Monday, November 06, 2006

Sufi Teacher witness transformation from clean-cut to radicalized young man


Staff Report - CBC News - Canada
Thursday, June 8, 2006

A Muslim religious leader in Toronto who knows some of those charged in the suspected bomb plot says the young men underwent rapid transformations from normal Canadian teenagers to radicalized introverts.

Sayyid Ahmed Amiruddin is a teacher of Sufism, a traditional brand of Islam that rejects the ideology of jihad. Amiruddin got to know Saad Khalid, 19, and some of the other alleged conspirators at a local mosque.

Khalid was arrested last Friday at a warehouse, where he and another suspect allegedly took delivery of what they thought was ammonium nitrate, a fertilizer, and the same substance used in the deadly Oklahoma City bombing in 1995.
Fifteen others are also facing charges.

Amiruddin says the group was seduced by hardline propaganda financed by the Saudi government and promoting a strict, Wahhabi brand of Islam.
He says the Saudis have flooded Canada with free Qur'ans, laced with jihadist commentary.
"In the back of these Qur'ans that are being published in Saudi Arabia, you have basically essays on the need for offensive jihad and the legitimacy of offensive jihad and things like that. Very alarming stuff," he said.

Amiruddin said many mainstream Muslim organizations in Canada are really part of the problem, standing by as extremist propaganda spreads in the mosques. He says Khalid underwent a rapid transition from a clean-cut Canadian teenager to a long-haired, radicalized introvert.

Amiruddin says Khalid stopped coming to the mosque after he befriended 43-year-old Qayyum Abdul Jamal, another key suspect, who once preached that Canadian forces were in Afghanistan to rape Muslim women.

Amiruddin also has a theory as to why Khalid may have been open to such influences.

"His mother passed away and let's say within the first month of his mom passing away, his girlfriend, who was not Muslim, dumped him. And then from that within a year you have this radical turnaround right? Maybe he was just looking for love? I can't say for certain, but this was something I found common with these young guys."

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

He is not a Sufi teacher and did not know the young men who were accused at all. He is a big liar using Sufism as a way to make his lies acceptable. What a complete joke.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1cLyUpcYdKc

Anonymous said...

Actually, he is a Sufi teacher. His websites are www.alsunnahfoundation.org and www.khwajagan.org
He has the deputyship in the Naqshbandi Order under Shaykh Nazim Adil al Haqqani
http://ca.youtube.com/watch?v=BHgMpQIP-ww&feature=related
and is a Shaykh of the Qadiri Sufi Order of his maternal ancestors tracing him back to Ghawth al Adham Shaykh Abd al Qadir al Jilani 26 generations
http://ca.youtube.com/watch?v=gMciJ3AZvao&feature=related

Monday, November 06, 2006

Sufi Teacher witness transformation from clean-cut to radicalized young man

Staff Report - CBC News - Canada
Thursday, June 8, 2006

A Muslim religious leader in Toronto who knows some of those charged in the suspected bomb plot says the young men underwent rapid transformations from normal Canadian teenagers to radicalized introverts.

Sayyid Ahmed Amiruddin is a teacher of Sufism, a traditional brand of Islam that rejects the ideology of jihad. Amiruddin got to know Saad Khalid, 19, and some of the other alleged conspirators at a local mosque.

Khalid was arrested last Friday at a warehouse, where he and another suspect allegedly took delivery of what they thought was ammonium nitrate, a fertilizer, and the same substance used in the deadly Oklahoma City bombing in 1995.
Fifteen others are also facing charges.

Amiruddin says the group was seduced by hardline propaganda financed by the Saudi government and promoting a strict, Wahhabi brand of Islam.
He says the Saudis have flooded Canada with free Qur'ans, laced with jihadist commentary.
"In the back of these Qur'ans that are being published in Saudi Arabia, you have basically essays on the need for offensive jihad and the legitimacy of offensive jihad and things like that. Very alarming stuff," he said.

Amiruddin said many mainstream Muslim organizations in Canada are really part of the problem, standing by as extremist propaganda spreads in the mosques. He says Khalid underwent a rapid transition from a clean-cut Canadian teenager to a long-haired, radicalized introvert.

Amiruddin says Khalid stopped coming to the mosque after he befriended 43-year-old Qayyum Abdul Jamal, another key suspect, who once preached that Canadian forces were in Afghanistan to rape Muslim women.

Amiruddin also has a theory as to why Khalid may have been open to such influences.

"His mother passed away and let's say within the first month of his mom passing away, his girlfriend, who was not Muslim, dumped him. And then from that within a year you have this radical turnaround right? Maybe he was just looking for love? I can't say for certain, but this was something I found common with these young guys."

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

He is not a Sufi teacher and did not know the young men who were accused at all. He is a big liar using Sufism as a way to make his lies acceptable. What a complete joke.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1cLyUpcYdKc

Anonymous said...

Actually, he is a Sufi teacher. His websites are www.alsunnahfoundation.org and www.khwajagan.org
He has the deputyship in the Naqshbandi Order under Shaykh Nazim Adil al Haqqani
http://ca.youtube.com/watch?v=BHgMpQIP-ww&feature=related
and is a Shaykh of the Qadiri Sufi Order of his maternal ancestors tracing him back to Ghawth al Adham Shaykh Abd al Qadir al Jilani 26 generations
http://ca.youtube.com/watch?v=gMciJ3AZvao&feature=related