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In
my 16 years as a journalist I’ve traveled the world and met many
wonderful people and some that I would prefer never to meet again. I
think of these characters as ghosts, people who operate in a world of
shadows, dark and creepy. The attacks of 9/11 unleashed more of them
and they are scarier than anything I’ve ever experienced. Some have
transformed themselves into monsters, others into demons. I believe
that such ghouls still exist. In fact, I know they do.
Take for example my close encounter with an armed and deadly member of
Ahmad Shah Masood’s rag tag army in the winter of 1993. Our team was
returning to Kabul along a perilous stretch of road shortly after
interviewing Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, the only prime minister in modern
history to have bombed his own capital. The Russians had long been
driven out of Afghanistan and Moscow’s puppet regime in Kabul had taken
a pounding from a coalition of Mujahideen forces. But the times had
changed and now the “holy warriors” were killing each other.
I was ordered to get out of the vehicle. A gun was pointed at my head
and I was accused of being an Indian spy. I saw my life flash before
me. The pleas of our translator were drowned out by rocket fire
followed by an endless stream of tracers that lit up the starry sky.
Hekmatyar and Masood hated each other and for all the hate these two
could muster, the people of Kabul paid dearly with their lives.
I could hear our translator saying “Canadian! He’s a Canadian
journalist!” The poor chap was doing his best, but it was to no avail.
I carried a Canadian passport, but to the young man holding the
Russian-issued Kalashnikov it made no sense that a person who looked
like he did and with his complexion could ever possibly be a Canadian.
I had to have come from somewhere and India must have been an obvious
choice to him.
I would have tried ‘Guyana’ but if an official at the ministry of
interior had no geographical idea where that was, there was hardly any
chance that this unschooled young fighter, hardened by years of war,
would fare any better. How do you negotiate your way out of this
situation? There is a sense of helplessness that overcomes a person and
fear is palpable at moments likes these. Eventually, I decided to speak
and the only words that would come out of my mouth were, “I’m a
Muslim.”
“In that case,” he barked, “recite the kalimah.” I knew he wasn’t
expecting the short form – that would have been too easy – so I recited
the full passage, mentioning the angels, the prophets, the books, good
and bad, and the Day of Judgment. He hugged me and as he did he called
out to his armed comrades, masked by the darkness of night, to bring me
a cup of tea. I discovered then what it means to have faith and later
that night I made an oath as I lay in my bed shaken and restless.
I pledged that however strong my conviction was for any cause, I was
never going to embrace violence as a means to redress any wrong,
perceived or real. If that is ever translated to mean an end to my
life, so be it.
I had long buried my dreadful experience when the attacks of September
11, 2001 occurred. The demons were uncaged. I had even forgotten that
we were shot at, hijacked and robbed at gun point on the road from
Kabul to Jalalabad. But soon after the United States rained hell down
from the blue sky on the people of Afghanistan, I had another
opportunity to return to Kabul.
The ghosts of the Russian invasion that I had encountered in my first
visit were now replaced by a new and more dangerous menace – an odd
league of radical Deobandis and Wahhabis. Masood was dead, killed days
before 9/11 by members of Al-Qaeda posing as reporters. His forces were
decimated by the Taliban and whatever was left of them was now under
the command of Gen. Rashid Dostum, an unsavory character with a passion
for vengeance.
It was also the Taliban, under the guidance of Mullah Omar a.k.a.
Amir-ul-Mu’minin, who drove Hekmatyar and his fighters out of
Afghanistan and into Iran. But with the Taliban a.k.a. the ‘Army of
God’, literally decimated on the orders of the Vulcans in Washington
and London, Hekmatyar rolled up his rugs and returned to his native
land. Today, he is again dodging bullets and missiles, hiding out in
the rugged mountains of southern Afghanistan. His aim is to drive the
invaders out of his country and topple the Karzai government. To him,
there is a pure Islamic state, the utopian dream of all Islamists,
still to be established. It appears nothing has changed in all these
years other than names and dates.
My experience tells me that to take sides in what amounts to wars
between ghosts and demons is pointless. There are some ideological
liberals in our community who take to the pulpit to argue that
American, British and Canadian foreign policy is responsible for
creating the fertile grounds for violent extremists to germinate. The
argument is lame and they know it. It is true that Western foreign
policy is often driven by greed and ignorance and in most cases it
results in death and destruction to countless innocent people, many of
them in the Muslim world. But to conclude that foreign policy is wholly
responsible for terrorism and suicide bombings is hogwash. The people
who are advancing this argument are trying to save their own skin.
