I'm getting increasingly fed up of hearing how Muslims in the UK don't do enough to combat extremism, how our silence on extremist matters is deafening and even that by doing nothing we are showing our silent support to extremists.
Now the questions i have are;
1- What can we do about the extremists?
Educate the true teachings of Islam, try and stop vulnerable young men asking the wrong people for advice, try and stop the wrong people being put in a position where they can give such advice in the first place.
On a macro-level, we have to be able to discuss things civilly with other Muslims - learning to actually
talk through disagreements, rather than instantly reacting in a hostile manner to a Muslim who disagrees with our own perceived understanding of Islam. So, the more 'militant' Muslims should not call the more 'peaceful' ones hypocrites simply for thinking differently, and vice versa - instead they should actually discuss their differing interpretations in order to find the middle (and probably correct) ground. All in light of scholars' interpretations, with the Quran and Sunnah on the highest rung of the intellectual ladder.
2 - How can we distance ourselves from them?
Well, if the more jittery members of the Islam-hating (sorry,
terrorism hating) proponents of the war on terror are to be believed, terrorists (the 'evil' Muslims) plot in secret, undetectable, and yet their 'good and righteous' counterparts are expected to somehow detect and prevent these people from committing atrocities. Which the 'evil' ones plot in secret. Which means they lie to others. Which means they're not easy to detect. Which means you probably won't find them unless you're actively looking for them. Which means this is the job of secret service types.
3 - Will Joe public ever be happy with any of our efforts?
If the Internet is to be believed, Joe Public views the perceived silence of Muslims regarding terrorism with suspicion, and focuses only on the minority who celebrate such atrocities. You know, the 'Judge the Group by the Vocal Troublemaking Minority Who Nobody Else in the Same Group Agrees With' method.
If we are to regard this approach as accurate, then
according to this thread about a prominent Muslim unequivocally condemning terrorism, in which the sole non-Muslim member replying at the time of writing, expresses dissatisfaction over the most ridiculous of semantic points - then no, Joe Public will never be happy with any of our efforts.
Fortunately, I think that judging an entire group by its vocal minority of troublemakers is idiotic, if predictable human behaviour.
Also, since when has preventing terrorism had anything to do with placating Joe Public? If we want to help stop a problem, we have to do so out of a genuine desire to solve the problem, not to win over the crowd. That's not to say winning over the crowd is not desirable or neccessary, it's just popularity or reputation should not inform a person's decision to help solve the problem of terrorism.
4 - Any other idea on how we can actually change public opinion that the majority of Muslims are normal folk etc etc...
Just live your life as a good Muslim, law-abiding citizen, hard worker, and friendly presence, without getting involved in terrorism.
Which is what 99% of Muslims (and people in general) are doing (or trying to do) anyway.
I don't really believe in 'changing public opinion'. It's too fickle. Other people will think what they think.
If you want to help solve the problem of terrorism, don't make popularity your motivation.