family squeezed itself into a third-floor apartment.
Zubeidat
took classes at the Catherine Hinds Institute of Esthetics, before
becoming a state-licensed aesthetician. Anzor, who had studied law,
fixed cars.
By some accounts, the family was tolerant.
Bethany
Smith, a New Yorker who befriended Zubeidat's two daughters, said in an
interview with Newsday that when she stayed with the family for a month
in 2008 while she looked at colleges, she was welcomed even though she
was Christian and had tattoos.
"I had nothing but love over there.
They accepted me for who I was," Smith told the newspaper. "Their
mother, Zubeidat, she considered me to be a part of the family. She
called me her third daughter."
Zubeidat said she and Tamerlan
began to turn more deeply into their Muslim faith about five years ago
after being influenced by a family friend, named "Misha." The man, whose
full name she didn't reveal, impressed her with a religious devotion
that was far greater than her own, even though he was an ethnic Armenian
who converted to Islam.
"I wasn't praying until he prayed in our
house, so I just got really ashamed that I am not praying, being a
Muslim, being born Muslim. I am not praying. Misha, who converted, was
praying," she said.
By then, she had left her job at the day spa
and was giving facials in her apartment. One client, Alyssa Kilzer,
noticed the change when Tsarnaeva put on a head scarf before leaving the
apartment.
"She had never worn a hijab while working at the spa
previously, or inside the house, and I was really surprised," Kilzer
wrote in a post on her blog. "She started to refuse to see boys that had
gone through puberty, as she had consulted a religious figure and he
had told her it was sacrilegious. She was often fasting."
Kilzer
wrote that Tsarnaeva was a loving and supportive mother, and she felt
sympathy for her plight after the April 15 bombings. But she stopped
visiting the family's home for spa treatments in late 2011 or early 2012
when, during one session, she "started quoting a conspiracy theory,
telling me that she thought 9/11 was purposefully created by the
American government to make America hate Muslims."
"It's real," Tsarnaeva said, according to Kilzer. "My son knows all about it. You can read on the Internet."
In
the spring of 2010, Zubeidat's eldest son got married in a ceremony at a
Boston mosque that no one in the family had previously attended.
Tamerlan and his wife, Katherine Russell, a Rhode Island native and
convert from Christianity, now have a child who is about 3 years old.
Zubeidat
married into a Chechen family but was an outsider. She is an Avar, from
one of the dozens of ethnic groups in Dagestan. Her native village is
now a hotbed of an ultraconservative strain of Islam known as Salafism
or Wahabbism.
It is unclear whether religious differences fueled tension in their family. Anzor and Zubeidat divorced in 2011.
About
the same time, there was a brief FBI investigation into Tamerlan
Tsarnaev, prompted by a tip from Russia's security service.
The
vague warning from the Russians was that Tamerlan, an amateur boxer in
the U.S., was a follower of radical Islam who had changed drastically
since 2010. That led the FBI to interview Tamerlan at the family's home
in Cambridge. Officials ultimately placed his name, and his mother's
name, on various watch lists, but the inquiry was closed in late spring
of 2011.
After the bombings, Russian authorities told U.S.
investigators they had secretly recorded a phone conversation in which
Zubeidat had vaguely discussed jihad with Tamerlan. The Russians also
recorded Zubeidat talking to someone in southern Russia who is under FBI
investigation in an unrelated case, according to U.S. officials who
spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to
discuss the investigation with reporters.
The conversations are
significant because, had they been revealed earlier, they might have
been enough evidence for the FBI to initiate a more thorough
investigation of the Tsarnaev family.
Anzor's brother, Ruslan
Tsarni, told the AP from his home in Maryland that he believed his
former sister-in-law had a "big-time influence" on her older son's
growing embrace of his Muslim faith and decision to quit boxing and
school.
While Tamerlan was living in Russia for six months in
2012, Zubeidat, who had remained in the U.S., was arrested at a shopping
mall in the suburb of Natick, Mass., and accused of trying to shoplift
$1,624 worth of women's clothing from a department store.
She failed to appear in court to answer the charges that fall, and instead left the country.
___
Seddon
reported from Makhachkala, Russia. Associated Press writers Eileen
Sullivan and Matt Apuzzo contributed to this report from Washington.
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