Paris attack: Motives of extremism and hatred
The murder of a French teacher has sparked a lot of
international condemnation surrounding the attack and its motives and
consequences, as it succeeded a series of recent terrorist attacks in the
country, raising questions about the reasons and motives that brought Paris
back to the top of the list of terrorist targets in Europe.
In addition, the attack has affected the intellectual trends
currently raised in France about terms launched by its politicians linking
violence to Islam, which is considered wrong by Muslims, especially by Grand
Imam of Al-Azhar Sheikh Ahmed al-Tayeb. Also, an immigrant of Chechen origin
having been responsible for carrying out the attack may complicate the paths for
migrating to Europe, where societies have been ravaged by violence under the
weight of economic, humanitarian and political destitution.
Heinous decapitation
An 18-year-old man of Chechen origin carried out the violent
attack against a French teacher near Paris on October 16, cutting off the
latter’s head for showing caricatures of the Holy Prophet Muhammad (may God
bless him and grant him peace) to his students at the school, which angered
parents. News of the incident spread throughout the region, so the young man of
Chechen origin decided to kill the teacher in a terrorist operation.
The attack also comes just shortly after a stabbing attack
in Paris on September 25, when an extremist stabbed two people near the old
headquarters of the Charlie Hebdo magazine after al-Qaeda threatened to target
the newspaper's employees again for re-publishing the cartoons of the Prophet
Muhammad (pbuh) that were first published in 2015, after which terrorists carried
out an armed attack against the magazine, killing 12 people.
The Paris stabbing is similar to the recent beheading in
terms of the exploited motives, despite Muslim religious figures condemning the
incident. Extremist groups continue to exploit acts of hate and abuse in order to
justify the killings, despite the denunciation of these facts by Muslim scholars.
Al-Azhar statement
Al-Azhar released an official statement on its Facebook page
condemning the terrorist attack, stressing that murders cannot be justified
under any reason.
Al-Azhar called for respecting all religious sanctities and
keeping away from hate speech because it that provokes violence between
different groups. The Islamic institution called for the need to implement
international legislation criminalizing the act of insulting religions and religious
symbols.
In the same context, Sheikh Ahmed al-Tayeb stressed on
October 18 that Islam does not call for violence. Stigmatizing the religion as
terrorist constitutes ignorance of the teachings of the true religion, he
noted, adding that linking religion with extremism is a clear call to incite
hatred and sectarianism.
According to the responses of Al-Azhar and its Grand Imam, which
are the most influential Muslim references in the Islamic world, there is a
categorical rejection and denunciation of terrorist operations carried out by
some lone wolves who undermine the reputation of religion. Therefore, extremism
remains linked to causes far from religion, according to Al-Azhar scholars.
Timing and ideology
Recent facts raise questions about what the motives are that
linked the current timing of the escalating intellectual discourse among French
politicians who described terrorism as “Islamic” in disregarding the well-known
term “Islamism”, which specifically uses religion to justify violent acts for
political goals.
It is possible, however, that extremist groups are seeking
to shed more light on their presence in the media to compensate for their
losses, including ISIS and al-Qaeda. In a previous statement to the Reference,
Brigadier General Khaled Okasha, director of the Egyptian Center for Thought
and Strategic Studies, said that Paris enjoys great media coverage, which
extremist groups want to exploit.
This does not negate the hypothesis of a radical escalation
on French soil, especially with the parallels of offensive operations, as well
as the recently discovered networks that manage major cryptocurrency funds for terrorist
elements in Syria. This is also fueling the Islamist and far-right conflict in
the West, taking advantage of incidents of mutual hatred that may hinder
peaceful coexistence for refugees.



