US captive held by Islamic State writes parents: 'I'm afraid to die'

Peter Kassig, 26, who was taken captive in Syria last year, has converted to Islam and changed his name to Abdul-Rahman Kassig.

Family handout photo of Abdul-Rahman Kassig fishes with his father, Ed Kassig, near the Cannelton Dam on the Ohio River. (photo credit: REUTERS)
Family handout photo of Abdul-Rahman Kassig fishes with his father, Ed Kassig, near the Cannelton Dam on the Ohio River.
(photo credit: REUTERS)
The parents of a US aid worker held hostage by Islamic State militants on Sunday released photographs of their son and parts of a letter he wrote them from captivity in which he says he is scared to die but at peace with his belief.
Peter Kassig, 26, was taken captive a year ago while doing humanitarian work in Syria, his family has said. He was threatened in an Islamic State video issued on Friday that showed the beheading of a British aid worker.
Ed and Paula Kassig of Indianapolis, Indiana, appealed for his release on Saturday in a video message.
On Sunday, they called for people to use the name he has taken since converting to Islam, Abdul-Rahman Kassig.
They also released photos of him working as a medic in Syria in 2013, fishing with his father on the Ohio River in southern Indiana in 2011, and - much younger - standing in his mother's arms by a waterfall during a family camping trip in 2000.
Kassig's parents said they were overwhelmed by the response from those who thought their boy was a hero for the humanitarian work he had been doing.
"We have also received many questions about our son's conversion to Islam," they said, adding that friends said his journey toward Islam began before he was taken captive, and that he voluntarily converted between October and December 2013.
Quoting from a letter he wrote them in June, they said he prays five times every day and takes the religion's practices seriously, including adopting the name Abdul-Rahman. "We see this as part of our son's long spiritual journey," they said.
In the parts of the letter they released, Kassig thanked his parents and said it could not have been easy raising him.
"I am obviously pretty scared to die but the hardest part is not knowing, wondering, hoping, and wondering if I should even hope at all," he wrote.

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"If I do die, I figure that at least you and I can seek refuge and comfort in knowing that I went out as a result of trying to alleviate suffering and helping those in need."
The letter added that he was in a "dogmatically complicated situation here, but I am at peace with my belief."
Kassig had been doing humanitarian work through Special Emergency Response and Assistance, an organization he founded in 2012 to treat refugees from Syria, his parents have said.
They have also said their son served in the U.S. Army during the Iraq war before being medically discharged. Pentagon records show he spent a year in the army as a Ranger and was deployed to Iraq from April to July 2007.
After leaving the army, Kassig became an emergency medical technician and traveled to Lebanon in May 2012, volunteering in hospitals and treating Palestinian refugees and those fleeing Syria's civil war.