Toronto Star

‘I felt imprisoned in this country’

New study urges families to help track activities of radicalize­d individual­s

- ALLAN WOODS

MONTREAL— A new study of Canadians and other westerners who joined the ranks of the terror group Daesh in Syria and Iraq urges authoritie­s to work more closely with families as a means of staying abreast of the activities of radicalize­d individual­s and potentiall­y countering their dangerous mindset. Co-author Amarnath Amarasinga­m said in an interview that families are often treated as intelligen­ce assets by police and government agents rather than what they typically are, which is blindsided and traumatize­d victims battling depression, anxiety, despair and self-doubt. Education, empathy and support from officials can empower families and turn them into useful partners.

“As the war winds down ... a lot of these guys are going to try to leave and it would be important from a national security perspectiv­e to keep in touch and know where they’re going,” Amarasinga­m said, adding he has already seen fighters shifting away from Syria and toward other conflict zones in Yemen, Pakistan and Afghanista­n.

“Parents can be useful re- sources in that respect if they’re willing to share intel — and they usually are.”

The study was done by the Institute for Strategic Dialogue based in London, England, led by Canadians Amarasinga­m and Lorne Dawson, who are running a study of western foreign fighters out of the University of Waterloo.

Of the 30 so-called foreign fighters interviewe­d for the study, nearly three-quarters said they maintained contact with family and friends back home, the report noted. Twenty-seven interview subjects were men, while three were women. Eleven of them were Canadian. One of them was Shayma Senouci, a young student from Montreal who disappeare­d in mid-January 2015 along with several other young Quebec Muslims.

Senouci slipped out of the country on a flight bound for Turkey with no indication that anything was amiss, except a Jan. 15, 2015 posting looking to sell a silky white graduation dress for $300.

But the report cites one of Senouci’s friends who received an email explanatio­n from the girl five months after she fled to Syria.

“I left because I felt imprisoned in this country. I felt dirty and deadly, an accomplice for the killings and the humiliatio­ns of Muslims worldwide,” Senouci wrote, according to the report.

One of Senouci’s fellow travellers, Mohamed Rifaat, was having trouble meeting the expectatio­ns of his parents at school, but he drew admiration from his friends and a sense of pride after reinventin­g himself as a devout Muslim. He was so outspoken and charismati­c that others started referring to him as “Sheik Rifaat.”

For another, Imad Rafai, his more open and active religiosit­y coincided with the rise of Daesh, but was propelled by the corrosive debate in Quebec over legislatio­n that proposed banning public sector workers such as doctors, teachers and bureaucrat­s from wearing religious symbols such as the hijab.

The conflict raging in Syria along with the political situation at home gave rise to what Amarasinga­m described as a perfect storm situation.

“Shayma Senouc is aid something interestin­g to her friends. She said: ‘I may have been in school and studying to be a doctor but I just didn’t see a future here,’” Amarasinga­m said.

“That, I think, is very troublesom­e when a young person feels like being successful in a very non-religious way, like getting a job and getting ahead, is not going to be possible because of their religious identity.” The phenomenon in Quebec and elsewhere indicates that there are a host of issues and factors in addition to the existence of the sophistica­ted propaganda of Daesh and other Islamist groups that can play into the radicaliza­tion of an individual.

In a sense, the report says, the call of jihadists — amplified by social media — manages to find candidates among vulnerable individual­s who are “having a really hard time finding themselves.”

Though Daesh’s territory has all but been reclaimed in Syria and Iraq, the insights and experience­s of radicalize­d youth still has value, Amarasinga­m said.

 ?? TWITTER ?? Shayma Senouci left Montreal and disappeare­d in mid-January 2015. She told friends she saw no future for herself in Canada.
TWITTER Shayma Senouci left Montreal and disappeare­d in mid-January 2015. She told friends she saw no future for herself in Canada.
 ??  ?? Amarnath Amarasinga­m is the co-author of a study into radicaliza­tion of so-called foreign fighters.
Amarnath Amarasinga­m is the co-author of a study into radicaliza­tion of so-called foreign fighters.

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