This time last year this Melbourne boy was just another high-school kid, so how, one year later is he fighting for Islamic State?
He was a gifted maths student from Melbourne’s northern suburbs.
But now, at just 18-years of age he is a fully fledged member of Islamic State photographed brandishing rifles, and quoted as considering “martyrdom missions” with a suicide vest.
But how does it come to this? How does a young Australian boy named Jake end up being flashed around the world media as the “White Jihadi”? It is a question many are scrambling to answer as Fairfax Media expose the young 18-year old’s true identity.
He first came to light last year when several media outlets wrongly identified him as a British teenager and called him “Britain’s White Jihadi”.
But friends from high school recognised him – and he has now been identified as a young man named Jake – his surname has been withheld – who attended Craigieburn Secondary College’s CEAP Excel accelerated learning program- and was a maths genius.
Fairfax Media reports that he dropped out of high school mid-last year after converting to Islam and bought a one-way ticket to Istanbul.
He then travelled to Iraq and Syria. Jake converted to Islam when he was 16 – his family were unhappy about his decision – but is was one that he committed to attending two north suburban Melbourne mosques
A former friend told Fairfax Media Jake had “made his own choice and he believes it’s the right choice.
“He was not pushed into IS [Islamic State] and was not pushed into Islam. People can make their own decisions and this was one of his …he felt that it was right for him … He had done sufficient research to believe it was the right step in life,” the friend said.
“He was obviously a believer in Islam and wanted to fulfill what he believed was his duties to the religion.”
Top Comments
Surely a "one-way ticket" raised concerns at customs? No one thought to ask why the boy didn't have a return ticket booked and ready, since he wouldn't have had a work or study visa entitling him to stay for an extended period of time?
Yet again the wrong question is being asked. It's not a question of how, I can answer how; online meaningful conversation that actually when articulated well can make sense. The need for action which is entrenched in our blood but in particular young disenfranchised youth. Buy ticket and off you go. There's the how question. I implore society to ask, and seek to why. What is exactly being offered that can convince clearly intelligent men and women to follow these actions. Maybe instead of looking at the clearly negative and barbaric side, take a look and dissect the isil side to the situation. Education and knowledge of what we are exactly up against is surely the most empowering thing we can do.