Blaming Western foreign policy for fomenting extremism is precisely the
argument that Ayman Al-Zawahiri and his new sidekick, American convert
Adam Yahiye Gadahn a.k.a. ‘Azzam the American’ want us to advance to
justify their vision of a ‘New Jihad World Order.’ When we buy in we
end up advancing the goals of this fringe group of loud and obnoxious
Muslim men and women who are hell-bent on heralding The End. There’s
another name to describe their religious zeal – Messianic. Osama bin
Laden, Al-Zawahiri and now Gadahn, believe that the appearance of the
Mahdi is near and that they will be the chosen ones to lead his army
when good confronts evil in a final showdown before God brings
everything crashing down in apocalyptic grandeur.
Isn’t this ‘holier than thou’ arrogant attitude what God makes
blameworthy in the Quran? When the Prophet Musa (Moses), may Allah
bless him, returned to find his people steeped in idol worship he
scolds them with a profound question: “Would you like to hasten the
judgment of your Lord?” (Al-A’raf, verse 150). And in another verse of
the Quran, God says: “Man was created with a hasty nature. I shall show
him My Signs (the Day of Judgment), but don’t try to hasten it.
(Al-Anbiya, verse 38)
I’ve been watching hours of Al-Qaeda propaganda videos while
researching a major documentary to be aired this fall on the Canadian
Broadcasting Corporation (CBC). These videos were downloaded from the
internet, copied and traded by one gullible young Muslim to another in
Toronto, my city. They all carried the same frightening messianic
messages made savory because their skilled producers used heart
wrenching recitations of noble Quranic verses to make hideous acts
appear chivalrous.
I’ve now realized this arcade of videos represents the old Al-Qaeda.
The face of the new Al-Qaeda is ‘Azzam the American.’ His full beard
and white turban does little to mask his slick and wily undertones. He
knows exactly what to say and in doing so he is not tugging at our
heart strings, he is appealing to our minds. He would like us to
believe that Western foreign policy, in particular America’s, is the
reason why he and his band of suicide bombers are prepared to bring
terror to America, Britain and Canada. What astonishes me is not so
much what he says, but the things he doesn’t say. At least in
the West we can refer to
these decisions as ‘policies.’
Anyone who
was paying attention to Imam Suhaib Webb’s speech at the Islamic
Society of North America’s (ISNA) annual conference would have realized
that it was a condemnation of Gadahn’s diatribe.
Imam Webb is
blue-eyed, blonde, tall, and handsome American convert to
Islam. He appeared on ISNA’s main session alongside Shaykh Hamza Yusuf,
Imam Zaid Shakir and Dr Ingrid Mattson, all converts, decked out with
his Azhari turban and wearing the traditional robe of that great
institution which covered the suit and tie he said his “Church going
American grandmother would be proud of”. He did not mince his words.
Muslims in
America, Imam Webb warned, must expunge these demons from
the house of Islam. Demons like Gadahn and company. It was a message
reiterated by Shaykh Hamza. “Condemn, if you wish Western foreign
policy vis-à-vis the Muslim world, but resolve as well to abolish
extremism, violence and a hateful discourse from your mosques,
community and homes.”
This was the
message that the estimated 30,000 participants at ISNA’s
convention took home on the occasion of the 5th anniversary of 9/11. It
was a strong message, made even more memorable because for the first
time in all its 43 years, the predominately male leaders of ISNA and
its sister organisation, the Muslim Students’ Association, chose a
Canadian-born female convert to Islam as their president. Anyone who
knows this organization is well aware that this is a huge leap.
Ingrid
Mattson has served her organization well and it appears she has
been groomed for leadership by two very powerful allies in the ISNA
hierarchy, Abdallah Idris and Nur Abdallah, former presidents and pals
from their activist days growing up in the Sudan. It was Abdallah Idris
who brought Mattson into the loving embrace of ISNA in the late 1980’s
and it was he who could not stop himself from exploiting her gender to
tug at the purse strings of generous women in order to meet ISNA’s ever
ambitious fund-raising targets.
If Muslims
in the West are ever going to shake the ghosts of 9/11 they
need to have leaders who are indigenous to the West, whether they are
brown, white or black. 9/11 is our albatross and the faster Muslims
accept this fact the more effective they will be in responding to the
challenges it has put on their porches.
We have to
prevent ourselves from getting sucked into the ‘blame game.’
The blame game is like a game of dodge ball where Muslims run around
denying any responsibility for their misery, pretending it’s always
someone else’s fault. Any ‘someone’ will do just fine as long as he or
she is not an Arab or a Pakistani.
Nazim Baksh is this issue’s Guest
Editor. He is a Canadian Journalism Fellow at the University of Toronto
and an award-winning journalist who has been covering the rise of
global terrorism since the late 1980s.
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