How Minnesota Muslims are countering Islamist propaganda
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Abdirizak Mohamed Warsame, 20, is one of ten Minnesota men charged with conspiring to help the Islamic State. Mr. Warsame was arrested Wednesday night and on Thursday was ordered held pending a detention hearing next week.
Court documents allege Warsame tried to help other members of Minnesota鈥檚 Somali community travel to Syria to fight for the Islamic State. Warsame planned to enter Syria by way of Mexico.
Warsame, the expected leader of the group, is charged eight months after his friends. Of the nine men charged with conspiring to help the Islamic State terrorist group, three have pleaded guilty, five are already scheduled to stand trial in May, and authorities confirm the ninth is in Syria.
鈥淭he men have been described as friends in Minnesota鈥檚 Somali community who recruited and inspired each other to join the Islamic State,鈥 the Associated Press reports. 鈥淪ome of them communicated with Islamic State members overseas, some took steps to get fake passports, and some played paintball to prepare for combat.鈥
And while the small town of Eagan, Minn., might be shocked by the recent allegations, Minnesota leads the nation in the number of people who have left, or tried to leave, the country to fight with terrorists aligned with the Islamic State.
In a September report released by the US House Committee on Homeland Security, Minnesota recruits make up 26 percent of the 58 cases reviewed by the task force. California and New York hold second and third place for the most recruits, but even their percentages combined don鈥檛 equal that of Minnesota.
The heaviest concentration of Somalis in the United States , with an estimated population of 25,000.
鈥淭his report is alarming and ,鈥 Sadik Warfa, deputy director of the Global Somali Diaspora in Minneapolis, told the Minneapolis Star Tribune. 鈥淚 worry about the stigma and the prospect of our community being marginalized. But in the end, it鈥檚 up to us as Somali-Americans to really change our image.鈥
But even in the state with the most Islamic State sympathizers, Muslim and non-Muslim communities in Minnesota have taken peaceful action to fight back against extremism.
Mohamed Ahmed, once a typical middle-aged father and gas station manager, is one of many Muslim Minneapolians to do whatever he can to fight extremism in his state. Frustrated by the Islamic State鈥檚 stealthy social media campaigns, Mr. Ahmed decided to make a social media campaign of his own.
Ahmed has used his own money to produce and develop his website, . On his site, Ahmed creates cartoons and videos so average people can share 鈥渓ogical talking points countering falsehood propagated by extremists.鈥
Ahmed says it will take many "Average Mohameds" to beat the Islamic State. 鈥淚t takes an idea to destroy an idea,鈥 Ahmed told USA Today. 鈥. We鈥檒l take all risks to defend democratic values.鈥
And Minnesota businesses unrelated to the Muslim community, such as the Mall of America, have dedicated efforts and financial resources towards 鈥 designed to make Somali young people less vulnerable to the terrorist message,鈥 reports the Minneapolis Star Tribune.
Private companies had already raised $390,000 in September. And part of the contribution will go to Big Brothers Big Sisters of the Greater Twin Cities so more care and attention is focused on the local Somali youth.
This report contains material from the Associated Press.