The BBC talked with one young British woman who was recently contacted by ISIS recruiters. She preferred not to use her name, but she did talk about what first got her interested in groups others might view as radical.
“Why are they going?” she asked herself. “I guess that sparked a sort of curiosity.”
“It wasn’t really as cliché as people think it was. It wasn’t a sort of ‘Hey, come join us!"” she notes. “It was more of a, “Hey sister, how are you doin’?’ … It’s like a conversation with a friend. It’s like a normal thing.”
“If I have three kids and a husband, am I really going to be able to continue living my passion?” she asked herself. “The thing about this [soccer] team is everyone’s a family, everyone’s together. You have somewhere where you are accepted, where everyone does love you. Once you have a place to go like this this, you won’t even be brought to think about that kind of thing.”
“There are a lot more parents that have come open to one another, working together, supporting each other,” she says. “Whereas in North America, very much there’s still a stigma, everybody’s holding back. They’re afraid to speak out, they’re afraid to reach out for help.”
“They unfortunately look at our children as monsters, and they’re not. They’re normal, everyday kids that get caught up in something, make mistakes and don’t realize the choices they’re making,” she says. “They’re not all evil like what we see in the media. They’re kids having emotional struggles.”
“Parents shouldn’t try to do this on their own,” she says. “They’re too emotionally connected to their children. And they can end up pushing their youth further away.”
Our children are not monsters- argues mom of ISIS fighter
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