The prison jihad
Religion is at the center of a war behind bars
WashingtonTimes.com
A former Watergate felon has the key to fighting terrorist recruitment in
America's prisons: Bring in more Christians.
The threat is real. Terrorist recruiting is growing at prisons worldwide,
according to a new study titled "Prisons and Terrorism: Radicalization and
De-radicalization in 15 Countries," published by the
International Centre for the Study of Radicalization and Political Violence.
The study notes that prisons have "played an enormous role in the narratives
of every radical and militant movement in the modern period."
The report found that Islamic radical groups such as
al Qaeda are
particularly active in prison recruitment and networking because they "see
it as their duty to propagate their faith and political ideology (dawa)." To
them, a prison "constitutes a potentially fruitful place for conversion and
radicalization," and they "consequently exploit whatever opportunities they
are offered to approach other offenders and turn them into followers of the
group."
Prisons are "places of vulnerability" in which some inmates - usually not
the most hardened criminals but first-time jailbirds and people with shorter
criminal records - can fall prey to terrorist recruiting pitches. Two of the
most important motivators that are "most likely to make inmates susceptible
to new faith and belief systems - including extremist and militant
interpretations of Islam" are the need for physical protection, which can be
offered by any gang, and "the search for meaning and identity," which
radical Muslims seek especially to supply. This psychological, emotional or
spiritual need, "which new prisoners experience in particularly intensive
ways," is the key to transforming a confused criminal into a committed
killer for Allah.
Prison officials are aware of the problem and attempt various ways to
deal with it, from physically separating members of extremist groups,
putting ringleaders in solitary confinement and developing intelligence
networks within the terror networks inside their prisons to keep an eye on
them. Prisons, however, can be used more actively to reverse the tide of
radicalization. The report notes that prisons "can play a positive role in
tackling problems of radicalization and terrorism in society as a whole" and
recommends that "prison services should be more ambitious in promoting
positive influences inside prison, and develop more innovative approaches to
facilitate prisoners' transition back into mainstream society."
Enter the former special counsel to former President Richard M. Nixon,
Chuck Colson,
who spent seven months in prison for obstruction of justice during the
Watergate scandal. After his incarceration,
Mr. Colson
founded
Prison Fellowship, a nonprofit organization seeking "the transformation
of prisoners and their reconciliation to God, family and community through
the power and truth of
Jesus Christ."
To those prisoners seeking psychological, emotional or spiritual stability,
Prison
Fellowship provides a nonviolent, faith-based solution.
The program has been successful in reforming criminals generally.
Prisoners in Texas who took part in the InnerChange Freedom Initiative
sponsored by
Prison
Fellowship had an 8 percent recidivism rate, compared to a 55 percent
rate in the general prisoner population. Minnesota Department of Corrections
Commissioner Joan Fabian said the program is "just the right one when
nothing else worked."
Programs such as this, vigorously applied among prisoner populations most
susceptible to terrorist recruitment, could short-circuit the mechanisms
used by violent extremists and provide prisoners with sound emotional
frameworks for productive citizenship. Critics might charge that using
programs like
Prison
Fellowship as an active part of a counterterrorism strategy approaches
an unconstitutional establishment of religion. But in this case, taking
faith out of the equation is a form of unilateral disarmament against a foe
that uses a religion-based ideology to sanctify violence committed by its
adherents. If the choice is between prisons creating crusaders for
Christ or
Islamic jihadists, we say bring on the crusade.
© Copyright 2010 The Washington Times, LLC.