When Malak Shalabi visits her extended family in Jordan, they sometimes drive through the countryside and see Syria in the distance. āBut thereās no going back,ā she says. āWhenever I spend time with my family and they share stories of life back home, I hold on to every word, because this is one of the closest connections Iāll ever have to our motherland.ā

Malak Shalabi,Ā ’18
Hometown: Mill Creek, Washington
Major: Law,Ā Economics & Public Policy
Shalabiās family are refugees scattered throughout the Middle East and the U.S. Her fatherās father was born in Palestine but moved to Qatar in 1958. Born in Syria, Shalabiās mother immigrated to Kuwait with her family during the presidency of Hafez al-Assad. She was visiting her brothers in the U.S. when the Gulf War broke out and devastated her community at home. āMy mother ended up staying here because there was nothing to return to,ā says Shalabi.

Shalabiās father came to the U.S. for college and met her mother, who had worked hard to learn English and get into a top dental school. Even after they married and built new lives in America, they kept monitoring global politics that affected the friends, family and countries they loved.
āAl Jazeera was always on TV in our living room, especially during the invasion of Iraq and uprisings in Palestine. And when the revolutions [the Arab Spring] began in the Middle East, we were following all of it,ā Shalabi says. āMy parents would ask, āDo you truly know your roots?ā and it would provoke me to look into it more.ā
Drawing from experience
While majoring in Law, EconomicsĀ &Ā Public Policy at , Shalabi was inspired by her professors to research the issues that have affected her family ā and to use her perspective as a Muslim to guide her work. Bruce Kochis, who teaches at the , āencouraged students to explore the idea of religion,ā Shalabi says. āIf I was talking about my faith, he would say, āWrite about it. Explain it in your class.ā And that was something I had never really experienced before.ā
When Shalabi sought out Kochis as an adviser for a research project, he continued urging her to draw from her personal experiences.
āHe asked me, āWhatās the one thing that sticks out to you when you speak to Syrians back home or here?ā says Shalabi. āAnd it was the tortureā ā specifically, the targeted torture and murder of Sunni Muslims in Syrian prisons.
For her research, Shalabi traveled to Amman, Jordan, where she visited a care center for Syrian refugees and spoke with a psychologist who treated victims of torture. She also interviewed a man who had survived a stint in a Syrian prison.
āI met with him in a cafĆ©. People around us were laughing and enjoying their day, and he was calmly telling me the most horrendous things you could ever imagine being done to a person,ā Shalabi says. āIt hit me at that moment: There are many thousands of people detained in Syria right now. This is their reality ā theyāre living in an entirely different world.ā
Bringing Syrian voices to Washington
Shalabi returned with a sense of responsibility to help share with Westerners the stories sheād heard during her travels. She had conducted the interviews in Arabic, which she grew up speaking at home, then translated them into English.

Her resulting paper, an exploration of the cruel treatment in Syrian prisons, details sectarian abuses and examines the civil warās religious dimensions. While much of the Westās attention is trained on ISIS, Shalabi focuses on those who are too often left out of the narrative: Syrian citizens marginalized by the government of Bashar al-Assad, especially those at odds with its increasingly sectarian leanings.
āThe more I read, the more responsibility I felt,ā she says. āThis is a way of bringing the Syrian voice into the West.ā
Shalabiās work earned her an undergraduate research award. āMy mother cried when I won,ā she says. āIt meant the world to her that her children are able to do what her generation and her fatherās generation couldnāt: speak a word of justice against an oppressive tyrant.ā
āMalak has an unquestionable commitment to giving voice to oppressed populations,ā says Karam Dana, assistant professor at the 91±¬ĮĻ Bothell School of Interdisciplinary Arts & Sciences. āHer findings can help us study religious communities that are scrutinized, oppressed and targeted around the world.ā
Active in the community
Staying connected to her roots has also motivated Shalabi to help others forge ā or regain ā connections to their homelands. For nearly a year, she ran Free Syria Seattle, a grassroots organization that engaged local activists with Syrians in a stand against oppression by facilitating discussions, art exhibits and protests.
More recently, Shalabi has begun teaching Muslim youth groups about the history of Syria and the Middle East. āSome people donāt even flinch when they see the news about the violence in Syria,ā she says. āI want to share what Iāve learned with them.ā
This fall, Shalabi is headed to , where she intends to study international law. āSomeday, I hope that I can use my J.D. to help promote justice in the Muslim world,ā she says.