For families of radicalizing U.S. youth,
a help line
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[April 13, 2017]
By Scott Malone
BOSTON (Reuters) - Melvin Bledsoe felt
helpless as he watched his son transform - becoming distant, converting
to Islam and changing his name from Carlos Bledsoe to Abdulhakim Mujahid
Muhammad.
The Baptist father of two wishes there was someone who could have
offered him guidance before the 22-year-old attacked a U.S. Army
recruiting center in Little Rock, Arkansas, killing a soldier and
wounding another in 2009.
"I didn't have any help. I didn't have no one to turn to, no one to lean
on but my other family members," Bledsoe, 61, who runs a tour company in
his native Memphis, Tennessee, recalled in a recent phone interview.
Bledsoe, hoping to give parents in similar situations and fearful of
calling the police more options than he had, founded the nonprofit
Parents for Peace and launched what it bills as the first citizen-run
U.S. telephone help line to counter the ideologies that lead to violent
extremism.
The help line, which quietly began tests of operations in December but
only now is making itself known widely, is aimed at filling a void in
the United States and perhaps avert violence by offering parents and
others a way to better communicate with loved ones flirting with
extremism, according to people who study it.
"It could be a powerful thing. People don't have anywhere to go if they
have a concern about their kids and they don't want to go to law
enforcement," said Heidi Beirich, director of the Intelligence Project
at the Montgomery, Alabama-based Southern Poverty Law Center, which
tracks hate groups.
Another group, called Life After Hate and based in Chicago, offers
assistance to people personally involved in white supremacist
organizations who are looking to break away. And some Muslim leaders
across the country offer counseling to those tempted to turn to
violence.
The Parents for Peace help line - +1-844-49-PEACE (+1-844-487-3223) -
models itself on suicide help lines and other groups addressing such
issues, and is open not only to those dealing with militant Islamist
ideologies but also white supremacist and other radicalizations.
The United States has seen dozens of extremist attacks since the Little
Rock incident, from the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing and the 2016
Orlando nightclub massacre carried out by militant Islamists, to the
2015 mass shooting at a historically black Charleston, South Carolina,
church by a white man who wanted to start a race war.
DIFFERENT BELIEFS, SIMILAR PATHS
Although very different ideologies motivated the attackers, many
followed similar paths to violence, immersing themselves in angry online
communities.
"Former neo-Nazis and former jihadists report similar things," said
Myriam Nadri, a therapist of French-Moroccan heritage with an office in
Boston who is the group's executive director. "They talk about
experiences with humiliation, they talk about extreme rage and anger."
Calls to the help line are answered by two staffers, who work out of a
tiny office in Boston. They begin calls by taking time to hear out
callers' concerns.
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Program coordinator David Phillippi (L) and Executive Director
Myrian Nadri with "Parents For Peace", a support group founded by
parents whose children were involved in extremist violence and which
is starting a telephone helpline for people who fear their loved
ones are being recruited into extremist organizations, speak to
Reuters in Brookline, Massachusetts, U.S., March 23, 2017. Picture
taken March 23, 2017. REUTERS/Brian Snyder
The counselors then advise callers on techniques to persuade their
loved ones to open up about their activities, in order to counter
the secrecy that militant and criminal groups usually urge on their
members.
So far, the line has received just a couple of calls, but Nadri said
she expects the volume to pick up as the group does more to
publicize its existence.
In some cases, callers may be put in contact with Bledsoe or other
members of his group who have lost loved ones to extremism.
Bledsoe's son survived his attack and is serving a life sentence,
while other members of Parents for Peace have seen relatives killed.
Their number includes Carole Mansfield of Burton, Michigan, whose
granddaughter, Nicole, traveled to Syria to join its civil war and
died in the fighting in 2013.
"I'm battling cancer and I just hope and pray that I can live long
enough to help at least one family save their loved one," Mansfield
said in a recent phone interview. "That's the mission that I have in
my life."
The help line makes clear that callers who fear an attack is
imminent should call authorities. The group otherwise has avoided
working directly with law enforcement, and has not sought any
funding from the U.S. government's "countering violent extremism"
program.
That Justice Department program, established during Democratic
President Barack Obama's administration, aimed to address the
factors that drive some to violence by providing grants and other
resources to community groups to develop prevention efforts.
Obama's successor, Republican President Donald Trump, now wants the
program to focus solely on Islamist militancy, rather than also
addressing white supremacist groups. That move has drawn criticism
from Democrats in Congress.
The proposed policy shift makes Parents for Peace's neutrality all
the more important, Bledsoe said.
"It should be about any extremist," he said. "Parents for Peace is
willing to talk to anyone who feels there is a threat."
(Reporting by Scott Malone; Editing by Jonathan Oatis)
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