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				| Terrorism and Religious 
        Extremism:
 A Mindful Approach
 
 Steven Barrie-Anthony
 
 What are the psychological factors that 
        are responsible for terrorism?  What social conditions cause them 
        to develop?  And what can we, as individuals, do to influence them?  
        The World-Trade Center disaster has provoked an intense U.S. led 
        offensive against terrorism.  Most
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				| people seem to think that this kind of war is something 
        new.  It's not. 
				 Many other tragic conflicts in recent 
        times fit the same model: 
 � Genocides that occurred in Kosovo and Bosnia
 
				
				   
         � Attempted extermination of the Kulak peasant class in Russia 
				
 � Actions of the Khmer Rouge in Cambodia
 
 � Attempted extermination of the Intelligentsia in Communist 
         China
 
 � Hutus vs. the Tutsies in the Congo
 
 � Turk�s genocidal massacre of the Armenians
 
 � Holocaust of European Jews at the hands of the Nazi's
 
 � Similar conflicts within 
         our own democratic borders (as will later
 be explained)
 
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				|  |  | While on the surface, 
        these may seem like completely unrelated events, they all 
        embody a similar core philosophy.  These conflicts are each 
        characterized by having one group which sees itself as being tragically 
        oppressed, and seeks freedom or prosperity through the annihilation of 
        an 'evil' group of oppressors.  Sound familiar? It should.  
        The comparison between the scenarios mentioned above and the situation 
        that prompted the September 11th attacks is obvious.  America is 
        the perceived oppressor at which Bin Laden directs all of his rage. 
 Some people seem to think that we can 
        obliterate terrorism simply by wiping Al Qaeda and its 'evil leader' off 
        the face of the earth.  Such a belief, however, is far from 
        true.  Even if we kill every single
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				| terrorist who lives on this earth today, the 
        future would still remain uncertain. We do need military action, but we 
        need to supplement it with psychological tactics.  We must know why 
        these situations occur, and act accordingly. 
 The good news is that we
				have a basic understanding of how 
        such conflicts emerge, and solid ideas as to how their development can 
        be interrupted.  Central to the creation of people like Bin Laden 
        is a concept called totalism.  For our purposes, totalism can be 
        thought of as an exaggerated form of something that exists within each 
        one of us: the tendency to see ourselves as wholly good and 'the enemy' 
        as wholly bad.
 
 To contact Steven Barrie-Anthony, 
        e-mail him at: [email protected]
 PRINTABLE  PAGE
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