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Monday, December 13, 2010
Posted by tmatt
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The topic of this Boston Globe magazine piece could not be more explosive — literally. It’s about suicide bombers and the controversial issue of why they do what they do.

But let’s begin at the very beginning — before the article even gets started.

As working journalists know, reporters very, very rarely have much input into the headlines that go with their stories. Readers, however, rarely seem to realize this and often blame the scribes for this crucial part of the package that contains their words. That’s precisely what I was tempted to do when I read the headline on this report by veteran feature writer Paul Kix.

That headline?

The truth about suicide bombers

Are they religious fanatics? Deluded ideologues? New research suggests something more mundane: They just want to commit suicide.

Now, when you combine that headline with the powerful opening anecdote, the impression is that this is going to be a rather one-sized advocacy piece for those who have gathered this “new research.” The top of the story is quite dramatic. Still, this is just an anecdote.

Qari Sami did something strange the day he killed himself. The university student from Kabul had long since grown a bushy, Taliban-style beard and favored the baggy tunics and trousers of the terrorists he idolized. He had even talked of waging jihad. But on the day in 2005 that he strapped the bomb to his chest and walked into the crowded Kabul Internet cafe, Sami kept walking — between the rows of tables, beyond the crowd, along the back wall, until he was in the bathroom, with the door closed. And that is where, alone, he set off his bomb.

The blast killed a customer and a United Nations worker, and injured five more. But the carnage could have been far worse. Brian Williams, an associate professor of Islamic studies at the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth, was in Afghanistan at the time. One day after the attack, he stood before the cafe’s hollowed-out wreckage and wondered why any suicide bomber would do what Sami had done: deliberately walk away from the target before setting off the explosives. “[Sami] was the one that got me thinking about the state of mind of these guys,” Williams said.

Eventually a fuller portrait emerged. Sami was a young man who kept to himself, a brooder. He was upset by the US forces’ ouster of the Taliban in the months following 9/11 — but mostly Sami was just upset. He took antidepressants daily. One of Sami’s few friends told the media he was “depressed.”

Today Williams thinks that Sami never really cared for martyrdom; more likely, he was suicidal.

This leads straight to the thesis statement that begins by summarizing the traditional interpretation of the actions and motives of suicide bombers. Yes, this does include an oh-so-typical abuse — as defined by Associated Press style — of the word “fundamentalist.” The bombers are said to hate the Western world because its cultural norms “contradict the fundamentalist interpretations that animate the bombers’ worldview.”

Sigh. This has become almost normal these days. So let’s move on. Readers immediately hit the crucial new wrinkle, the one screamed in the headline.

… Williams is among a small cadre of scholars from across the world pushing the rather contentious idea that some suicide bombers may in fact be suicidal. At the forefront is the University of Alabama’s Adam Lankford, who recently published an analysis of suicide terrorism in the journal Aggression and Violent Behavior. Lankford cites Israeli scholars who interviewed would-be Palestinian suicide bombers. These scholars found that 40 percent of the terrorists showed suicidal tendencies; 13 percent had made previous suicide attempts, unrelated to terrorism. Lankford finds Palestinian and Chechen terrorists who are financially insolvent, recently divorced, or in debilitating health in the months prior to their attacks. A 9/11 hijacker, in his final note to his wife, describing how ashamed he is to have never lived up to her expectations. Terrorist recruiters admitting they look for the “sad guys” for martyrdom.

For Lankford and like-minded thinkers, changing the perception of the suicide bomber changes the focus of any mission that roots out terrorism. If the suicide bomber can be viewed as something more than a brainwashed, religiously fervent automaton, anticipating a paradise of virgins in the clouds, then that suicide bomber can be seen as a nuanced person, encouraging a greater curiosity about the terrorist, Lankford thinks. The more the terrorist is understood, the less damage the terrorist can cause.

It’s a fascinating idea and, as the article clearly states, one that remains new and quite controversial. For starters, religious doctrine is involved. Where does “suicide” — forbidden by the Koran — end and the quest for “martyrdom” begin as a believer seeks to give his or her life to earn the “pleasure of Allah”?

In effect, Kix is attempting to cover the very complex debates about why so many Muslims seek martyrdom. The headline suggests that this will be a one-sided article. It isn’t.

I am sure — trust me, I am sure — that many experts on both sides of the debate could find holes in the article. Still, I think that it’s important to note that Kix is covering a debate and it appears that he has found top quality voices of authority on both sides.

A key question quickly emerges: Can Western researchers truly understand the motives of most suicide bombers if what is taking place is essentially a religious rite, an act of faith? And for others, the debate is essentially a question of mathematics.

One study in the academic literature directly refutes Lankford’s claim, and that’s the University of Nottingham’s Ellen Townsend’s “Suicide Terrorists: Are They Suicidal?” published in the journal Suicide and Life Threatening Behavior in 2007. (The answer is a resounding “no.”)

Townsend’s paper was an analysis of empirical research on suicide terrorism — the scholars who’d talked with the people who knew the attackers. In Lankford’s own paper a few years after Townsend’s, he attacked her methodology: relying as she did on the accounts of a martyr’s family members and friends, who, Lankford wrote, “may lie to protect the ‘heroic’ reputations of their loved ones.”

When reached by phone, Townsend had a wry chuckle for Lankford’s “strident” criticism of her work. Yes, in the hierarchy of empirical research, the sort of interviews on which her paper is based have weaknesses: A scholar can’t observe everything, can’t control for all biases. “But that’s still stronger evidence than the anecdotes in Lankford’s paper,” Townsend said.

As Robert Pape of the University of Chicago also notes:

… “(We) have a handful of incidents of what looks like suicide and we have over 2,500 suicide attackers. We have literally hundreds and hundreds of stories where religion is a factor — and revenge, too. … To put his idea forward, [Lankford] would need to have a 100 or more stories or anecdotes to even get in the game.”

