Oula A. Alrifai


Oula Alnashar Alrifai is a Syrian democracy youth activist, author, analyst, and political asylee, from Damascus, Syria currently living in the United States due to death threats to her family in 2005 from Bashar al-Assad regime in Syria. Oula is a co-founder and executive director of . She was featured with her family in The Washington Post newspaper on an account of their human rights activism and support for the Syrian Revolution in 2011. Alrifai is Ammar Abdulhamid's step-daughter. Alrifai with her parents and her brother Mouhanad sought political asylum in Washington, D.C., in 2005. She is currently a senior fellow at Washington Institute for Near East Policy. Alrifai has been published in the most prestigious American magazines including Foreign Affairs, The National Interest, The Hill, and CTC Sentinel. Her research and policy analysis focus on Syria and the Middle East. Oula became a U.S. citizen in 2016. In 2018, she released her award-winning documentary, .

Education

In December 2011 Alrifai received her B.A. from the University of Maryland, College Park in Government and Politics and Middle East studies, where she was awarded the full-tuition Academic Excellence Scholarship until her graduation. Alrifai is a member of the National Political Science Honor Society and a member of the International Honor Society. Alrifai holds a Master of Arts in Middle Eastern studies from Harvard University. Her thesis, The Self-Flagellation of a Nation: Assad, Iran, and Regime Survival in Syria, focuses on the development of the Iranian-Syrian relationship in the 1970s and 1980s through the lens of religio-political dynamics. It is now available at Harvard Library.