The Manila Times

Battle to free Mosul of IS ‘intellectu­al terrorism’

- AFP AFP

MOSUL: In a classroom of the University of Mosul, in the Islamic State group’s former Iraqi capital, around 50 volunteers have undergone a week’s training on how to combat the jihadists’ ideology.

The ulema, or Islamic scholars, aim to set up “brigades” tasked with ridding Mosul residents of extremist ideas following the city’s recapture last July which ended three years of IS rule.

“Mosul must be liberated from the thinking of Daesh after having been liberated militarily,” said Mussaab Mahmud, who just completed the course, using an Arabic acronym for IS.

“We were deceived by Daesh ideas and now we are trying to free ourselves from its ideology,” said the 30-year-old day laborer.

The first group of volunteers came from all sectors of Mosul society, including mechanics, teachers and a sheikh.

The men aged from 25 to 45 signed up on Facebook for the course run by the Ulema Forum of Mosul, Iraq’s second largest city which was left shattered by the months-long battle to expel IS.

The classes are being con experts in Islamic jurisprude­nce from Mosul and Tikrit, a city to the south that was also previously under brutal IS rule.

“The lessons are concentrat­ed on human rights, human developmen­t, peaceful coexistenc­e and communal peace,” the forum’s president Sheikh Saleh al-Obeidi told Agence France-Presse.

He said participan­ts were tutored on “faith, Islamic jurisprude­nce and the Hadith ( record of the sayings of the Prophet Mohammad) to allow them to counter the ideas of Daesh and its intellectu­al terrorism”.

Priority on ‘brainwashe­d’ children

IS imposed its own rigid interpreta­tion of Islamic law on all aspects of everyday life, branding opponents “apostates” who should be killed.

Most members of religious and ethnic minorities who had lived in peace for centuries alongside Mosul’s majority Sunni Muslims beatings and public executions.

Sheikh Obeidi said the brigades will go out and “combat the extremist ideas on social media and by calling on residents in their homes.”

His forum was establishe­d in 2014 in the autonomous region of Iraqi Kurdistan, to the north of Mo

They broadcast on private television channels but residents risked the wrath of IS if they were caught tuning in to the forum’s programs.

Sheikh Obeidi said that the class- es would expand to cover “all social groups and both sexes,” although it was still looking for permanent premises in the war-battered city.

Priority will be the children indoctrina­ted in IS-run schools where they were taught the jihadist version of Islam and given weapons training.

“As a teacher myself, what I’ve learnt here will allow me as far as possible to erase the radical Daesh ideas instilled in pupils, because they were the worst affected and - mad Hamid, 27.

“I will go to the parents because the home and the family play a major role in spreading the idea of tolerance and coexistenc­e,” he said.

Mohammad Abaiji, a 24-yearold imam, or prayer leader, said he would run seminars in the mosque for children “to spread enlightene­d ideas, because Islam is a religion of tolerance.”

 ??  ?? FIGHTING RADICALISM A graduate of an anti-jihadist ideology course organized by the Muslim Scholars Forum of Mosul speaks to new volunteer recruits after his ceremony in the northern Iraqi. Iraqi volunteers signed up for a week-long course run by...
FIGHTING RADICALISM A graduate of an anti-jihadist ideology course organized by the Muslim Scholars Forum of Mosul speaks to new volunteer recruits after his ceremony in the northern Iraqi. Iraqi volunteers signed up for a week-long course run by...

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