New
York, NY
(BlackNews.com) - Much maligned by the U.S. media, Sudan's
top selling literary novelist, Kola Boof, proves that
she was Osama Bin Laden's mistress in startling detail
as her autobiography Diary of a Lost Girl (ISBN:
0-9712019-8-6) finally hits America today in hardcover.
While he's still alive and could reasonably have her
killed, Kola Boof charges that because she is "Black
Arab", Bin Laden saw her as a "non-woman" and used her
body accordingly, keeping her against her will for six
months in 1996 and implanting tracking devices in her
teeth to keep her from escaping. Boof says that a recent
book by Bin Laden's sister-in-law Carmen only demonstrates
how he treated White Arab Muslim women in his own family.
Boof's 441 page autobiography is decidedly literary
and contains over 90 detailed pages of her time with
Bin Laden, including hunting and fishing excursions
with the terror chief, very graphic details about their
sex life, Bin Laden's gift for writing poetry, his marijuana
smoking and his reputed illnesses (Boof claims that
Ayman Al-Zawahri acted as Bin Laden's doctor and that
his "kidney disease" is greatly exaggerated).
Kola Boof, who in 2004 appealed to Israel to secure
over $600 million in guns and ammunition for Sudan's
South Rebel Army and is called "Queen Kola" by her African
supporters, also reveals her work as an Oil company
spy for Sudan's SPLA (her poem "Chol Apieth" was written
and used to memorialize Vice President John Garang at
his state funeral last year). Boof, who is half Arab
Egyptian and was born Muslim, has become infamous for
her criticism of Arab Muslim "imperialism", particularly
the abuse of Black women and children in Sudan and Egypt,
and writes quite passionately about "terrorism" and
why she believes Americans should take it more seriously.
Noting the hostility of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad,
she says, "The Arabs are not nearly done. There's a
fatwa on America. And I'm a liberal Democrat who's saying
it."
Kola Boof, who's published 6 books in 8 countries, was
adopted and raised in the United States by Black Americans
in 1979, became a U.S. citizen in 1993 and returned
to North Africa as an adult in 1994. She's the mother
of two sons.
In 2002, The New York Times wrote a scathing article
about Boof, without her cooperation, insinuating that
she did not exist, misquoting their sources and making
other speculation that has since been proven incorrect.
In 2003, after three weeks fact-checking, FOX NEWS,
was able to confirm much of Boof's life story and profiled
her in a national television interview. Diary of
a Lost Girl (ISBN: 0-9712019-8-6) was released today
in hardcover.