As an American
Muslim, I cannot find words strong enough to condemn the barbaric attack in
Paris by ISIS that has claimed over 100 lives and injured many more. I hope that
a significant proportion of the estimated 5 million French Muslims, the largest
in Europe, will take to the streets to denounce the terrorist organization. The
cancer of ISIS must be eliminated not just for the sanctity of human
civilization but for its survival.
It is tragic
that Muslims are fleeing their homelands (Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan and more) by
the thousands because of the persecution and the instability wrought by a band
of fanatics. The Paris attack by ISIS will worsen their condition as suspicion
and intolerance against them mount.
Two wrongs,
of course, cannot make a right. In this case, there is only one wrong that must
be made right, and that is to decisively defeat ISIS and cleanse the earth of
its nihilistic ideology.
Some of us fall
for the seductive appeal of the “Yes, But” syndrome to explain away any event or
catastrophe. Yes, Afghanistan is a mess but isn’t American overreach in the
aftermath of 9/11 one of the main causes? Yes, Iraq is an unending disaster but
isn’t George Bush’s war against Saddam Hussein based on the mythical weapons of
mass destruction the main reason why things are the way they are?
True on both
counts but the “Yes, But” explanation cannot be used to justify the horror that
ISIS has unleashed around the world. Whatever the dark forces that gave birth
to it, this terrorist organization is now bent on destroying anything that
stands in the way of its brutal worldview through murder and mayhem.
Which is why we
must unite against it, irrespective of our race or creed.
Recent events
indicate that ISIS is on the run. Kurdish and rebel Syrian forces, with the
help of airstrikes by a U.S.-led coalition, have retaken several strategic
towns in northern Iraq and Syria. Evidence is also mounting that a drone strike
has killed Mohammed Emwazi, the infamous “Jihadi John” responsible for
beheading American journalist James Foley, among others. (Not many Americans
are aware that Kuwait’s Jassem Emwazi, the 51-year-old father of “Jihadi John,”
called his son a dog, an animal, a terrorist and hoped that he would die and go
straight to hell when the first video of the beheading surfaced.)
So what does
a terrorist organization do to keep its flickering flame alive in the hearts of
its delusional followers? Sow seeds of anarchy by killing people at random when
they are out enjoying a concert, for instance, or dining at a restaurant. That’s
what happened in the City of Light last Friday.
Although
lingering echoes of “where are the moderate Muslims” still persist in some
conservative corridors of America, by and large this canard is gradually receding.
There is a reason for it. All major Muslim organizations in America, and for
that matter, around the world, have condemned the attack in Paris.
This did not
keep Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump from calling for more
scrutiny of American mosques. Mr. Trump would have done Muslims a favor if he
could also identify which mosques should be under surveillance, unless he
meant, of course, all mosques.
In the Friday congregational prayers that I attended in
recent months in the Bay Area, for instance, the majority of the sermons by
Imams were directed against ISIS and how it was violating the most fundamental
tenets of the faith through its contempt for life. A YouTube video made about a
year ago against ISIS by Hamza Yusuf, one of the most
prominent Islamic scholars in America, has been viewed by close to half a
million people around the world.
Some Western pundits claim that ISIS is winning the war of
ideas against the West. This leaves most of us Muslims scratching our heads.
Really? Exactly where is this happening? Certainly not in our mosques where we
have called ISIS by what it is: a terrorist organization that has nothing to do
with Islam and that must be destroyed.
Yet it is
also true that some young and vulnerable American Muslims have fallen prey to
ISIS’s slick social media campaign for recruitment. (A recent Danish
intelligence report states that the typical age range of foreigners joining
ISIS is 16 to 25.) One such was Northern Virginia’s 17-year-old Ali Shukri Amin
who was sentenced to more than 11 years in prison last August for helping
another teen travel to Syria to join the fight there. In acknowledging his
guilt, Amin also stated that when he sought advice about the war in Syria from
the adults in his life, including imams, “they could not provide adequate
answers” or seemed “too busy to try.”
One could
make the case that Amin was unlucky because many American Imams have been
counseling disillusioned youth planning to travel to Syria to reconsider their
decision. One such is Imam Mohamed Magid of Sterling, Virginia, who was able to
persuade several youths from his congregation to abandon their decision to join
ISIS simply by asking them to “use your mind.”
So while we Muslims
condemn the Paris attack, we must also take our youth seriously if they show
signs of alienation and disillusionment with their lives and reason with them
in ways that make sense to them, instead of being patronizing toward them.