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Bewilderment, more than anything else, dominates the minds of the families of 21 people from Kerala who have left their homes without any explanation. They don’t understand why their family members have left, where they are, or if they will return.
What is clear however, is that they had become followers of the Salafi thought in the past three years, absorbed in the strict rules it advocated as the tenets of “true Islam”.
Salafis are people who believe that the right way of life was the one led by the early Muslims, those who lived within 400 years of Prophet Mohammed’s death. They believe the lives of people of that time were worth emulating, down to the last detail, hence the focus on religious scriptures.
Sitting in the porch of their home in Padanna, 23-year-old Hafeesudheen’s uncle Salim says that his nephew always spoke about Saudi Arabia, Dubai and their Islamic way of life in a bad light.
Hafeesudheen is among those missing from Kerala. His family says he was never overtly religious, and made occasional visits to the mosque. But it was around 3 years ago that he began speaking of ‘true Islam’. He began going to a Salafi mosque.
While some family members follow the Salafi movement, others like Salim are atheists.
He dropped out of Bachelor of Business Management (BBM) course without explanation to his family and left home on 28 May saying that he was going to Kozhikode to attend Quran classes. On 6 June, he informed the family that he had reached Sri Lanka and would return after a month. The family, who were expecting him a month later, received only a stray message – “As-salamu alaykum”.
The family then contacted the families of the other missing youth, who also confirmed receiving such messages. And they came to the conclusion that all of them had gone together.
Hafeez had tried to convince his wife to follow his way of thinking, but the family says that his wife took the bold decision to disagree. “Probably that’s why he didn’t take her along with him when he went off this time,” the family says.
Hafeez’s father Hakeem was aware of the rapid changes in his son’s attitude.
Less than a hundred meters from Hafeez’s house is a family whose 5 members went missing. Dr Ijaz, his wife Rihaila and 2 year-old child, Ijaz’s brother Shihaz and his wife. Their cousin Ashfaq and his wife have also gone missing.
Shihaz left two months ago without a word. His brother Ijaz and family left a month later, saying that they were going to Hyderabad and then to Laksadweep. The family has not heard from the two brothers since then, apart from stray messages on Telegram app saying that “they had reached where they wanted to reach”.
Ijaz’s family holds Rashid’s influence on the youth to be instrumental in their change in religious inclination. Ijaz used to be a practicing doctor, a good one at that, a family member says.
The families are uncertain how the brothers knew Rashid, but says that it is after knowing him that the brothers started talking about abandoning everything and leading a simple life.
Mujeeb recollects an episode from a couple of months ago, when he had forcefully asked Rashid to leave the house when he came looking for Shihaz. The family says that all of the missing youths would hang around at Rashid’s house in Udumbanthara, only a few kilometres away.
The family remembers Rashid as a quiet man, who never indulged in much conversation with any of the family members. A relative adds that Rashid had come back, leaving his well-paying job abroad, to settle in Thrikaripur a few years ago.
A few kilometers away, in Udumbanthara, Rashid’s parents sit in their living room surrounded by an investigation team. The family narrates everything they know to the team, in the hope that it would help find the missing.
Rashid’s brother, however, says that the police have advised the family against speaking to the media.
For most of Rashid’s friends, his Salafi views and quest for finding purity has come across as a huge surprise.
Many who knew Rashid as a student of the St Joseph’s College in Pala say that he was among the brightest students in the batch, also an active member of IEEE chapter of the college.
Rashid’s wife Ayesha’s (Sonia Sebastian by birth) friend from Christ college says that she came to know that Sonia had converted to Islam only from her posts on Facebook.
Another friend said that Sonia had done most of her school education in Bahrain and her parents are still settled there.
Even as Kerala police and central authorities try to piece together the sequence of events and how people from four or five difference districts in the state have gone missing at the same time, in Kasargod, there is palpable fear.
“It is not like they were all naïve, all of them were highly educated. But we still believe that they must have gone to undertake religious studies or pilgrimage. Why would they go with their wives and children if they had gone to fight? Three of the women were even pregnant,” Mujeeb says.
Mujeeb is echoing the thought of all the families. That those missing have gone in search of Islam, and have not joined terrorist outfits.
(This article has been published in an arrangement with The News Minute.)
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