National Post (National Edition)

From Nazis and Khadrs to Star Wars and kink

Made Wikipedia edits for several hours most days

- ADRIAN HUMPHREYS

An examinatio­n of the 62,267 changes and additions Joshua Boyle made to Wikipedia before he and his wife were held captive in Afghanista­n and his recent arrest on more than a dozen criminal charges reveals persistent activity on terrorism, Nazi women, torture devices, snipers and sex acts including bondage.

Boyle did extensive, perhaps obsessive, work as an avid unpaid contributo­r to the public-source online encycloped­ia on a wide variety of subjects, spending several hours almost every day adding and deleting informatio­n and arguing with other editors for years.

An examinatio­n of his online presence also offers the likely answer to the mystery of his previous meeting in 2006 with Justin Trudeau, crypticall­y revealed by Boyle after a meeting with the prime minister in December last year. “Incidental­ly, not our first meeting with @JustinTrud­eau, that was ‘06 in Toronto over other common interests, haha,” Boyle said on Twitter.

Boyle’s online presence reveals he previously met Trudeau, before he was elected to public office, in September 2006 at a rally in Toronto over the humanitari­an crisis in Darfur. The rally also featured former Lieutenant­General Romeo Dallaire.

Boyle took a photograph of Trudeau and Dallaire with event organizers and uploaded it to Wikipedia two months later.

Dallaire said he had no recollecti­on of Boyle — at that event or otherwise. A call to the Prime Minister’s Office was not returned prior to deadline.

Boyle’s involvemen­t in Wikipedia started on Oct. 20, 2004, at 5 a.m. when he added informatio­n about an obscure Star Wars bootleg from Turkey. That day he created his first Wikipedia profile under the user name Sherurcij with the biography: “Just some 21 year old student that works on Wikipedia in his spare time...”

It turns out he had a lot of spare time.

According to his lengthy user log, providing the time and date of all saved edits, he appears to have often worked nights on entries, including on holidays. On Valentine’s Day in 2005, for instance, he created an entry on an online Star Wars game, added to an entry on a U.S. environmen­tal activist and then on Canadian musician Neil Young.

Later that month Boyle created his first page involving geo-politics about an Israeli settlement in the Gaza Strip.

His more esoteric interests soon emerged, including a strange attachment to the “Pear of Anguish,” an old implement used as a choking device.

In May 2005 he edited pages on foot whipping, chastity belts, cheek kissing and “Facials (sex act)”.

He later added a photo of a female model in a bra wearing a “ring gag,” an antique picture of a dominatrix, and a photo he took of a condom machine.

He edited articles on the Islamic views on anal sex and oral sex. He uploaded a photo, taken by someone else, of a Judas Cradle, a spike-topped stool used for torture.

He divided his attention between that material and his primary public interests of justice, social activism, military history, global atrocities, crime and, eventually, terrorism.

His first input on the subject of terrorism came March 14, 2005, when he made edits to the entry on the Beslan school siege.

That month he also made his first Nazi-themed contributi­ons, creating an entry on a Second World War German general and editing the entry on German Blood Certificat­es, documents Hitler issued to Germans with Jewish blood.

His activity on Nazis tilted toward Nazi women, creating dozens of pages on females involved in Hitler’s regime.

His edits to the entry on the Branch Davidians, the fringe religious sect wiped out after a siege of a compound in Waco, Tex., seemed to trigger an interest in snipers; he then created and edited many entries on snipers over years.

On New Year’s Eve 2005, shortly before midnight, he edited an entry on “List of events named massacres” and two hours after midnight edited “Foreign hostages in Iraq.”

He became strident with other editors, often reverting entries to the way he had written them after others made changes. He also broke protocol by signing entries he wrote.

Boyle waged an internal Wikipedia fight for a year over the use of gruesome photos of the murdered children of Joseph Goebbels, Hitler’s propaganda minister. He first sought out the images, saying he would be “forever indebted” if someone found them, and then championed their use despite complaints they were “depraved” and “ghastly.”

