Reflections on life at “De Witte Wand”…

Making Bombers

There’s an excellent article by Shiv Malik in the current issue of Prospect about the process that turned Mohammad Sidique Khan from a youth worker into the leader of the London bombings of 7/7. A must-read that has the ring of truth about it.
 
The same issue of Prospect also has an article about the anthropologist Mary Douglas, who recently died at the age of 86. The article makes an important point about her research that is highly relevant to Malik’s article:
Douglas’s theoretical apparatus allowed her to think in original ways about almost any topic. In a lecture earlier this year at the Young Foundation, she discussed "enclaves," the small groups which at their most extreme become terrorist cells. Where others emphasise their strengths, she emphasised their weaknesses: how prone they are to splits and sectarianism, and how hard it is for their founders to enforce rules. To survive, enclaves create around themselves what Douglas called a "wall of virtue"—the sense that they alone uphold justice, while all around them are suspect—yet the very thing that bonds them together encourages individuals within them to compete to demonstrate their own virtue and the failings of their peers. The only thing that can override this fragility is fear of the outside world—and so sects, whether political or religious, peaceful or violent, feed off the hostility of outsiders, using it to reinforce their own solidarity. The implication is clear for western governments: in the long term, defeating terrorism depends on ratcheting fear down, not up, dismantling the "walls of virtue" rather than attacking them head on with declarations of war.
Unfortunately, there seems to be little likelihood of governments following this sage advice.  

2 responses to “Making Bombers”

  1. Brian Avatar
    Brian

    I read the quotation with Fred Phelp’s Westboro Baptist Church in mind, and the description chillingly fits. 

  2. Geoff Avatar
    Geoff

    Quite. And at some level I think everyone realises this, but we can’t help but react in the inappropriate way. The same truth, I think, is what makes the "Bigot on a Bridge" joke so funny. We laugh because we recognise that it is so true…

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