Stopping the Devil from Stealing Young Souls 


Toronto Star 
 July 15, 2005

The heart-rending loss of humanity in the wake of the London bombings is a tragedy that affects all, Muslim and non-Muslim alike.

Despite the cause-and-effect theories trotted out extensively by commentators, the atrocity was a homegrown problem. It can be solved only within the community that allowed it to grow. That community is not necessarily a religious one, but a multicultural community like the one we have here in Canada.

I say this with feeling because I am a Pakistani Muslim woman with two sons, the same age as some of the suicide bombers in London. The difference is, my sons are secular in public and knowledgeable and religious in private. They have grown up in an environment of respect for other faiths and of life. More important, they know how to balance both.

Early this year, my 20-year-old son, Saif, went to Birmingham, England to visit a friend. When he returned, he was quite troubled. He confessed he was disturbed by the religious ideology of his English counterparts. And at Friday prayer in a mosque, he was shocked at the fire-and-brimstone spouted from the pulpit.

Later, he took a drive with his friend. The vehicle they were in developed a flat tire. My son suggested they take the vehicle to be fixed at a gas station they had just passed. To his surprise and dismay, the three British-Muslim boys with him said they would rather walk than take their business to a non-Muslim. They proceeded to try and indoctrinate my son about the ills of the West and how important it was not to integrate with locals.

Saif says he was alarmed at their attitude. He found their views dishonest and disconnected from the reality of living in the West.

I've seen this trend on visits to Britain. There is a growing sense of frustration among young people and it's dangerous.

Last week's events are symbolic of this malaise. Granted, there are many political, economic and social factors that come into play when we talk about terrorism today. Anyone with half a brain is aware that the war in Iraq and U.S. foreign policy plays a strong role in any reaction to the West. But it does not, and never will, justify the death of innocents.

Can this happen in Canada? Perhaps, unless we wake up and smell the coffee. I don't mean only Muslims, although public opinion would like to treat this as an exclusively Islamic problem.

When the bubble bursts, it affects all of us. Before we are left blaming each other, let's find solutions. I don't believe surveillance, airport checks, limiting immigration and picking up bearded Muslim men at random is the answer. Targeting one community won't solve anything either.

The solution lies with parents and guardians, peers and advisers, teachers and religious institutions. All of us need to be more vigilant about the kind of rhetoric being spouted, about the ideology of hate being exported to Canada, about Muslim youth becoming targets for Al Qaeda recruiters in places of education and worship.

Most important, perhaps, is teaching our youth to raise their voices in condemning all acts of violence and being aware about what is going on around them.

Last month, two of the largest centres of Islamic learning, Al Azhar, in Egypt and Qum, in Iran, issued a joint fatwa calling suicide bombing a sin that is unacceptable under any circumstance.

In Amman, Jordan, more than 170 Muslim scholars who gathered for an International Islamic conference agreed to forbid labelling anyone with apostasy, condemning extremists who used hatred to fire up sentiments against others.

To those who want to know where moderate Muslims are hiding, we are alive and well and working around the clock to undo the damage done by 30 years of indoctrination by an ideology of hate. We work hard to get our voices heard above the babble of the extremists.

Last week's bombing in London struck close to home. My brother-in-law was on a train just ahead of one that was bombed. Like hundreds of others going through the same experience in Britain, we worried ourselves sick until we knew he was safe. Today, many families mourn their dead and so 
do we.

However, our loss is greater. We mourn not only the dead and wounded, we also mourn the living who have lost their souls.

Before the souls of our youth are sucked away by the devil in disguise, let's join hands for the greatest of all jihads — the struggle to respect the dignity of human life.

 

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