He’s working on that. Lankford’s forthcoming study, to be published early next year, is “far more robust” than his first: a list of more than 75 suicide terrorists and why they were likely suicidal.

And so forth. It’s sobering, at times quite depressing, material that is literally haunted by religion and doctrinal debates. The story is real and so is the debate. That’s called “journalism.”

This is one story that deserved a much more nuanced headline.

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9 Responses to “Yearning for suicide, glory or both?”

  1. Jerry says:

    This story reminds me of a common word, an ordinary word, a word that is often little appreciated. But I put that word on a pedestal to be contemplated and appreciated. The word is “some”. That is the key part of that story; that treating everyone who blows themselves up as if they exist only in a certain mold without seeing that such people have complex and differing motivations is a mistake. So I’m glad you brought that story to my attention.

    Well-loved. Like or Dislike: Thumb up 5 Thumb down 0

  2. MichaelV says:

    Thanks to this blog, I’ve known for a couple years now that headlines aren’t usually picked by the same people who write articles. That knowledge has kept me from “blaming the reporter” on several occasions. But I still have a question about it: why?

    Is there a reason for it? Is this a situation that all reporters attack and all editors defend? Or is the reality more nuanced than that?

    Like or Dislike: Thumb up 0 Thumb down 0

  3. Bob Smietana says:

    TMATT— I think this is an Idea’s section story not a magazine piece.

    Like or Dislike: Thumb up 0 Thumb down 0

  4. gfe says:

    MichaelV — The reason reporters traditionally haven’t written headlines is because (in newspapers, anyway) headlines are usually written to fill a certain space (so many columns wide, so many lines deep, with letters a certain size), and it isn’t known until fairly late in the process what that space will be. In fact, if a newspaper has more than one edition, the headlines may be different in each edition.

    By the time the reporter sees the headline, the newspaper has probably already finished its run off the presses.

    As more news moves to online, where headlines don’t have to be written to a specific space, I could see situations where the reporter would write the headline along with the article (subject to later editing). But I’d be surprised if there are many major sites where that is happening now.

    Sometimes reporters cringe when they see the headlines that have been written for their articles. Likewise, copy editors cringe when they come across the story that sloppily enough written that it’s difficult to figure out what is the main point that should go in the headline.

    Like or Dislike: Thumb up 0 Thumb down 0

  5. J.W. Cox says:

    I don’t really see this headline as suggesting that what follows is a one-sided story in favor of the new research; which in any case, I think, misses the point of the story.

    In my limited experience, I usually write a suggested headline, which is sometimes used as-is, or sometimes modified, and on some occasions replaced.

    Headline writing, as Mr. Mattingly knows, is an art; that’s even more true with the advent of online news. Headlines, in my opinion, have to be honest (though what that means in this context is open to debate) but they CAN NOT be nuanced. Usually, they simply can’t condense the entire story’s meaning into a dozen or so words. Otherwise, it’s a just a bumper sticker, and there’s no reason to read the story.

    Headlines give you a reason to read on.

    I think the headline here is un-artful. But at least workmanlike.

    The larger issue is the kind of assumptions that both the researchers and readers bring to the topic of “suicide bombers” and the murkiness around how the alleged “religious motives” actually affect people’s thinking and decisions.

    For example, this sentence: “Yes, in the hierarchy of empirical research, the sort of interviews on which her paper is based have weaknesses: A scholar can’t observe everything, can’t control for all biases.” This is a pretty off-hand acknowledgment by Townsend that the nature of her “research” (supporting the conventional theory that bombers are religiously motivated) apparently has a very high degree of uncertainty.

    Robert Pape’s comment also reveals more than I think either he or the reporter realize: “We have literally hundreds and hundreds of stories where religion is a factor — and revenge, too.”

    But if those stories are based on the kind of research that Townsend does, how can Pape be sure that religion really is a factor for the BOMBER, instead of a motive attributed to the bomber by friends and relatives?

    And his off-hand addition of “and revenge, too” is astounding: is revenge related to religious belief? If so, how? If not, what percentage of bombings are motivated by religion and what percentage by revenge? And why, if revenge is a dish best served cold, do revenge-motivated bombers choose to carry it out by killing themselves in the process? Why not join a militia, or a rocket team, or a become a sniper, or any of a hundred other possibilities that don’t involve suicide?

    The article touches, somewhat confusedly, on the difference between suicide and martyrdom, but doesn’t go deep enough or broad enough.

    Like or Dislike: Thumb up 0 Thumb down 0

  6. Dave says:

    I’m not sure this idea is helpful in anticipating or preventing suicide attacks. It expands the possible number of martyrdom-seekers in any given population: Not only the fervent and the vengeful but the depressed.

    Like or Dislike: Thumb up 0 Thumb down 0

  7. tmatt says:

    DAVE:

    Also, what if one is depressed for religious reasons? Perhaps by the state of the world or by, oh, the state of the Palestinians? Or other woes that are real?

    Like or Dislike: Thumb up 0 Thumb down 0

  8. Bob Smietana says:

    Bad headline but really good story — diving into a complex and controversial topic with balance. The Globe remains one of the best papers around because of stories like this.

    Like or Dislike: Thumb up 1 Thumb down 0

  9. BJ Mora says:

    Traditionally - that is, trying to look at intrapsychic factors at play for a suicidal person - suicidal ideation may be broken down into three wishes: a wish to die, a wish to kill, and a wish to be killed. So what Lankford and others may wish to try to find out is how much these bombers have all three of these characteristics. These are not usually questions one asks people! (Unless one is a mental health clinician of one sort or another, as I am.)

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