‘Boko Haram is 100% a Muslim problem,’ says Nigerian Sheikh
He says Boko Haram ‘came from among us’ and must be ‘tackled by us’
By Dan Wooding, Founder of ASSIST News Service, who was born in Nigeria
“We
[Muslims] have to understand that these people [Boko Haram] are from
among us and that the society was not doing enough to bring these
elements out,” Sheikh Ahmad Gumi told The Interview magazine. “We have
to reflect and see if we want to truly combat Boko Haram. I can tell you
that Boko Haram is 100 per cent a Muslim problem … It is we Muslims
that have the responsibility to tackle it more than anybody else.”
According
to Hassan John, a Nigerian journalist writing for World Watch Monitor,
Gumi is an influential figure in Nigeria, particularly with the Muslim
youths of the Izala sect in the north of the country. His father, the
late Abubakar Gumi, was a highly controversial cleric, who is attributed
to have influenced the radical, Wahhabi theology of Boko Haram and
other radical groups.
Abubakar
Gumi was once the Grand Khadi of the Northern Region of Nigeria, and
head of Sultan Bello Central Mosque in Kaduna. He attacked the mysticism
attached to Sufi Islam and publically squabbled with the Sultan of
Sokoto, the most influential figure for Nigeria’s Fulani and Hausa
peoples. He paved the way for the founding of the Izala sect in Jos,
Plateau State, in 1978. Izala has since grown in influence and number in
most parts of northern Nigeria and spread to countries like Niger, Chad
and Cameroon, where Boko Haram also operates.
“Following
in his father’s footsteps, the younger Gumi has delved into
controversy, but unlike his father, he also promotes peaceful
co-existence in a country torn by deep ethnic and religious divides,
which have led to the killing of thousands of Christians.”
He
has taken to social media to propagate his ideas. In a 2012 Facebook
post, he wrote: “We Muslims collectively are more POWERFUL than any
group in the nation, yet … we forfeited this power. POWER protects
wealth, lives, culture, religion and family. When you give power to the
wrong person you lose all. This can explain our poverty, terrorism,
moral degradation and family disunion.”
For
Sheikh Gumi to declare that Boko Haram is “100 per cent a Muslim
problem” could indicate that Muslims in Nigeria are fed up with the
terrorist group. It could even prove a major turning point in the fight
against them, although it may also make him a target.
“Boko
Haram is a segment of the northern population, and cooperation was
protecting them,” he said. Though he did not name which “cooperating”
organization he was referring to, he is not the first to suggest that
Muslim groups in the north – and even some politicians – have been
secretly supporting Boko Haram.
Gumi
also said that corruption has hampered the military campaign against
Boko Haram. However, he suggested the man behind the arms scandal, the
former national security adviser to former President Goodluck Jonathan,
Sambo Dasuki, should not be prosecuted.

The
challenge Ahmad Gumi has thrown down to the Muslim community in Nigeria
is commendable because Boko Haram still has sympathizers within large
sections of the Muslim population in the north. The fact of the matter
is that, unless the Muslim community sees radical Islam as its own
fight, and works hard to reform Islam, any assistance from non-Muslims
will be considered suspicious and therefore rejected.
But
more important is the fact that, unless Muslims all over the world
become proactive in the fight against terrorism, there will always be a
suspicion they are collaborating with terrorists.
To
say that Islam is a peaceful religion and that terrorists are not
Muslims is not enough, because terrorist groups use the Qur’an and
Hadith in defense of their ideologies. Not many people know the
difference – even Muslims.
“All lizards crawl on their belly. How do we know which suffers bellyache?” an African proverb says.
Hassan
John concluded by saying, “People want terrorism to stop. But like
another African proverb says, ‘He who wants to swim must be prepared to
get wet.
“To fight Islamophobia and unify Nigeria, Muslims must engage radically with radical Muslims.”
For more information, please go to: https://www.worldwatchmonitor.org
Sheikh
Ahmad Gumi. (Facebook / Dr. Ahmad Abubakar Mahmud Gumi). 2) Leader of
Boko Haram. 3) Boko Haram victims. 4) Dan Wooding with his mother, Anne
Wooding, just after he was born at Vom Christian Hospital in Northern
Nigeria.
** You may republish this and any of our ANS stories with attribution to the ASSIST News Service (www.assistnews.net).
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