Marvel Comic’s newest superhero will pack a lot of punch, like the publisher’s other good guys Captain America and Iron Man, but her alter ego is far from a super soldier or a millionaire playboy with a technologically-advanced armored suit.
In January, Marvel will introduce a reimagined version of the character, Ms. Marvel. The new Ms. Marvel is 16-year-old Kamala Khan, a Pakistani-American Muslim teenager from Jersey City, New Jersey. Marvel says Khan discovers she has amazing body-morphing powers and models herself after her idol, Captain Marvel, another superheroine from the Marvel Comics universe.
“Kamala is just a 16-year-old girl, exploring the many facets of her identity when she is suddenly bestowed with super-human powers that send her on the adventure of a lifetime,” said Marvel Comics Editor-in-Chief Axel Alonso.
The team behind the story is being led by acclaimed novelist G. Willow Wilson. Wilson said she and her team hope to show a character “who struggles to reconcile being an American teenager with the conservative customs of her Pakistani Muslim family.”
“Like a lot of children of immigrants, she feels torn between two worlds: the family she loves, but which drives her crazy, and her peers, who don’t really understand what her home life is like,” Wilson said.
When asked specifically about the character’s Muslim faith, Wilson said it will be “an essential part of her identity and something she struggles mightily with.” Wilson also promised that the character will neither be a “poster child” for Islam, nor will she be used as a “token minority.”
“She’s going through a rebellious phase,” the author says of Ms. Marvel. “She wants to go to parties and stay out past 9 PM and feel ‘normal.’ Yet at the same time, she feels the need to defend her family and their beliefs.”
The team at Marvel says they’re ready for all kinds of reaction to the new Ms. Marvel. The comic’s editor Sana Amanat told The New York Times, “I do expect some negativity, not only from people who are anti-Muslim, but people who are Muslim and might want the character portrayed in a particular light.”









