The Columbus Dispatch

Effort to stem homegrown US extremism launches

- By Philip Marcelo

BOSTON — A federally backed effort to stem the rise of homegrown extremists is underway in Massachuse­tts, nearly three years after the White House announced the initiative on the first anniversar­y of the Boston Marathon bombings that killed three people and injured hundreds.

The state last week selected three organizati­ons to use $210,000 in federal money earmarked for the pilot effort, The Associated Press learned through a request of public records. The organizati­ons propose initiative­s meant to keep youths from being drawn to the violent messages of extremist groups.

United Somali Youth, which operates out of New England’s largest mosque, the Islamic Society of Boston Cultural Center, was awarded $105,000 to help Somali, African and Middle Eastern youths build critical life skills through afterschoo­l programs, counseling, college readiness assistance and other efforts.

Empower Peace, which was founded by a communicat­ions and marketing executive, was given $42,000 to teach high schoolers statewide how to develop social media campaigns promoting tolerance and combating bigotry so that they can produce them at their schools.

And the 20-year-old Somali Developmen­t Center has been given $63,000 to better integrate Somali immigrants and refugees into the broader community.

Abdirahman Yusuf, the center’s executive director, said the Boston-area Somali community hasn’t had to grapple with terrorist recruitmen­t like those in other parts of the country but needs to take preventati­ve steps.

“With events like Columbus, Ohio, it’s important for our community to have a dialogue,” he said, referring to last month’s car and knife attack at Ohio State University by a Somali-born student that is being investigat­ed as possible terrorism. “This is a relevant issue.”

But with a new administra­tion moving into the White House, there’s “real concern” over the future of such programs, said John Cohen, who helped President Barack Obama’s administra­tion develop its “countering violent extremism” strategy that included pilot efforts in Los Angeles and Minneapoli­s in addition to Boston.

A spokesman for President-elect Donald Trump’s transition team didn’t immediatel­y comment. But, on the campaign trail, Trump and his surrogates suggested they’d take more aggressive steps to combating Islamic extremism than the current administra­tion, including banning Muslims from entering the country and surveillin­g mosques and Muslim residents.

Local critics in Massachuse­tts complain the focus on Somalis and other predominan­tly Muslim minorities runs counter to the program’s stated mission of addressing all manner of violent ideologies, not just Islamic extremists.

“CVE predominan­tly targets Somalis, Muslims, and Arabs — falsely legitimizi­ng hostility against these communitie­s,” said Shannon Erwin, of the Boston-based Muslim Justice League.

The state Executive Office of Health and Human Services, which awarded the money, stressed the agency didn’t expressly seek out Somali or Muslim-focused initiative­s. Instead, it said, it broadly sought proposals addressing violence motivated by racial, religious or gender-based prejudice or that intended to influence government conduct through mass destructio­n, assassinat­ion or kidnapping.

The agency received just four applicatio­ns, one of which didn’t meet the grant’s requiremen­ts, according to the documents obtained by the AP. And while two were Somali-based nonprofits, the third, Empower Peace, encompasse­s a broader population.

The three pilot cities have been slow to roll out their programs since they were touted at a global White House summit last year as pillars of the Obama administra­tion’s broader strategy to combat extremist thinking.

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