Explaining the factors which lead to deep-rooted
alienation in a person prompting him to take the path of self-destruction,
Dr Khalid Sohail delves into the psychology of a terrorist who turns
suicidal.
Who are the people who get involved in terrorist
attacks? Why would someone kill thousands of innocent people? What kind of
personalities and philosophies do such people have? Since the events of
September 11, 2001, terrorist activities have entered a new realm in
today's world, which demands our immediate review in the light of new
political, economic and religious changes in the world.
Most
people are still shocked to have found that the nineteen people who
destroyed the Twin Towers and part of the Pentagon were middle class,
educated and well-trained men. They had learned to fly airplanes at flight
schools in different parts of the United States. The attack was planned
with such secrecy using such unusual domestic "weapons" that all the
intelligence agencies of the superpower could not have prevented the
tragedy. Those hijackers were not uneducated, desperate and angry
teenagers who tied some bombs to their bodies and entered a shopping mall
to kill a handful of "enemies" as elsewhere. Those who knew these men
perceived them as "normal" and "ordinary" and "average" and would never
have thought them capable of performing such dastardly deeds.
To
understand the psychology of these men, we need to emotionally distance
ourselves and see their actions using a logical, rational and objective
point of view. We need to consider many factors that could have played a
role in the present tragedy, to ponder different pieces that link together
to complete the puzzle. When I think of these "terrorists" and the puzzle
they left behind for us to ponder, the following pieces come to mind.
The first is the psychology of these people who are willing to
take the lives of innocent people voluntarily and without a stab of
conscience. They include serial killers and mass murderers, people who
have developed a personality where, because of past traumatic experiences,
they have become so destructive and revengeful that they willingly kill
strangers, people they have never met. While writing my book about Javed
Iqbal, an accused serial killer of one hundred children in Pakistan, and
researching world literature on the topic, I was shocked to discover that
the highest numbers of serial killers and mass murderers in the last
thirty years were found in the United States.
Elliot Leyton, in
his book, Hunting humans, notes, "America produces proportionately
more of these killers than any other nation on earth." While these serial
killers and mass murderers might have a personal, political and religious
ideology, they are not members of any organized political or religious
party and their activities are not part of any party's agenda like today's
terrorists.
While reviewing the personalities of those serial
killers and mass murderers, it became apparent to me that they belonged to
two separate groups. The first are those men who grew up in very abusive
homes and were violently treated by their families. Such people developed
psychopathic personalities in their early years and were so angry and
bitter at the whole wide world that at some stage of their lives they
decided to take their "revenge" on innocent men and women.
On the
other hand, the second group included those men who were from middle
class, educated families who felt specifically angry with one particular
religious, ethnic or gender group. Their violence was focused on that
segment of society.
The second piece of the puzzle is the
involvement with a political organization. Such a political organization
might have national and/or religious motives. In the last few decades we
have read about a number of groups worldwide who train men for "terrorist"
attacks. Such groups have a very well organized hierarchy and pick very
committed and dedicated teenagers or young adults, almost always males.
Many of these young men are uneducated and poor. Many have been
incarcerated in prisons of the enemy, or their relatives have been killed
or badly hurt during violent confrontations in the past.
These
teenagers and young men face death for their country or cause. Once ready,
they are given a "mission" but in many cases most of the details are kept
secret from the recruit. On a particular day, they are transported to the
desired place and then ordered to perform their role. There is no turning
back. Many become known as "suicide bombers".
The third piece of
the puzzle is the extreme religious belief system that becomes the very
reason for their existence. They not only have a faith in a life after
death but also believe that by killing their enemies, which in their eyes
are "enemies of God", they will go to heaven and be remembered as martyrs,
as shaheeds. In many cases they volunteer their services in the
Holy War but in some cases join a small group of religious extremists to
become a part of their special mission.
It is important to
understand that most religious communities whether Muslims, Jews,
Christians or followers of other world religions, do not believe in
killing innocent men and women. Some might believe in Crusades or Holy
Wars or Jihads. It is important to differentiate between those
soldiers who believe in fighting with the army of their enemies on the
borders of their country to protect the sovereignty of their nation versus
the "terrorists" who do not give a second thought to the moral decadence
of killing innocent people.
