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Muzamil
Jaleel on the mind and motivations
of a jehadi. Photographs by Javeed
Shah
He
could be a died-in-the-wool product of a remote madarsa, somewhere,
bearded, spartan, aloof and intent on his purpose of establishing
the Empire of the Faith. Or he could be a jean-clad graduate
from a Western campus, modern to all intents and appearances,
but equally single-minded in determination as his counterpart
from the madarsa. He may have been part of the West and benefited
from what it has to offer, but he also sees the ‘‘ills and
injustices of its materialism, its determination to foist
on the world an order and ethos it has created’’; he is determined
to fight it. In the final analysis, the jehadi, or the pan-Islamic
warrior, is the same person, whether he comes from an ill-equipped
madarsa or an affluent university, whether he comes from the
poverty of the ‘‘Orient’’ of from the plenty of the west.
He celebrates death in the service of Islam and resolutely
believes that death in the service of the only cause worth
serving is a one-way ticket to heaven. His biggest disagreement
with the modern concept of democracy is that he does not believe
religion is the private affair of a person but rather a complete
way of life which necessarily includes politics. Islam is
his religion and his nation; it transcends geographical boundaries,
ethnicities, colour, creed, race, all manner of other distinctions.
He rejects secularism and any social order other than that
defined by Islam. He rejects the sovereignty of the individual
and believes that Allah alone is the sovereign and His commandments
are the supreme law of man.
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Excerpts from two undated letters
of Nadeem Khateeb to his parents:
‘‘In the name of Allah, the most
beneficent, the merciful Assalam-u-Aleikum, Most dear
Mom and Dad, Inshallah, this will find you in good health
and high spirit, Amin.
‘‘By the merciful Allah’s grace,
I am in very good health and in tremendous spirit, and
why shouldn’t I be, after all Allah has guided me on
the greatest road, the road to Allah’s forgiveness and
the greatest rewards...
‘‘When I read and hear (about) the rewards that Allah
has kept for those who do Jehad in his way and for those
who sacrifice everything for the love of Allah and who
want Islam to be victorious all around, I wish that
I could have done more Jehad. Well, I can’t bring the
time back, but at least I can spend the rest of my life
fighting for the cause of Allah (Inshallah)...’’
‘‘I am going at the call of Allah
and doing what what Allah has made (our) farz. I am aware
this might hurt, but duty to Allah come first and foremost.
Dearest Mom and Dad, it is the
way you raised me, that is why my Iman (faith), Alahamdulilah
(thank God), is
strong.... It is important for all of us to remember
that the life on the earth is nothing but a test and
a sowing ground, and the life to come is the
eternal life and all our
efforts should be for that life...’’
(Full
Story)

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Of
course, the theoretical reason why Islam had asked its followers
to wage jehad was to create an egalitarian social system order
where the poor and the vulnerable would be treated with respect
and dignity. Jehad (struggle) never exclusively meant a holy
war; it could have been a social, political, economic campaign
as well. It was a fight against inequality, social injustice
and discrimination. But today jehad has but one dimension
— Kital, or violent struggle. And it has but one icon: Osama
bin Laden, embattled with the Great West to establish the
domination of his own realm of faith.
According to Karen Armstrong, author of a recent book on the
rise of fundamentalism in religions, the contemporary conceptualisation
of violent jehad was done by Moulana Abul Ala Muwdudi, a Pakistani
scholar and mentor of the Jamat-e-Islami. He was first to
talk of universal jehad which he declared to be one of the
central tenets of Islam. Armstrong says that ‘‘it was an innovation
required in Muwdudi’s eyes, by the current emergency. Jehad
(struggle) was not a holy war to convert the infidel, as westerners
believed, nor was it purely a means of self-defence, as Abdu
(another top Islamic scholar of 20th century) had argued’’.
In fact, Muwdudi defined jehad as a revolutionary struggle
to seize power for the good of all humanity’’.
The very idea of a pan-Islamic jehadi or mujahid is believed
to have born after Muwdudi’s call. ‘‘Like any idealogist,
Muwdudi was not developing an abstruse scholarly theory but
issuing a call to arms,’’ Armstrong writes. Muwdudi saw all
other systems as irredeemably flawed. He believed democracy
led to chaos, greed, and mob rule; capitalism fostered class
warfare and subjected the whole world to a clique of bankers;
communism stifled human initiative and individuality. Jehad,
he said, was the only remedy. ‘‘Never before had jehad figured
so centrally in the official Islamic discourse and the militancy
of Muwdudi’s vision was almost without precedent,’’ Armstrong
says.
But, of course, bin Laden has made it more central than ever
before, sending off new global waves of inspiration to sections
of youth ready to give their all the fight that he has come
to symbolise. So blinded, often, is the commitment of the
jehadi to the cause that those confronted with them are at
a loss for counter-strategies. Says a senior police officer
in Srinagar who has often dealt with jehadis: ‘‘The typical
jehadi is very difficult to break, he is absolutely determined
to have his one-way ticket to heaven and for that he will
do anything. And our tools for tackling them as absolutely
insufficient. Do you know, you can ram all manner of questions
on a typical jehadi during interrogation and he will not yield
anything. Who sent you? Who do you work for? Who motivates
you? What is your mission? You can go on asking and he will
say nothing. And one day, it suddenly struck me that the answer
to all these questions is just one word: Allah. That is what
the jehadi is all about and it is very difficult to counter
that. It is certainly not something that can be won over by
guns or policemen or the army. You need other tools, I wonder
what. It is a battle of the mind he is waging, you have to
fight him in the mind.’’
It is often been said, in the context of Kashmir in particular,
that the fedayeen are sent off on the suicide missions in
a highly drugged or intoxicated state; it is one of the ways
the government dismisses their sense of motivation and, therefore,
the gravity of the problem that the burgeoning jehadi creed
presents. But this is an erroneous, and perilous, way of looking
at the phenomenon. One of the jehadis involved in the recent
Srinagar Assembly bombing is believed to have spent a lot
of his time in occupation of a flank of the building trying
to provide fire-cover so the innocent among those trapped
could escape the carnage. Certainly not something a drugged
man can achieve. They may be intoxicated, but not on drugs
or alcohol; it is their faith they are high on and that is
something that may be very difficult to counter with guns
or security strategies alone.
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They
embrace bloody ends...
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become
idols for the young...
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as
mourning parents approve
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(With
inputs by Sankarshan Thakur)
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