December 18, 2008 Publishing Good News since 1884 Volume 125 Number 44
   
 

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Would-be suicide bomber voices change of heart

 

BAGHDAD (BP)—Ahmed Abdullah al-Shaya, an 18-year-old Saudi, left his homeland last year just after the Islamic holy month of Ramadan with a fire in his heart to eradicate Americans from Arab lands. But his plan for martyrdom backfired, leaving his face and hands horrifically seared and his heart turned toward peace for the Iraqis.

According to a news story posted on USA Today’s Web site, al-Shaya said his goal was “to kill the Americans, policemen, national guards and the American collaborators.”

Inside Iraq, he spent several weeks with like-minded Iraqi militants and others from Syria, Morocco, Jordan, Tunisia, Yemen and Macedonia.

But prior to his designated car bomb mission, al-Shaya’s insurgent collaborators unexpectedly detonated a bomb-rigged butane gas truck he was driving on Dec. 24, stirring him to a change of heart in a videotaped interrogation by Iraqi Interior Ministry officials, according to USA Today reporter Steven Komarow.

“I want the Iraqi people to live in peace,” he said. And he no longer supports Osama bin Laden because “he is killing Muslims.”

As for those who deceived and disfigured him, al-Shaya said, “I want revenge for what they have done to me.”

The Dec. 24 blast killed nine people, including a family whose house fell in and crushed them. Shaya was ejected from the truck by the explosion, but not before severely burning him.

Evangelist and author Anis Shorrosh, in comments to Baptist Press, said that understanding the mind of a would-be martyr such as al-Shaya comes from understanding the Koran. Nearly 100 verses urge Muslims to “promote and protect Islam” by such means, he said. One such verse in the Koran states: “Whoso fighteth in the way of Allah, be he slain or be he victorious, on him We [Allah] shall bestow a vast reward.”

Shorrosh, of Fairhope, Ala., said not all Muslims embrace this teaching, with many of them citing such teachings as, “There is no compulsion in religion,” from the Koran. “To them this is a tolerant view of other religions and of Muslim’s attitude toward one’s choice of his own religion,” Shorrosh said.

Despite such moderation among some Muslims, jihadism marches on, Shorrosh said, and Muslim extremists see the United States as the “Great Satan.”

Yet, Shorrosh noted, “The entire world has become galvanized against the unnecessary bloodshed by Muslim fanatics and militants throughout the globe. The tide is turning against such horrible activities because the march toward democracy is unstoppable and people are crying out, ‘We are for peace, not war, for forgiveness, not vengeance.’”