The Complete Infidel's Guide to ISIS (22 page)

Read The Complete Infidel's Guide to ISIS Online

Authors: Robert Spencer

Tags: #Religion, #Islam, #History, #Political Science, #Terrorism, #Non-Fiction

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A young Muslim in the Chicago area, Mohammed Hamzah Khan, nineteen, along with his sister, who was seventeen, and their brother (sixteen), got farther, but like Cerantonio, didn’t make it. On October 4, 2014, they sneaked out of their home early in the morning and made their way to O’Hare International Airport, intending to travel to the Islamic State. Hamzah Khan left a note for his parents that combined piety with grievance (an extremely common combination among Muslims who are inclined toward the Islamic State and other jihad groups: “An Islamic State has been established and it is thus obligatory upon every able-bodied male and female to migrate there,” he declared. “Muslims have been crushed under foot for too long. . . . This nation is openly against Islam and Muslims. . . . I do not want my progeny to be raised in a filthy environment like this.”
41

Khan’s sister contributed her own note: “Death is inevitable, and all of the times we enjoyed will not matter as we lay [sic] on our death beds. Death is an appointment, and we cannot delay or postpone, and what we did to
prepare for our death is what will matter.”
42
In other words, death while in the process of serving Allah should be one’s highest aspiration.

The three Khan teens were arrested at the airport, their search for the pure Islamic land and a death worthy of Allah postponed for the time.
43

In reporting on the Khans’ aborted flight, the
Washington Post
gave ample space to their parents to make their case that they had not raised the three children in an “extremist” atmosphere, but were just ordinary, albeit conservative Americans whose offspring had inexplicably gotten “radicalized.” However, the
Post
story unwittingly provided a glimpse into the world of a devout Muslim upbringing in the United States, in which a young person who has learned hatred and contempt for infidel civilization can easily decide that (in the words of the Muslim Brotherhood motto) death for the sake of Allah is his highest aspiration.

The would-be Islamic State jihadis’ mother, Zarine Khan “has worked for many years as a teacher at a local Islamic school,” and “the Khans tried to shield their children from unwanted influences. They had a TV when the children were younger, but they had no cable service. The TV was used solely for showing DVDs—mainly cartoons and educational JumpStart programs from the public library.”
45

 

TAQIYYA WATCH

“The vast majority of Muslim clerics say the group cherry picks what it wants from Islam’s holy book, the Quran, and from accounts of Muhammad’s actions and sayings, known as the Hadith. It then misinterprets many of these, while ignoring everything in the texts that contradicts those hand-picked selections, these experts say.”

—Associated Press, March 2, 2015
44

Given the Islamic outlook it’s obvious the family had, those DVDs most likely also included Islamic teaching tools. The
Post
also tells us that “the children studied at a local Islamic school, which offered a standard U.S. curriculum of English, math and science—but also classes on Islam. . . . All three Khan children also became Hafiz, which means they completely memorized the Koran in Arabic.”
46

 

FROM DELTA AIR LINES TO THE JIHAD

Again and again, those who find the Islamic State’s call impossible to resist turn out to be the most devout young Muslims. Abdirahmaan Muhumed, a Muslim from Minneapolis who had once had a job cleaning Delta Air Lines airplanes at Minneapolis airport, made his way to ISIS only to become one of the first U.S. residents to die in the Islamic State’s jihad.
47
He explained: “A Muslim has to stand up for [what’s] right. I give up this worldly life for Allah.” Muhumed said that if some thought of him as a terrorist, he was “happy with it,” and prayed that Allah would “make my mom strong for the decision that I made.”
48
Muhumed, a twenty-nine-year-old father of nine children, was killed while fighting for the Islamic State in late August 2014.
49

Lack of Opportunity Drove Them to It? Middle Class Kids, Medical School Acceptees Flock to ISIS

Noting that many young Somali Muslims from the Twin Cities had made their way to Iraq and Syria to join the Islamic State, Mohamud Noor of the Confederation of Somali Community in Minnesota made a significant statement: “Most of [those who left] don’t have the resources to even buy a ticket to go to Chicago. So that means there is [sic] some influential individuals who are taking advantage of our youth.”
50
Not just influencing them, apparently, but paying for the trips of these poor young people.

