Why radical jihadists are cropping up in Minnesota, leaving to join terrorist groups - NY Daily News
“Allah loves those who fight for his cause,” Muhumed posted on his Facebook page earlier this year. The homegrown terrorist bolted Minnesota in 2012.
But authorities say the issue dates back at least seven years in the region. The most notorious cased involved local man Troy Kastigar converting to Islam and joining the terrorist group al-Shabab.
The group was behind the September 2013 attack that killed 67 people inside the Westgate Mall in Nairobi.
U.S.-born Kastigar, killed in 2009 in Mogadishu, was among the first wave of local men who answered the call to join the jihad in Somalia.
Kastigar was the son of a Native American mom, and changed religions about three years before his death.
He even appeared in a posthumous al-Shabab recruitment video extolling the virtues of terrorism. The 40-minute clip featured three men billed as “Minnesota martyrs” for the cause.
“If you guys only knew how much fun we have,” Kastigar said in the Internet come-on. “This is the real Disneyland. You need to come here and join us.”
Kastigar and McCain attended Robbinsdale Cooper High School in New Hope, Minn. They were friends before jihad.
“They both were sort of searching, it seemed like,” Kastigar’s mom, Julianne Boada, told the Daily News from her front steps in Minneapolis. “I think both of them had a really strong desire to be needed and (be) of value.”
Minnesota is home to the largest Somali population in the United States, with about 25,000 residents.
“We are concerned how this radicalization and recruitment is being facilitated,” local FBI spokesman Kyle Loven told the Minneapolis Star-Tribune. “These questions are high priority, and we want to answer them shortly.”
Noor said there are a variety of issues, from poverty to peer pressure.
“Recruitment can happen in many ways,” he said. “This is friends of friends helping each other. That we know for sure.”
NYPD Commissioner Bill Bratton said last week there were more than 100 American jihadists fighting abroad. Some are from the New York area, raising concerns that radicals could bring terror to our doorstep.
“We are watching that very closely,” he said.
Nancy Crotti reported from Minneapolis.
lmcshane@nydailynews.com
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