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The_Omnissiah

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Islamic Radical "Detox" program

This just in!

 

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Toronto mosque offers 'detox' for Islamic radicals

Updated Wed. Feb. 11 2009 6:51 PM ET

CTV.ca News Staff

In what is likely the first of its kind in Canada, a Toronto mosque is offering a "detox" program for young Islamic radicals who are sympathetic to the terrorist group al Qaeda.

Muhammed Robert Heft, a team member of the Specialized De-radicalization Intervention program, says the program is based on the idea that Islamic extremism can be fought by incorporating traditional teachings of the Qur'an into a "12-step Extremist Detox Program."

Among the steps in the program offered at Toronto's Masjid El Noor mosque:

 

  • Finding common ground, "not fighting ground," with other faiths
  • In the "Open society of Canada," how to reconcile "dogmatic idealism with pragmatic realism"
  • Seeing the whole as one, and take into account "global challenges that affect us all."
  • Actively countering extremist ideology through "education, public speaking and writing."

"As Canadians of Muslim faith, it is our ardent desire to become leaders in the championing of anti-terror values," says a document explaining the program.

Heft told CTV Newsnet's Power Play on Wednesday that among the young radical Islamic followers the mosque is hoping to counsel are members of the notorious "Toronto 18." In 2006, a series of counter-terrorism raids in the Greater Toronto Area resulted in the arrest of 18 alleged members of a purported Islamic terrorist cell plotting a variety of attacks against targets in Ontario.

That case, along with that of Ottawa's Momin Khawaja who was convicted for his role in a British terror cell, have raised concerns about home-grown terrorism.

Heft said there are many sects in Islam, and that "99.9" per cent of Islamic leaders across the country agree they must work together to combat extremism.

 

But he did admit there are a "small number of firebrand preachers" who try to persuade young Muslims to jump onto the extremist bandwagon.

 

"Unfortunately, a few emotional, Internet-surfing, like-minded individuals who do what I call 'Do-It-Yourself Islam,' find themselves getting caught up in emotion and justify getting caught up in the hate that's inside them," Heft told Power Play host Tom Clark.

"They end up falling prey to people with deviant views of the religion."

 

But he says if one studies the tradition of Islam, going back to the orthodox scholars, "you realize these are the teachings of Islam."

 

And by incorporating these teachings into the mosque's program, Heft claims he's had success converting those who formerly held radical, anti-Semitic views into "productive members of society."

He says the program has also helped disenfranchised Muslims get jobs, and to get off welfare.

 

"We're winning," said Heft.

 

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So what do you all think?  I for one am happy to see something like this.  

They have programs similar to this in saudi arabia.

 

 

As-Salaamu Alaikum

-Omni

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Arminius's picture

Arminius

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Hi Omni: I also am happy to see this!

 

"Heft" sounds like a German name. Perhaps Robert Heft took some lessons from the "De-Nazification" program that was quite effectively applied in post war Germany. Many Nazis, who had been deluded by Nazi doctrine but were otherwise decent people (my father being one of them), were effectively de-doctrinized.

 

Now it is time to de-doctrinize radical Christians!

 

Where is rishi? He says doctrines are metaphorical; he'd be the right men for a detox program for Christian radicals.

Pickle's picture

Pickle

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My optimist cheers this effort as finally something positive to halt terrorism. Cynic in me doesn't think it has a chance in hell of working. Cynic is winning :(

rishi's picture

rishi

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Brilliant!  For me this is, at least in principle, what I mean by responding to a spiritual problem with a liturgical solution. You can't take away the toxic substitute without simultanously making the genuine reality more accessible to the 'addict.' 

 

And, yes, the addiction metaphor does raise interesting questions about our struggles for/against change in the UCC, doesn't it?  If the possibility were raised, we might expect to hear the reaction "people like us certainly aren't in need of 'rehab' ....  but we could do it for others!"   We can become so used to focusing on others and doing the kind of good that doesn't require much self-awareness.  So we would have to first recognize our own addiction(s) and realize that to be effective rehab counsellors for others, we would first have to be clean/sober ourselves, with all that involves -- like touching and working through the pain that got us trapped in our addiction(s) in the first place. 

 

So... if addiction was a metaphor for our spiritual crisis in the UCC, what do you think the "toxic substitutes" are that we have become addicted to and need to be detoxed from? And what are the realities that our addictions are substituting for?  And how would we begin to experience or access those realities in this spiritual rehab program?

 

graeme's picture

graeme

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interesting. Only arminius has realized we all need to detox our hatreds.

I guess we aren't as ready as those mosques are.

graeme

rishi's picture

rishi

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Hi Graeme,

Why just hatred? Couldn't we add greed and intentional ignorance too?  But even if we did, these are all very broad categories. I don't know any UCC congregations who wouldn't agree that a detox from such toxicities is a great idea.  It's when we start getting more specific and close to home about our addictions that we start backpeddling, start wondering if our ailments are not so advanced as to require something as extreme as detox and rehab. Maybe just a congregational makeover or facelift would do.

All the Best,

Rishi

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