IQNA

Canadian Youth Warned about Daesh

10:27 - October 16, 2017
News ID: 3464176
TEHRAN (IQNA) – The tall, slim teenager asks a question that's on the minds of many of the young people gathered around the cloth-covered tables in a small meeting room at a mosque in northeast Calgary.

Canadian Youth Warned about Daesh


"If someone from ISIS or ISIL (Daesh) approaches you, how would you respond to them, so that you're not attacked any further?" wonders Zubair Tariq, 16.

"If they approach, you should be smart enough to know that ISIL/ISIS is very big criminals in the eyes of Islam," answers Imam Syed Soharwardy, founder of Muslims Against Terrorism and the Islamic Supreme Council of Canada.

"These people reach out through the internet. These people reach out through a local community. Understand this is not somebody who is a nice Muslim or a good Muslim or a true Muslim. This is someone who is disguised as a Muslim. ISIL is a disguised Muslim.

"They say they are good Muslims but to us they are a bunch of thugs and criminals," he continues. "They are terrorists."

Social media recruiting

Soharwardy met recently with 30 Muslim youth at the Jamia Masjid Gunbad-e-Khizra mosque. It was one of several meetings he does on a regular basis to prevent the radicalization of Canadian Muslim youth.

Soharwardy decided to call another meeting after an attack earlier this month that injured a police officer and civilians in Edmonton. A man stabbed an officer doing traffic control outside a football game and then crashed a cube van into pedestrians downtown. Five people were injured. Police say they seized a Daesh flag as evidence.

Tariq says he hasn't been contacted directly by anyone seeking to recruit young Canadian Muslims, but he's worried.

A report last year on the terrorist threat in Canada said that at the start of 2014 there were more than 130 Canadians who were abroad and suspected of terror-related activities. By the end of 2015, the number had grown to about 180 and the government knew of about 60 extremists who had returned to Canada.

Some of the students at the meeting express anger at the backlash they endure every time a terrorist attack happens anywhere in the world.

"I don't understand why the word terrorist or terrorism is stitched to the word Muslim or the name of Islam. Terrorism itself is just an attack on anyone," says Shahwali Hameed.

"Terrorism has no religion."

Aysha Ali believes a lack of understanding causes people to believe all Muslims are terrorists every time an attack occurs.

"It definitely gets worse. They wouldn't blame it on Muslims if it just happened once, but it's happened several times where people like ISIS and ISIL do it in the name of Islam."

Double standard

Ibrahim Khan says there appears to be a double standard. He points out nobody is calling the perpetrator in the Las Vegas mass shooting a terrorist.

"He's either mentally damaged or they just call him a shooter. No one calls him a terrorist, because he doesn't have a long beard."

Soharwardy says he believes there are still recruiters and Daesh sympathizers working in Canada and he suggests that will continue until their financial pipeline dries up.

He tells the students that anyone who promotes hatred or committing violent acts is not following the Muslim faith.

"If you see anybody make sure you report to your parents, your teacher, to me," he says.

"Let us know right away, because we need to defend ourselves and ... remain loyal, faithful, law-abiding citizens of this country."


Source: CBC News

Tags: iqna ، canada ، muslims ، youth ، daesh
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