International Journal on Criminology Volume 4, Number 2, Winter 2016 | Page 61

Know What You Are Fighting systems appear, demonstrating to people that life has no meaning. In reality, Durkheim states, these systems “merely symbolize in abstract language and systematic form the physiological distress of the body social.” Under these circumstances, suicide is a position taken in relation to the group and to society. It denounces the disorganization connected to individual suffering and collective distress, as already seen. The candidate feels psychologically surrounded: he or she is told that salvation of the soul will only come from the unavoidable explosion which will serve the good cause. An indoctrination equivalent to deifying the diabolical, by beatification of suffering. Success in a suicide operation is a threefold accomplishment for the group because at the same time • it impresses its own “soldiers;” • it leaves a mark on public opinion; • while at the same time loosening the psychological encirclement that it suffers. Using a human bomb to loosen the vice that paralyzes the group, both psychologically and spatially, is a feat of the psychology of terror carried out by sponsors who are experts in manipulation. Here the word vice refers both to the real situation of the group and the psychological state of the candidate for suicide. Loosening the vice is the first goal of the group to escape pressure, encirclement, and destruction. Psychology of the Candidate for Suicide A candidate for suicide can be identified by a visible fascination with the preachers of terror. He or she is then indoctrinated using a hodge-podge of verbiage that nevertheless seems homogeneous since the subject is there the whole time as one chosen by heaven for a divine mission. A mass forms around the feeling of injustice that he or she feels, one with ingredients that combine and are orchestrated to transform the subject into a human bomb. But what is meant here by “mass” and “ingredients”? The “mass” is all of the material and psychological elements accumulated by the subject into his or her mind, throughout life, up to the decision to join the group—an act that is not a break with his or her former life but an extension of it. A variety of discourses and practices (the “ingredients”) place the subject, unknowingly, at the mercy of the sponsors. In the subject’s mind, the sponsors psychologically become the real authority: the subject is in the service of the criminal horde. 57 Article published in the newspaper Le Monde, Tuesday, March 24, 2015. 60