The photo of a stern-looking young man that appeared in a local Somali newspaper is the only one that Mumina Roba has of her son. There won't be any more.
On Tuesday, she stared at the picture of Farah Mohamed Beledi and nodded when asked whether he was her boy.
Beledi's journey from St. Paul high school student to presumed suicide bomber has left Roba heartbroken and without answers to explain his death or previous incarnations as a gang member, prison inmate, religious zealot or indicted terrorism suspect.
"Since he came out of jail, we've never seen him," Roba said through a translator.
She had heard that he was in Minneapolis and then later Nairobi. "Then we heard he was in Somalia," she said.
"The second thing we heard is that he was dead."
Last week, Al-Shabab, a terrorist group battling for control of war-ravaged Somalia, identified the bomber who killed himself and three others in the May 30 attack in Mogadishu as Abdullahi Ahmed, 25, of Minnesota.
But local community members soon realized the man was really Beledi, one of at least 20 young Minnesotans who have gone to Somalia to fight in the civil war. At least six have died, and Minneapolis has become the focus of one of the nation's largest counterterrorism efforts.