Why European women are turning to Islam
PARIS
Mary Fallot looks as
unlike a terrorist suspect as one could possibly imagine: a petite and demure
white Frenchwoman chatting with friends on a cell-phone, indistinguishable from
any other young woman in the café where she sits sipping coffee.
And
that is exactly why European antiterrorist authorities have their eyes on
thousands like her across the continent.
Ms. Fallot is a recent
convert to Islam. In the eyes of the police, that makes her potentially
dangerous.
The death of Muriel
Degauque, a Belgian convert who blew herself up in a suicide attack on US
troops in Iraq last month, has drawn fresh attention to the rising number of
Islamic converts in Europe, most of them women.
"The phenomenon
is booming, and it worries us," the head of the French domestic
intelligence agency, Pascal Mailhos, told the Paris-based newspaper Le Monde in
a recent interview. "But we must absolutely avoid lumping everyone
together."
The difficulty,
security experts explain, is that while the police may be alert to possible
threats from young men of Middle Eastern origin, they are more relaxed about
white European women. Terrorists can use converts who "have added
operational benefits in very tight security situations" where they might
not attract attention, says Magnus Ranstorp, a terrorism expert at the Swedish
National Defense College in Stockholm.
Ms. Fallot, who
converted to Islam three years ago after asking herself spiritual questions to
which she found no answers in her childhood Catholicism, says she finds the
suspicion her new religion attracts "wounding." "For me,"
she adds, "Islam is a message of love, of tolerance and peace."
It is a message that
appeals to more and more Europeans as curiosity about Islam has grown since
9/11, say both Muslim and non-Muslim researchers. Although there are no precise
figures, observers who monitor Europe's Muslim population estimate that several
thousand men and women convert each year.
Only a fraction of
converts are attracted to radical strands of Islam, they point out, and even
fewer are drawn into violence. A handful have been convicted of terrorist
offenses, such as Richard Reid, the "shoe bomber" and American John
Walker Lindh, who was captured in Afghanistan.
Admittedly patchy
research suggests that more women than men convert, experts say, but that -
contrary to popular perception - only a minority do so in order to marry Muslim
men.
"That used to be
the most common way, but recently more [women] are coming out of
conviction," says Haifa Jawad, who teaches at Birmingham University in
Britain. Though non-Muslim men must convert in order to marry a Muslim woman,
she points out, the opposite is not true.
Fallot laughs when she
is asked whether her love life had anything to do with her decision. "When
I told my colleagues at work that I had converted, their first reaction was to
ask whether I had a Muslim boyfriend," she recalls. "They couldn't
believe I had done it of my own free will."
In fact, she explains,
she liked the way "Islam demands a closeness to God. Islam is simpler,
more rigorous, and it's easier because it is explicit. I was looking for a
framework; man needs rules and behavior to follow. Christianity did not give me
the same reference points."
Those reasons reflect
many female converts' thinking, say experts who have studied the phenomenon.
"A lot of women are reacting to the moral uncertainties of Western
society," says Dr. Jawad. "They like the sense of belonging and
caring and sharing that Islam offers."
Others are attracted
by "a certain idea of womanhood and manhood that Islam offers,"
suggests Karin van Nieuwkerk, who has studied Dutch women converts. "There
is more space for family and motherhood in Islam, and women are not sex
objects."
At the same time,
argues Sarah Joseph, an English convert who founded "Emel," a Muslim
lifestyle magazine, "the idea that all women converts are looking for a
nice cocooned lifestyle away from the excesses of Western feminism is not
exactly accurate."
Some converts give
their decision a political meaning, says Stefano Allievi, a professor at Padua University
in Italy. "Islam offers a spiritualization of politics, the idea of a
sacred order," he says. "But that is a very masculine way to
understand the world" and rarely appeals to women, he adds.
After making their
decision, some converts take things slowly, adopting Muslim customs bit by bit:
Fallot, for example, does not yet feel ready to wear a head scarf, though she
is wearing longer and looser clothes than she used to.
Others jump right in,
eager for the exoticism of a new religion, and become much more pious than
fellow mosque-goers who were born into Islam. Such converts, taking an
absolutist approach, appear to be the ones most easily led into extremism.
The early stages of a
convert's discovery of Islam "can be quite a sensitive time," says Batool
al-Toma, who runs the "New Muslims" program at the Islamic Foundation
in Leicester, England.
"You are not
confident of your knowledge, you are a newcomer, and you could be prey to a lot
of different people either acting individually or as members of an
organization," Ms. Al-Toma explains. A few converts feel "such a huge
desire to fit in and be accepted that they are ready to do just about
anything," she says.
"New converts
feel they have to prove themselves," adds Dr. Ranstorp. "Those who
seek more extreme ways of proving themselves can become extraordinarily easy
prey to manipulation."
At the same time, says
al-Toma, converts seeking respite in Islam from a troubled past - such as
Degauque, who had reportedly drifted in and out of drugs and jobs before
converting to Islam - might be persuaded that such an "ultimate
action" as a suicide bomb attack offered an opportunity for salvation and
forgiveness.
"The saddest
conclusion" al-Toma draws from Degauque's death in Iraq is that "a
woman who set out on the road to inner peace became a victim of people who set
out to use and abuse her."
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