Islamic  Superheroes Going Global
 By Camille Agon  Tuesday - Aug. 05, 2008
 | Jabbar the Powerful, Hadya the Guide and Fatah the Opener: Islamic superheroes on a mission | 
Like other kids the world over, Middle  Eastern children have long fantasized about superheroes battling injustice in  American cities or fighting beasts in Japan. Five years ago, they got some  champions of their own to cheer on when Kuwait-born businessman Naif Al-Mutawa  created a new breed of superheroes endowed with Muslim  traits and virtues. Now Mutawa is on an even greater mission: taking  those same Islamic characters around the world.
 The  99, a comic-book series based on characters that each  personify one of the 99 qualities that the Koran attributes to God, met  early resistance in places like Saudi Arabia. Local authorities worried that the  series might mock Islam. But after Mutawa guaranteed that he would remain  respectful of religion and won backing from a major Islamic bank, the series  took off around the Gulf. Initially given away for free with Arabic versions of  Marvel comics (the license for which Mutawa owns in the region), The 99 is now a  stand-alone success, with some 500,000 copies given away and sold across the  region in the past two years.
 Now Mutawa wants to spread the word  farther. The first of six planned theme parks based on The  99 will open in Kuwait this October, and Mutawa hopes that an animated  television show will hit airwaves around the world by late 2010. Working with  writers such as Fabian Nicieza, who wrote for the Power Rangers and X-Men  comics, and a group of managers including an exRolling Stone publisher and  Marvel's former marketing chief, Mutawa believes The 99 can  succeed in non-Islamic markets. "Our characters are appealing to kids across the  world," he says. "We have been able to sell licenses to India, Bangladesh,  France, Spain, the U.K., the United States and Canada."
 The 99 is based on  a pivotal moment in Islamic history: the Mongol invasion of Baghdad in  1258. In Mutawa's series, 99 gemstones encrypted with  Baghdad's wisdom and power were scattered around the world, left for superheroes  such as "Jabbar the Powerful" and "Noora the Light" to find before their  archnemesis Rughal does.  
 While the 99 represent Allah's myriad  attributes  everything from wisdom to faithfulness  there is no overt mention  of religion in the stories. "When you read through the books, there is no  mention of Islam, Allah or the Koran," says Mutawa. "I used  an Islamic archetype, but the actual stories don't show any Islam,  because they are based on values that we all share." Even Superman, Batman and  Spider-Man, he says, "are based on religious archetypes. Like the prophets from  the Bible, they are all orphans. Superman left his parents on the planet  Krypton, and Batman sees his father and mother gunned down in front of  him."
 Yet the 99 do try  to teach virtues valued by Islam, such as working as a team and combining  your strengths with those of others. "The goal is to teach  children that there are 99 ways to solve a problem," says Mutawa. "In the  eighth issue, Jabbar the Powerful must rely on Noora's ability to see the 'light  of truth' in others to annihilate the bad guys."
 The characters in  The 99 include Muslims from all over the world: Fatah, from Indonesia,  can open and close gateways at any location; Daar, from the U.S., can inflict  pain; and Mumita, with unparalleled agility, is Portuguese. This year, a  burqa-wearing character from Yemen named Batina the Hidden will make an  appearance. "Even though there are approximately 50 female superheroes, only  five will be covered in that way," says Mutawa. "I want to send the message out  that there is not only one way to be Muslim."
 Mutawa, who has a Ph.D. in clinical  psychology and a master's in business administration from Columbia University,  spent 10 years as a psychologist working with the victims of war before founding  Teshkeel Media Group in 2004. His patients included men who were part of the  Iraqi army that invaded Kuwait. "When you hear these stories of Saddam Hussein,  who was cast as a hero and then ended up torturing his own people, you ask  yourself what kind of message we are sending our kids about what a hero does,"  says Mutawa. "With The 99, I wanted to make a difference and  give Muslim kids positive role models."
 For Jim Kuhoric, the purchasing  director at Diamond Comic Distributors (The 99's licensing agent in the U.S.,  Canada and the U.K.), Mutawa is onto a winner. "Not only are the stories  entertaining and the art extraordinary," he says, "but the 99 have also enabled  others to understand a wider vision than what they are normally exposed to  through the medium, and helped to promote cultural understanding and  acceptance." 
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                                                     The Holy Qur'an - http://www.quran.org.uk  
Commentary of Holy Qur'an http://al-islam.org/tahrif_quran/
Du'a - http://www.duas.org
Islam - http://www.al-islam.org
Free Islamic Books -http://www.winislam.com
http://www.islamic-message.net/English/index.htm
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          Commentary of Holy Qur'an http://al-islam.org/tahrif_quran/
Du'a - http://www.duas.org
Islam - http://www.al-islam.org
Free Islamic Books -http://www.winislam.com
http://www.islamic-message.net/English/index.htm
<img style="visibility:hidden;width:0px;height:0px;" border=0 width=0 height=0 src="http://counters.gigya.com/wildfire/IMP/CXNID=2000002.0NXC/bT*xJmx*PTEyNjQzNTU2MTQ3OTYmcHQ9MTI2NDM1NTYxNzg5MCZwPTIzODk4MSZkPUlzbGFtaWMlMjBDYWxlbmRhciUzYSUyMHJv/dGF*ZSZnPTEmbz*3NTdmNmI4M2M*MjA*NGE3OWQyOGU4MWYxZjdkZDBjMCZvZj*w.gif" /><div style="margin:0px auto;text-align:center;width:180px;height:180px;"><embed src="http://www.widgipedia.com/widgets/alhabib/3D-Rotation---Islamic-Hijri-Calendar-2829-8192_134217728.widget?__install_id=1264355606720&__view=expanded" width="180" height="180" flashvars="&col1=ffcc00&col2=cc9900&dayAdd=0&cal=true&gig_lt=1264355614796&gig_pt=1264355617890&gig_g=1" swliveconnect="true" quality="best" loop="false" menu="false" wmode="transparent" allowScriptAccess="sameDomain" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" pluginspage="http://www.adobe.com/go/getflashplayer" /></div>
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