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Monday, September 30, 2024

It’s Iimi! Intervention

After attending school on Friday (last Issue), Kismetta missed their weekend plans and has now missed three school days in a row. Overhearing Ms. Baculum say that the school will have to contact Child Protective Services, Iimi knows this is the last chance to help her friend, even if it means staging an… Intervention



































Post-Comic Notes:

Yes, Muslims are forbidden from drinking alcohol (Sumeja’s excuse that only date wine is forbidden is rejected by Muslim scholars). But to say that because of that prohibition, no Muslims do is like saying that because Catholics are banned from using contraception, no Catholics use it. Sin exists despite prohibitions.

I’ve wanted to change Imam Kouri’s model for a while. The problem with the heavyset male model is, compared with the others, it is very limited in poses, expressions, and clothing. The latter is especially annoying because characters based on that model can only wear a suit. Want them to go to the beach, jog, or perhaps be woken up in the middle of the night by a phone call? They’re wearing a suit.

Image Credits

The line art image on the left side of page 10 is © 2018 Bradley K McDevitt.

Some images used in this comic were AI drafted by the author using NightCafe or Copilot and then edited by the same. No artist names were used in the prompts.

Monday, September 23, 2024

It’s Iimi! The Final Struggle

The day has finally come. Sumeja and Bahrudin meet in the courtroom to finalize their divorce, divide assets, and set up custody arrangements. Kismetta finds herself a helpless bystander as she witnesses… The Final Struggle



















































Post-Comic Notes:

Hopefully, it should be obvious. But if it isn’t, Sumeja’s monologue on the last two pages is not a legitimate Muslim belief. Sumeja has rationalized common (but condemned) justifications for disobedience to Muslim teachings.

When I began planning the divorce storyline, I knew it would end with Sumeja losing her sons to Bahrudin. Plotting out how it could happen without “cardboard cutout” mustache-twirling villains took a long time. I’d considered everything from corrupt judges and bribery to sexism to Sumeja and Sheu-fuh blackmailed for an unsavory relationship.

Ultimately, I discovered that what Sumeja did broke US and International law. Once the judge learned that and—stripped of any reasons to declare the father an unfit parent—he would have no choice under US law but to order the sons returned. I think this was more plausible than anything else I considered.

As for what happens to the now-hyphenated Dhumzur-Grebo family, you’ll have to wait and see.

The name change was inspired by my discovery that Muslims did not have the custom of changing the wife’s last name. They usually keep their father’s last name. I later wrote that they were civilly married and followed American customs. However, I was annoyed by my research failure.

By the way, "Grebo" (a Bosnian surname) is pronounced Greh-bo, not Gree-bo.

Bahrudin’s Arabic translates as “Zuhayr? It’s Bahrudin. I apologize for calling so early. But I have a large amount of money to transfer for a divorce settlement, and I need it done before Wednesday.”

Image Credits
The final page image is © 2015 W. Fraser Sandercombe, used with permission. All rights reserved.

Some images used in this comic were AI drafted by the author using NightCafe and then edited by the same. No artist names were used in the prompts.