Boyle angrily responded: “Let’s nix the offensivel­y crude depictions of death on crucifix and Jesus Christ as well… btw, this is sarcasm.”

One editor said Boyle’s passion for using multiple images of the children’s bodies left him “extremely worried.” Unwilling to let it go, Boyle amended his Wikipedia signature to “Speaker for the Dead.” The current entry uses none of the photos.

Other controvers­ial photos he added include a 1910 photo of a sexually-abused German boy that an editor quickly deleted saying it was “extreme.” Boyle added it a second time saying “nothing wrong with image.” The photo is not currently in use. He also added photos from the 1940s of examples of human cannibalis­m.

He upset Wikipedia’s administra­tors in 2008 by purposely creating a hoax entry and a fake user account to nominate the hoax for Wikipedia’s front page. When spotted, Boyle said it was a “social experiment” to see how quickly false entries were detected.

In defending himself against a ban, he wrote: “I actually put in seven hours of use to the project every weekday, which often involves meeting with, telephonin­g and writing to the subjects of articles, the Department of Defence, Canadian Members of Parliament and the families of alleged terrorists.”

In 2006 he started amending terrorism entries, doing heavy editing about those charged with the Toronto 18 terror plot.

On Aug. 15, 2006, Boyle created the first Wikipedia page on Zaynab Khadr, a Canadian who once lived with her family in Osama bin Laden’s compound and whose father was an alQaida member. He included a quote from an anonymous Khadr friend saying “the Khadr family does not have any link towards al-Qaeda but were in Afghanista­n for the sake of helping the orphans.”

In August 2007, Khadr herself joined Wikipedia and started editing entries on herself and her family.

“Glad to see you finally made your way to Wikipedia,” Boyle greeted her. He then cautioned her about editing her own biography: “I have to treat you like any other person found editing their own article — and that means complainin­g if you ‘rewrite history.’”

She stopped editing her family’s entries but Boyle took her place.

He edited Zaynab Khadr’s entry to remove a reference to her being a “Canadian terrorist” and made the same change to entries on her family. He argued with users about adding balance to several biographie­s, including the Khadrs. “Most, if not all, of what exists about Khadr is innuendo,” he wrote about Zaynab’s father.

By 2007, Boyle was attending Khadr events and uploading his photos to illustrate Wiki pages. In February 2008, Boyle uploaded several old Khadr family photos provided by the family and then added details on Khadr’s previous marriages.

In 2009 he and Zaynab Khadr were married. All of his Khadr work on Wikipedia was done without declaring his close connection to the family, despite him chastising others for doing the same. In April 2009, when their marriage was revealed in the media, Boyle deleted a reference to it from Zaynab’s entry.

Boyle made 809 edits to the Wikipedia entry on Omar Khadr, Zaynab’s brother, and 377 to Ahmed Said Khadr, her father, his two most active entry subjects.

Boyle had a falling out with Wikipedia in 2010 while involved in an argument over users “strange requests for deletion and threats to ban me,” he wrote. His last Wikipedia edit was Oct. 29, 2011, when he added an internal Wikipedia award to his own user page.

Less than a year later, he and his pregnant second wife, Caitlan Coleman, travelled to Afghanista­n where they were abducted and held by militants for five years.

MOST, IF NOT ALL, OF WHAT EXISTS ABOUT KHADR IS INNUENDO.

 ?? WIKIPEDIA ?? Irma Grese, a female Nazi concentrat­ion camp guard, whose Wikipedia page Joshua Boyle edited, in Allied custody.
WIKIPEDIA Irma Grese, a female Nazi concentrat­ion camp guard, whose Wikipedia page Joshua Boyle edited, in Allied custody.
 ?? AFP / CBC NEWS ?? Freed Canadian hostage Joshua Boyle giving an interview on his arrival at Pearson Airport on Oct. 14.
AFP / CBC NEWS Freed Canadian hostage Joshua Boyle giving an interview on his arrival at Pearson Airport on Oct. 14.

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