Foreign Policy Blogs

The Economist on Muslim Students in the West

The Economist had an interesting article last week on Muslim students studying in the West – “the West” being the UK, US and Canada for this article.   The piece is written in the wake of the attempted bombing of a US airliner on Christmas Day by a Nigerian man who had, until recently, attended university in London.   The would-be bomber, Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, had served as president of the Islamic Society at University College London.  That fact is the jumping off point for the rest of the article as it seeks to take a reading on the experience that Muslim students have while studying in Western universities.

At almost every British university, there is an [Islamic Society] to which practising Muslim students, seeking soulmates, soon gravitate. The societies’ roles include organising prayer rooms and Friday sermons, and securing halal food. Since it was created in 1962, the leadership of FOSIS (Federation of Student Islamic Societies) has often had some ideological overlap with the Egyptian-based Muslim Brotherhood and Jamaat e-Islami, the Pakistani Islamist party. That does not imply sympathy for al-Qaeda’s campaign of global terror, but it does imply adherence to a version of political Islam.

I am surprised that the article does not cite the work of Marc Sageman, psychiatrist and former CIA officer,  whose analysis of terror networks takes a hard look at Muslim (often students) in the West and the dynamics that might explain a turn toward extremism.   Sageman claims that poverty, mental illness, criminal records or brainwashing have little to do with their attraction to a extremism.  Instead, as New Yorker reporter Raffi Khatchadourian notes, Sageman sees a different psychological profile as key:

Perhaps his most unexpected conclusion was that ideology and political grievances played a minimal role during the initial stages of enlistment. “The only significant finding was that the future terrorists felt isolated, lonely, and emotionally alienated,” Sageman told the September 11th Commission in 2003, during a debriefing about his research. These lost men would congregate at mosques and find others like them. Eventually, they would move into apartments near their mosques and build friendships around their faith and its obligations. He has called his model the “halal theory of terrorism”—since bonds were often formed while sharing halal meals—or the “bunch of guys” theory. The bunch of guys constituted a closed society that provided a sense of meaning that did not exist in the larger world.

The Economist article seems to be drawing heavily on the “bunch of guys” theory without citing it specifically.  This is a theory that has been hotly debated in counter-terrorism circles (for example, see Bruce Hoffman’s rebuttal to Sageman here).  But how important – and useful – is it to university officials who are overseeing the experiences of students at their universities, Muslims and others?  Probably not so much unless one is to cherry pick a few notorious cases like Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab.  But we should reflect on the experiences of Muslim students on our campuses and seek to avoid cases in which students become isolated and cut off from the positive aspects of a university education and experience.

A few thoughts come to mind:

US universities – and others – devote considerable resources to supporting international students and there are people who work night and day doing so.  We have to continue to craft academic and campus life programs that offer as much support as possible.  I have written previously about my concern when American students study abroad and live, study and travel only with other Americans.  It is is a limiting experience and offers little of the value that an international experience can and should offer – i.e., interacting and developing relationships with people from other countries.  The same is true for international students studying in the US (or Canada, Europe, Australia, or others).  It is not a good idea to foster programs that encourage students to hunker down with only other students from their home country, religion, etc. For the reasons I mention above, a certain amount of that will happen with any students, but without programs that seek to have students live and study with a true mix of students then a great opportunity is lost and, in some cases, a few might turn to a “bunch of guys.”

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