Batman meets Aladdin

Egyptian comics creator hopes U.S. ready for heroine

? If Batman had a twin sister, her name most likely would be Aya, “princess of darkness.”

Just like Batman’s alter-ego, Bruce Wayne, Middle Eastern comic book superstar Aya launched her quest for vengeance against evil after witnessing her father’s murder.

And while Batman stands vigil over Gotham City, Aya keeps watch over the City of All Faiths, which could easily pass for Jerusalem if it were ever overrun by cartoon villains.

Aya’s creator, Ayman Kandeel, hopes such superhero similarities will resonate with Americans and that comic book readers will embrace the new Middle Eastern crime fighter and her fellow AK Comics superheroes – Lone Warrior Rakan, the Last Pharaoh Zein and Jalila, savior of the City of All Faiths.

“I think our characters are global,” says Kandeel, who launched AK Comics in his native Egypt four years ago and is now rolling out its stable of superheroes in the United States.

Already available online, AK Comics in English are due to hit American comic book stores this month, bringing American audiences their first look at the Middle Eastern super heroes.

Along with daring and courageous action, the super characters bring some modern-day messages from the region, including that women, in a society that has often been closed to them, can be just as strong and heroic as their male counterparts.

Comic book creator Ayman Kandeel, of Egypt, is hoping that U.S. audiences will be ready to embrace his new Middle Eastern crime fighter Aya and her fellow AK Comics superheroes, Lone Warrior Rakan, the Last Pharaoh Zein, and Jalila, savior of the City of All Faiths.

The women, however, still have to watch how they dress.

Aya, for example, hadn’t been fighting crime for very long when her “Dolly Parton complex” began to offend some Middle Eastern readers, says AK Comics editor Daerick Gross. Her bosom quickly became less pronounced, while Jalila (who had developed superpowers when she survived a terrorist group’s nuclear attack) had to switch to a skintight superhero costume that didn’t expose her once-bare midriff.

Still, both women continue to rival Wonder Woman and Mary Jane Watson (Spider-Man’s longtime squeeze) for sexiness, while Lone Warrior Rakan is big and strong enough to pass for the Hulk (if the Hulk weren’t green). The Last Pharaoh Zein might give the Terminator a run for his money.

Kandeel carried the characters around in his head for nearly 30 years before they were ever sketched out and given story lines.

“I remember growing up as a kid, I first came across a Batman comic book and that was it – that was my beginning,” the soft-spoken businessman recalls with a chuckle. “I’ve always wanted to be involved in the creation of comic book super heroes.”

An amateur artist as a child, Kandeel developed the original AK Comics story lines and still writes the occasional story but leaves the drawing to professional freelancers.

Gross, AK’s editor, believes some story lines may be too foreign for some Western readers. But he’s also betting that just as many will be intrigued by the exotic locales, and that in the end, true comic book aficionados won’t care where the action takes place, just as long as there is plenty of “POW!” “SMASH!” and “KABOOM! to keep them entertained.

“A superhero fighting bad guys – that can be anywhere in the world,” he says.