Arab News

Qur’an not significan­t motivating factor for Daesh recruits, says expert

- Arab News London

The Qur’an is not a significan­t motivating factor for young men joining Daesh, a researcher has found.

The desire for “badass-dogoodery” is the main motivating factor, said Omar Shaukat, a former senior research fellow with the Afro-Middle East Centre in Johannesbu­rg who interviewe­d young men who were considerin­g joining Daesh at the height of its “caliphate” in 2014-15.

Knowing that most young men do not become jihadists because of religious factors can play a role in rehabilita­ting them, he added. Shaukat said he offered prospectiv­e Daesh recruits “a more effective strategy” for improving the lives of Muslims than becoming militant. Would-be jihadists need to be offered “nonviolent or non-hateful ways of being radical that would still hold up in their eyes as being effective — or at least more effective than they can achieve by associatin­g with IS-like (Daesh-like) groups,” he added.

Extremism can be “cured,” but that requires rejecting the taboo of engaging with potential terrorists, as well as the legal restrictio­ns that come with such engagement, he said.

“The cure, I would say, is civil society reaching out to these groups of people and trying to set up a dialogue,” Shaukat added.

“Not taking up the militant (path) but doing more social justice work and community work. Show them that’s a better and more effective strategy than becoming militant.” The South African researcher said he had persuaded potential Daesh recruits not to join the organizati­on by convincing them that extreme and grotesque acts of violence had historical­ly not been successful in bringing about change.

Documents leaked to the Associated Press in 2016 corroborat­e Shaukat’s findings. They showed that new Daesh recruits were often poorly versed in Islamic teachings, with the overwhelmi­ng majority having only basic knowledge of the Qur’an and Shariah law.

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