The fourth piece of the puzzle is
guerrilla warfare. Many "soldiers" go through rigorous training to face
the most trying circumstances. They have dedicated their lives to the
cause and are ready to die any time. By becoming a part of the guerrilla
organization, they learn to access the artillery and ammunition of the
enemy and then use it against them. In the past they had been part of
ambush attacks, chiefly at night, and stole guns and even tanks from their
enemies. In the modern world they have access to the universities and
training camps of their enemies and learn to use military weapons of every
description.
In the case of the nineteen hijackers, many of these
pieces might fit easily together. Without having access to their
personality profiles and family interviews, as one does in a psychiatric
practice, one can only theorize about their motivations.
"Why do
people resort to terrorist attacks?" is the question that has been
preoccupying many minds in the last few days. My opinion is that when
people feel weak, vulnerable and helpless while confronting a power far
stronger, then they lash out in anger and zeal and resort to terrorist
attacks. A terrorist symbolizes a contradiction, vulnerable yet strong at
the same time. He wants to remain anonymous yet also remembered in the
history of his community as a hero. He wants to die and yet also live
forever. He is the most rational being in planning his attack and yet acts
in the most irrational manner in being destructive to himself and others.
We have to see whether these nineteen men represent a larger group
who think like them and have a similar psychology but who are not willing
to risk their lives by going "all the way". If we do not take them
seriously, we may see the emergence of another group in the next few years
that can plan and execute more terrorist attacks like the September 11
tragedy. The time has come for an international organization such as the
United Nations to discover the whereabouts of these groups to protect
innocent citizens of all countries.
The nineteen hijackers chose
to make a statement. They want all of us to think seriously about the
unresolved political conflicts of the modern world. It is quite possible
that if those issues are not addressed in a fair and just way, the
conflict between the East and the West, Muslim and non-Muslim worlds will
continue. There will be ongoing tension and from time to time, outpourings
of violence from both sides.
I believe that we need to transcend
the psychology of revenge and retaliation and find ways of continually
extending cooperation. We need to break down the walls of anger and
resentment and bitterness through unselfish deeds and build bridges of
understanding and compassion. Humanity is going through an adolescent
turmoil. Like teenagers, we are struggling with our identity. We want to
know who we are and where we belong.
Like troubled teens, we often
get suicidal and homicidal. It is only in adolescence that human beings
begin to develop the capacity to commit successful suicides. So far in the
history of mankind we have not been able to kill the whole species. It is
only in the last century since the development of nuclear weapons that we
have attained the capacity to wipe out the whole of humanity from planet
Earth. We have reached a stage where we can set our direction on the path
of self-destruction and commit collective suicide or accept the challenges
of adulthood and acknowledge that we are all children of Mother Earth and
part of the human family.
Our need to mature is crucial, whereby
we can transform our violent consciousness, whether expressed in national
civil wars, religious holy wars, isolated terrorist attacks or guerrilla
warfare, to peaceful consciousness. Such a transformation can happen with
evolution, not revolution, with education, not preaching, in the social
environment of supportive families and schools with positive role models,
rather than confining men and women to army barracks.
Collectively
we have to realize that when two thirds of the world's people are poor and
uneducated and sick, there cannot be much hope for happy and healthy
communities worldwide. We also must respond to millions of refugees living
in camps around the world, waiting for the promises made by the United
Nations and the wealthy, advanced Western world to be fulfilled. We must
all be shocked at the quarter of a million refugees in camps in Bangladesh
waiting for the last thirty years to find a respectable place to live and
work.
The time has come for everyone to do valuable
soul-searching. Modern terrorists are the tip of the iceberg reflecting
the underlying tensions between different communities and the unresolved
conflicts between different parts of the world. We need to make a
commitment to create communities where people can live peacefully and
equally, irrespective of cultural or religious differences, otherwise we
will continue down the path of holy and civil wars. We must insist that
our leaders choose the right direction of peace, understanding, human
rights and cooperation.
Khalid Sohail is a Pakistani-born
writer and psychiatrist who has written many books and practises in
Toronto (Canada).
Excerpted with permission from Dunyazad: dunya dunya
dahshat hai