Are Muslims being driven to join the Islamic State by the prospect of financial gain? John Kerry, Obama administration spokesperson Marie Harf, and many others have declared repeatedly that poverty is driving people to terrorism, and that giving them economic opportunities is what will end the appeal of terrorist groups. In line with this, Mohamud Noor explained why former Delta employee Abdirahmaan Muhumed threw in his lot with
ISIS: “He had so many challenges, lack of opportunities in life. Those are the things that have driven him to be who he is.”
51

Yet many Islamic State jihadis had plenty of opportunities in life. A Muslim in Britain, Nasser Muthana, had been accepted into four medical schools, but turned them all down to travel to the Islamic State—because, he said, “jihad is obligatory.”
52
Another Muslim from Britain, Muhammad Hamidur Rahman, who like Muthana was killed fighting for the Islamic State, came from a prosperous middle class background—but according to his father, he “said he wanted to become a shaheed [martyr] for the sake of Allah.”
53

Andre Poulin: “Mujahedeen Are Regular People”

The idea that poverty drives young Muslims to terrorism was directly contradicted by the story of a middle class youth from Canada named Andre Poulin, who after his conversion to Islam began calling himself Abu Muslim. In a video that became an Islamic State recruitment tool, Poulin emphatically ruled out the idea that he was driven to join the Islamic State because of “challenges” or “lack of opportunities in life.” Abu Muslim declared: “It’s not like I was some social outcast, wasn’t like I was some anarchist or somebody who just wants to destroy the world and kill everybody. No, I was a regular person. And, mujahedeen are regular people, too.”
54

Poulin, who was in his twenties when he made the video, explained: “Before I come here to Syria, I had money, I had family, I had good friends, I had colleagues. You know I worked as a street janitor—I made over $2,000 a month at this job. It was a very good job, a very good job. And even though I wasn’t rich beyond my wildest imaginations, you know I was making it. It was good, and you know I always had family to support me, and I had friends to support me.”
55

What, then, was lacking? Life, he said, was not “religiously fulfilling.” He asked his fellow Muslims in Canada and elsewhere in the West how
they could think that they were pleasing Allah while paying taxes to a government that used them “to assist the war on Islam.”
56

Poulin appealed to Muslims in the West to join him: “We need the engineers, we need doctors, we need professionals. Every person can contribute something to the Islamic State.”
57
But they didn’t have to make the journey if it were difficult: he said that Muslims should all aid the Islamic State in some way. “If you cannot fight, then you can give money. And if you cannot give money, then you can assist in technology. And if you can’t assist in technology, you can use some other skills.” He promised that if they did come with their families to the Islamic State, “your families will live here in safety just like back home.”
58

FBI Director Comey has noted that the Islamic State is trying to lure “both fighters and people who would be the spouses . . . to their warped world.”
59
The lusty young jihadis of the Islamic State especially want to draw potential spouses to their domains. Aqsa Mahmood, a young Muslim woman who was born and raised in Scotland and then made her way to the Islamic State, tried to recruit other young Muslim girls from the West with the promise, paradoxically enough, of stability and prosperity: the recruits would get, she promised, “a house with free electricity and water provided to you due to the Khilafah and no rent included. Sounds great, right?”
60

Belying this talk of safety and security, however, the Islamic State recruitment video featuring Andre Poulin ends with footage of his bloody corpse and praise for him as a martyr of Islam.
61
Apparently the slick ISIS propagandists have decided that the lure of martyrdom is superior to the appeal of safety, in line with the Qur’an’s declaration: “Not equal are believers who sit home and receive no hurt and those who fight in Allah’s cause with their wealth and lives. Allah has granted a grade higher to those who fight with their possessions and bodies to those who sit home. Those who fight he has distinguished with a special reward” (4:95).

 

INTERFAITH DIALOGUE

A convert to Islam from Britain, Sally Jones, made her way to the Islamic State and took to Twitter to threaten her former coreligionists: “You Christians all need beheading with a nice blunt knife and stuck on the railings at Raqqa. Come here. I’ll do it for you!”
62

Jake Bilardi: “With My Martyrdom Operation Drawing Closer, I Want to Tell You My Story”

The case of Jake Bilardi (who after converting to Islam adopted the name Abdullah al-Australi—that is, “the Australian slave of Allah”), a young Australian convert to Islam who was killed in a jihad suicide attack in the Islamic State in March 2015, is also instructive. Far from being underprivileged or lacking in opportunities, Bilardi described his middle class upbringing in “affluent Melbourne” as “very comfortable.”

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