Mualaf bersaudara dari Perancis meledakkan diri dalam JIHAD di Syria.
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Mualaf bersaudara dari Perancis meledakkan diri dalam JIHAD di Syria.
Jan 8 2014
French brothers convert to Islam, blow themselves up in Syrian jihad
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French brothers convert to Islam, blow themselves up in Syrian jihad
Nicolas Bons was a petty drug dealer who cleaned up his life under the influence of Islam. He began studying the Qur'an and frequenting the local mosque. Then, also under the influence of Islam, he went to Syria and blew himself up, hoping to gain the promise of Paradise given to those who "kill and are killed" for Allah (Qur'an 9:111). When he initially turned his life around, his parents may have thought that Islam was a positive force in their son's life -- and ultimately, that of both their sons. But the story wasn't over at that point.
"Syria jihad takes life of second French brother," by François Ausseill for AFP, January 6 (thanks to Pamela Geller):
Toulouse — Nicolas Bons, a young convert to Islam from a comfortable middle class French background, has died fighting in Syria barely four months after his half-brother met the same fate, their father said Monday.
In a story that has provoked bewilderment, the mother of 30-year-old Nicolas was informed by text message from the frontline that her son had been "martyred" on December 22 in a suicide truck bombing in the Syrian province of Homs, the father, Gerard Bons, told AFP by phone from his home in French Guiana.
Nicolas's half-brother Jean-Daniel had died in fighting at the start of August. He was 22 and had been introduced to radical Islam by Nicolas, who had himself announced his conversion to his parents in 2009.
Nicolas's personal journey mirrors that of many of the increasing number of converts to Islam who have signed up for jihad, or holy war.
Having struggled at school, Nicolas lost his way in his early 20s, developing a cannabis habit and picking up a conviction for petty dealing.
According to his family, all that stopped almost overnight when he found Islam. He soon became a regular visitor to a mosque in his home town of Toulouse and an assiduous reader of the Koran.
When Jean-Daniel, who until then had lived with his father in French Guiana, came to study in Toulouse in 2011, he too soon converted under Nicolas's influence.
In March of last year the pair set off for Syria, having told their parents they were headed to the beach in Thailand.
A month later, they sent a letter revealing their true destination and in July Nicolas appeared, Kalashnikov and Koran in hand, in an Islamist propoganda video in which he calls on French President Francois Hollande to convert to Islam.
Jean-Daniel also features in the video but only looks on expressionless as his brother talks.
The two men's father has admitted he has no idea how Nicolas became radicalised.
Toulouse was home to the radical Islamist Mohammed Merah, who killed seven people in and around the city in 2012. But local clerics have dismissed suggestions it was at the mosque that Nicolas developed his fascination with jihad, suggesting the Internet was a more likely source of his unlikely transformation.
Bons said his former wife Dominique had received a text message on Thursday. It said: "Your son Nicolas carried out a truck bombing at an enemy village in the Homs region. May God accept him as a martyr."
Bons told AFP that he had tried to contact Nicolas several times to wish him well on his birthday on December 23.
"I always had problems getting through," he said. "I told myself, it's the festive season and maybe the call is not getting through because of heavy traffic. But it wasn't that."
"I never thought that he would descend to this level in this religion. It's appalling," he said.
"All these people who condition others to become human bombs are killers."
According to French intelligence sources, about 220 French jihadists -- around a fifth of them converts -- are fighting in Syria. Scores more are believed to be in transit or trying to go there and at least 18 had been killed prior to the death of Nicolas Bons.
Dominique Bons, Nicolas' mother, told France's Liberation newspaper that after receiving the text message, she called the Syrian number on her cellphone and a man speaking French confirmed his death.
"He added that he was in paradise under Allah's protection," she said.
Dominique Bons said that for the nine months that her son fought President Bashar al-Assad's forces, she managed on average to speak to him once a week.
"He seemed to be alright... He spoke of his 'Muslim brothers' who were very good with him, despite the language barrier," she said.
"He said he wanted to go right to the end," she said, adding that Nicolas believed his half-brother, who died on August 11, was in paradise and keeping well.
"He said he was waiting to go to paradise," his mother said.
"Syria jihad takes life of second French brother," by François Ausseill for AFP, January 6 (thanks to Pamela Geller):
Toulouse — Nicolas Bons, a young convert to Islam from a comfortable middle class French background, has died fighting in Syria barely four months after his half-brother met the same fate, their father said Monday.
In a story that has provoked bewilderment, the mother of 30-year-old Nicolas was informed by text message from the frontline that her son had been "martyred" on December 22 in a suicide truck bombing in the Syrian province of Homs, the father, Gerard Bons, told AFP by phone from his home in French Guiana.
Nicolas's half-brother Jean-Daniel had died in fighting at the start of August. He was 22 and had been introduced to radical Islam by Nicolas, who had himself announced his conversion to his parents in 2009.
Nicolas's personal journey mirrors that of many of the increasing number of converts to Islam who have signed up for jihad, or holy war.
Having struggled at school, Nicolas lost his way in his early 20s, developing a cannabis habit and picking up a conviction for petty dealing.
According to his family, all that stopped almost overnight when he found Islam. He soon became a regular visitor to a mosque in his home town of Toulouse and an assiduous reader of the Koran.
When Jean-Daniel, who until then had lived with his father in French Guiana, came to study in Toulouse in 2011, he too soon converted under Nicolas's influence.
In March of last year the pair set off for Syria, having told their parents they were headed to the beach in Thailand.
A month later, they sent a letter revealing their true destination and in July Nicolas appeared, Kalashnikov and Koran in hand, in an Islamist propoganda video in which he calls on French President Francois Hollande to convert to Islam.
Jean-Daniel also features in the video but only looks on expressionless as his brother talks.
The two men's father has admitted he has no idea how Nicolas became radicalised.
Toulouse was home to the radical Islamist Mohammed Merah, who killed seven people in and around the city in 2012. But local clerics have dismissed suggestions it was at the mosque that Nicolas developed his fascination with jihad, suggesting the Internet was a more likely source of his unlikely transformation.
Bons said his former wife Dominique had received a text message on Thursday. It said: "Your son Nicolas carried out a truck bombing at an enemy village in the Homs region. May God accept him as a martyr."
Bons told AFP that he had tried to contact Nicolas several times to wish him well on his birthday on December 23.
"I always had problems getting through," he said. "I told myself, it's the festive season and maybe the call is not getting through because of heavy traffic. But it wasn't that."
"I never thought that he would descend to this level in this religion. It's appalling," he said.
"All these people who condition others to become human bombs are killers."
According to French intelligence sources, about 220 French jihadists -- around a fifth of them converts -- are fighting in Syria. Scores more are believed to be in transit or trying to go there and at least 18 had been killed prior to the death of Nicolas Bons.
Dominique Bons, Nicolas' mother, told France's Liberation newspaper that after receiving the text message, she called the Syrian number on her cellphone and a man speaking French confirmed his death.
"He added that he was in paradise under Allah's protection," she said.
Dominique Bons said that for the nine months that her son fought President Bashar al-Assad's forces, she managed on average to speak to him once a week.
"He seemed to be alright... He spoke of his 'Muslim brothers' who were very good with him, despite the language barrier," she said.
"He said he wanted to go right to the end," she said, adding that Nicolas believed his half-brother, who died on August 11, was in paradise and keeping well.
"He said he was waiting to go to paradise," his mother said.
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