By PAISLEY DODDS AND SYLVIA HUI | AP
Published: Aug 7, 2010 22:08 Updated: Aug 7, 2010 22:08
LONDON: Britain's first "anti-terror" summer camp opened Saturday, with the goal
of teaching Muslim youth how to rebuff extremists who try to recruit them at schools
and in online chat rooms.
The three-day event hopes to equip hundreds of students with arguments from the
Qur'an on how to respond to people with radical beliefs, encounters some at the
camp said happen regularly.
The issue of Islamist recruiting has made steady headlines in Britain after suspects
in high-profile terrorism cases were reportedly radicalized while studying at elite
UK
universities or after listening to imams who preach holy war.
"We want to give youngsters a balanced view of Islam and to remove the misconception
of what jihad actually is," organizer Muhammad Tahir ul-Qadri told The Associated
Press. "Extremists have confined the act of jihad to the act of militancy and violence.
This is totally wrong according to Qur'anic commandments." In March, the Pakistani
scholar who now lives in Toronto issued a 600-page fatwa, or religious edict, against
terrorist acts like suicide bombing.
Some 1,300 high school and university students are expected to study his fatwa
and hear about moderate Islam at the camp at Warwick University in Coventry. Ul-Qadri
said that in a series of lectures and debates, he would convince the students "why
suicide bombing makes one a disbeliever, and why terrorists will go to hell fire."
Muslim conferences aimed at helping youths tackle extremism are not new — some US
organizations have even reached out to Muslim rappers and musicians in an effort
to encourage youths to use music and other means as a form of protest rather than
violence.
But the issue is particularly timely in Britain. Omar Sheikh, a British citizen
who orchestrated the killing of journalist Daniel Pearl, was reportedly recruited
while studying at the London School of Economics. Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, a young
Nigerian accused of trying to detonate a bomb hidden in his underwear on a flight
from Amsterdam last year, also was said to be radicalized while studying in London.
Many in Britain still reel from memories of the suicide bombing attack on London's
transit system in July 2005, in which four homegrown terrorists — including two
youths aged just 18 and 19 — killed themselves and dozens of other commuters.
Britain is home to some influential preachers of radical Islam, the most well-known
of them being imprisoned Egyptian-born radical cleric Mustafa Kamal Mustafa, also
known as Abu Hamza Al-Masri. The one-eyed, hook-handed hard-liner used to be head
of London's Finsbury Park Mosque, said to be a meeting point for extremists, and
is accused of setting up a terrorist training camp in rural Oregon.
"For years hate speech was allowed to flourish in Britain so you had preachings
from radical imams igniting the passions of youths and dividing the community,"
ul-Qadri said. "It's now time to repair this." For many of the young Muslims attending
the camp, joining a terrorist group to wage holy war jarred with their moderate
believes. But they said extremists are outspoken at universities, and they lack
the right arguments to counter radicals who approach them.
"I have had some experiences especially at university (with radicals)," said
Tahseen Khalid, a 24-year-old university student in business and international politics.
"They haven't really worked on me ... I'm not confused. I believe terrorism is
quite alien to the culture we were brought up in. I just want the information to
help me argue the case in the strongest way," said Khalid, a Pakistani who was born
and grew up in Britain.
Teacher Samra Adri, 33, said she also met with extremist groups while at university.
She said young British Muslims often lack proper religious education and don't have
a clear alternative viewpoint to militant rhetoric.
"You hear in the news everyday about Afghanistan, Pakistan, what America's doing
... many Muslims are obviously angry about the political situation in the world,
but they don't understand exactly how a Muslim should react," said Adri, who lives
in London.
A bigger problem is that the myriad Muslim organizations in Britain representing
rival factions often contradict and attack each other's ideologies and political
agendas. One of these groups, the Islamic Society of Britain, condemned the conference
as a big public relations exercise and said it does not target the youths who are
really vulnerable to radicalism.
Justin Gest, an academic on migration studies at the London School of Economics
and Political Science, said the conference would at least expose young people to
alternatives of what "good Islam" can be.
"If it changes one young Muslim's views about what is real Islam, that's a good
thing," he said. "How many of their minds will change I don't know."