Uploaded by sabirpiya on Aug 9, 2010
BBC News: Muslim summer camp preaches 'anti-terror' message
It's the summer camp with a difference. No whittling of sticks or food on the open fire.
Warwick University this weekend is the venue for what is billed as the UK's first anti-terrorism camp and the BBC has been along to find out why so many Muslims turned up.
Inside the lecture hall, you could hear a pin drop.
Row upon row of earnest-looking young men and women were scribbling notes into a classily-bound journal handed out with their welcome pack.
'Love is purity'
The 1,300 delegates were listening to Dr Muhammad Tahir ul-Qadri, an Islamic scholar with a gift for rhetorical flourishes and what he describes as a message of love for mankind.
Talking in simple, slowly delivered sentences, the revivalist Pakistani-born cleric takes his audience of predominantly young British and European Muslims through what love means.
Love is purity, he tells them. The Arabic word for love used in the Koran is related to the word for seed. No plant can grow without a seed - and so no pious act can grow without love. If love is the seed of every act of piety, then how can an act of hate like terrorism please God?
The full argument takes him 15 minutes, but he holds the audience's attention.
"Extremists and terrorists are in the minority in the Muslim ummah [brotherhood]. But they have always been vocal", he says.
"The majority have always been against extremism and terrorism, but unfortunately they have always been silent.
"The Islamic solution is integration. Get integrated into British society.
"It's not against your religion. Has the word Pakistan been revealed in the Koran? If you can be Pakistani and Muslim, why can you not be Muslim and British?"
That anti-extremism message is at the heart of Dr Qadri's worldwide movement and its efforts to rapidly expand in the UK.
Earlier this year, he arrived in London to launch a launch a 600-page fatwa, or religious ruling against terrorism.
It is not the first such fatwa but Dr Qadri's followers say it is the first to have "no ifs or buts".
The weekend camp, called "The Guidance", was organised to back up that fatwa and has recruited participants from cities across the country.
Zakia Yusuf, 18, from Manchester, has given up her weekend to come and hear the message.
"I've heard a lot of different things from different people but they don't give me clear guidance about what Islam says. But I think that what the Sheikh [cleric] says is all true.
"Terrorism isn't right - how can it be? But I think that a lot of people are a bit confused about what is right and why.
"It's all there in the Koran, but people don't understand it, which is why I think we need something like this so you can come along and take away the knowledge.
"I'm actually quite scared of what would happen if we don't get this right."
Adam, who is in his 30s and from Birmingham, has experienced first-hand what happens when moderate voices are drowned out.
"I was at university in London when [radical cleric] Abu Hamza was preaching at Finsbury Park Mosque."
"When you listen to people like them, you are alone and away from home and you are seeking answers and comfort.
"They're very passionate in the way they talk. Someone can quote something and convince you."
Adam said it took him some time to work out that the likes of Abu Hamza, who is currently in jail awaiting extradition to the United States, were preaching hatred.
That personal journey is familiar to Muhammad Sadiq Qureshi, an imam from east London.
"The young people I work with ask three questions," he says.
"What's the Islamic definition of terrorism? Should Muslims seek revenge for conflicts around the world, such as Afghanistan or Iraq?
"And they ask about suicide bombers; why these people sacrifice their lives."
But he says that he can only achieve so much.
"I see people who are brainwashed already and they don't listen to the arguments", he said.
"They are hypnotised and believe that extremism is the way to paradise.
"They still turn up and stand outside the mosque handing out their leaflets. I want to know why the prime minister doesn't ban these people."
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