“IS Drew This Dream Picture—Like Floating on a Pink Cloud”: Danish Returnees’ Entry into and Exit from Salafi-Jihadism through Nurtured and Fractured Fantasies
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Review of Existing Literature Dealing with Salafi-Jihadist Pathways
3. Methodology: Gaining Access to a Clandestine Milieu
4. Limitations and Opportunities When Interviewing Firsthand Sources
5. Analysis
5.1. Entering Salafi-Jihadist Milieus
The police officer tells me ’some of your classmates believe you have extremist tendencies and that you plan to blow up the school.’ And at that point I was like flabbergasted (…) And he asks me ‘are you Sunni, are you Shia? (…) I assume you have fulfilled the five pillars of Islam? Do you have thoughts about fulfilling anything with it?’ (…) So he just keeps on about this religious identity and background and it really provokes me extremely much.(Yusuf)
I had a feeling of not belonging to Denmark. That Danes do not want any good for Muslims. You do not feel that you are worth anything. You cannot be in your own body any longer. You are suffocated.(Shiela)
[c]aught hold of: (…) ‘the rhetoric concerning immigrants, where you feel that you are discriminated against’—those feelings he reinforced. He said: ‘this anger is not worth it, it is a waiting room to death.’(Shiela)
‘[t]hat’s what happens when we think this is our society. We get hurt. But brother, there are some who feel the same way as you do. They also have stories they can tell you.’ And I thought: ‘why not?’ at least if there is someone then we can share and then we can have a social community. And at that point I did not have any community, I mean, I was pushed out of the Danish.(Yusuf)
You enter a circle of friends, where the only thing you talk about is [the videos]. This is literally the only thing we talk about for three hours. Five times a week (…) you talk about it and then you talk about it again. And then you start talking about the fact that you want to travel. And then you just travel.(Rami)
Through their videos, IS drew this dream-picture of the caliphate—like floating on a pink cloud.(Shiela)
5.2. Exiting Salafi-Jihadist Milieus
He said: ‘you want to go to [Muslim country]—that makes no sense. Because Islam is not about the collective, it is about individuality (…) Your work is individual and you have to work with yourself.’ And I thought: ‘what the hell, do you challenge me on my home ground?’ (…) His holistic view was different from what I was used to. I was used to ‘do this, do that.’ But I was also characterized by the group I was part of, where it was much about them and us, much black-and-white, but he [the social worker] was more like, it is about me and my religion and how I feel about it.(Yusuf)
One day my mother called me. And she just talked normally and quietly to me about this fact that ‘you can provide help even though you live in Denmark. You can take an education. You can initiate fund-raising campaigns. And you can do many things—you are a young boy. You have a family’ and that was like the turning point for me (…) I was at the wrong place (…) She tried to understand me. Why was it? No one had asked me these questions; why did you do it? What was the reason? And it was like the fact that my mother tried to understand me. That motivated me.(Rami)
Thought about themselves. You could not trust anyone. It was always about feathering one’s own nest first. You look for a social community, which you actually never get.(Shiela)
I thought I would forget [that she missed her family] if I had a child (…) I became pregnant, because I did not believe that I would get back to Denmark—and when I stopped believing it.(Shiela)
5.3. Resocialization into Conventional Society
It was like the people I went to school with had painted some kind of a picture of me being a walking issue. The principal was after me all the time. I sensed that. And I could sense it from my local community—for example, I used to visit the mosques and there people started to distance themselves from me. I could sense that when my friends’ parents called them and I was with them, they would never—no one would say my name (…) It was like ‘this person is dangerous to hang out with.’(Rami)
I start telling [him my story] and he does not interrupt me or anything and I really appreciate that. When I was allowed to say something in the beginning, my tone of voice was pretty high because I wanted to be heard, but he is so calm, so my tone of voice automatically drops down and I get to tell it all (…) I felt that he gave me something in terms of trusting the system again.(Yusuf)
Now I am member of an association that helps young people. And I can see that the elderly people, with whom I speak today, they greet me very well. So I can feel…that people do not see me as they used to see me before.(Rami)
6. Concluding Discussion
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | In October 2021, three Danish women (and 14 children) were repatriated to Denmark—these numbers are not included in the latest officially estimated number of returnees, which was in March 2021 (National Board of Social Services 2021) [3].
|
2 | |
3 | Salafi-jihadist milieus are here broadly defined as the social networks and communities (e.g., the brotherhoods and sisterhoods) that support Salafi-jihadism, the violent defense of Islam (Wiktorowicz 2006) [87], either cognitively or behaviorally. The milieus are based in Western societies or in conservative Muslim countries. In Denmark, the milieus are typically found in the areas around the larger cities, such as Copenhagen, Aarhus, and Aalborg (Danish Security and Intelligence Service 2021) [88]. |
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Jørgensen, K.E. “IS Drew This Dream Picture—Like Floating on a Pink Cloud”: Danish Returnees’ Entry into and Exit from Salafi-Jihadism through Nurtured and Fractured Fantasies. Societies 2022, 12, 104. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc12040104
Jørgensen KE. “IS Drew This Dream Picture—Like Floating on a Pink Cloud”: Danish Returnees’ Entry into and Exit from Salafi-Jihadism through Nurtured and Fractured Fantasies. Societies. 2022; 12(4):104. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc12040104
Chicago/Turabian StyleJørgensen, Kathrine Elmose. 2022. "“IS Drew This Dream Picture—Like Floating on a Pink Cloud”: Danish Returnees’ Entry into and Exit from Salafi-Jihadism through Nurtured and Fractured Fantasies" Societies 12, no. 4: 104. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc12040104
APA StyleJørgensen, K. E. (2022). “IS Drew This Dream Picture—Like Floating on a Pink Cloud”: Danish Returnees’ Entry into and Exit from Salafi-Jihadism through Nurtured and Fractured Fantasies. Societies, 12(4), 104. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc12040104