[1] She is considered one of the Islamic State's most famous propagandists and gives detailed defenses of terrorist acts.
Her mother has written that al-Nasr “was born with a dictionary in her mouth.” After the Syrian civil war began, she left Syria to one of the Gulf states but returned in 2014, arriving in Raqqa.
[1] On October 11, 2014, she was married in the courthouse of Raqqa, Syria to Mohamed Mahmoud, known as Abu Usama al-Gharib, an Austrian Vienna-born preacher.
[3] According to Cole Bunzel, a Ph.D. candidate in Near Eastern Studies at Princeton University, many of her poems are published weekly by the al-Sumud Media Foundation.
[4] Her grandfather is Mustafa al-Bugha, the Syrian imam renowned for his public support of Bashar al-Assad.