As a child in Yemen, Luai Ahmed participated in school assemblies where children chanted against Israel and burned the Israeli flag. Every Friday in the mosque, he repeated after the imam alongside thousands of other children: “May Allah destroy Israel, may Allah kill the Zionists, may Allah kill the Jews.” He was taught that Jews were not human beings, but rather apes that God transformed because they refused Islam. The consistent message was that Jews were evil and that their destruction was necessary for peace in the Middle East. He grew up thinking the Holocaust was “a Jewish plot… propaganda to gain sympathy,” with the consensus being that “of course it never happened.”
The turning point came in 2014, when Ahmed traveled to Sweden to deliver a lecture. Following urgent advice from his family, he sought political asylum and remained there. This decision was driven by necessity: his family faced ongoing threats from al-Qaeda due to his mother’s activism, making their safety precarious and his return to Yemen impossible. Sweden became his new home, offering not just physical safety but the intellectual freedom that would ultimately transform his perspective.