A few months before his killing rampage, convicted robber and prison inmate Benjamin Herman had a jailhouse conversion of a sort. A white suburban teen and a nominal Catholic when he was first incarcerated, he emerged in late May as an avowed Islamist who would murder three people within hours of gaining freedom on a work-release program.

Herman fatally stabbed two female police officers during his hour-long attack in the Belgian city of Liege, and then used one of their pistols to kill a passing motorist. Shouting “Allahu akbar,” he seized a hostage and wounded two more officers before being shot dead in a gun battle with police.

Afterward, as the facts about the killings came to light, one biographical detail stood out: Herman, a product of Belgium’s French-speaking middle class, had come under the sway of a group of radical Islamist inmates in prison.

In a country that has acted aggressively to put extremists behind bars as a means of preventing terrorism, the attack stoked fears that Belgium’s policy could be having the opposite effect, creating hotbeds of radicalism and sprouting new generations of would-be terrorists.

“Never have so many people been arrested on charges related to terrorism, and never have we seen so many of these guys in prison together,” said Thomas Renard, a Belgian terrorism expert and researcher at the Egmont Royal Institute for International Relations in Brussels. “In bringing them together, we are facilitating their ability to recruit. And that is something that will stay with us for a long time.”

Across Europe, prisons are the latest battleground in the evolving fight against Islamist-inspired terrorism. Beginning five years ago, Western countries saw thousands of their citizens migrate to Iraq and Syria to join the Islamic State or other Islamist groups. Since 2016, hundreds have returned, but the mood at home has changed. Traumatized by terrorist attacks and a swelling refugee crisis, European countries since 2016 have taken a hard line on returnees, enacting tough laws that require criminal charges and incarceration for anyone who traveled to the Middle East or sought to support Islamists groups abroad. Until 2016, many returnees were simply allowed to go home if there was no proof they had been fighters or involved in terrorist acts.

Europe has seen fewer deaths from terrorist attacks since the policies went into effect. But now European officials are grappling with a new problem: how to prevent prisons from becoming training and recruitment centers for future terrorists. From Belgium and the Netherlands to Germany and France, law enforcement officials are experimenting with markedly different approaches to the problem, including reeducation programs and the near-total isolation of the most radicalized inmates. The efforts are a race against time, as many of the jailed returnees will regain their freedom in less than two years.

“They come to the end of their sentence, and we have no choice but to release them,” said a Belgian official who helps supervise the treatment of Islamist inmates in that country’s largest prisons. The official, like several others interviewed, spoke on the condition of anonymity out of concern that former inmates might target them.

“Some of them,” the official said, “could be human bombs.”

Quotes and words such as “Ben-Laden,” “Jihad,” “AK-47” and “Allahu Akbar” are written on the window of an isolated room next to the DeRadex section of Ittre Prison southwest of Brussels.

An emphasis on nonviolence, not deradicalization

Ittre Prison, a walled, high-security complex southwest of Brussels, is one of Belgium’s most notorious, one-time home to convicted child molester and murderer Marc Dutroux and a host of organized crime figures. In 2007, it was the site of a spectacular escape by Nordin Benallal, Belgium’s “jailbreak king,” who used a helicopter crash on the prison’s grounds as a diversion that allowed him to escape.

Today, Ittre is known as one of two Belgian prisons with special isolation units for dealing with the most radical of the country’s jailed Islamists. Called DeRadex, the unit is home to men regarded by Belgian officials as particularly dangerous. As of last month, Ittre’s DeRadex section held 13.

The inmates in the section are allowed to socialize with others within the isolation unit only during certain hours and under close supervision. Isolation is, in fact, the essential ingredient in Belgium’s new approach for dealing with radicalized prisoners: Although they may not be able to separate inmates from their extremist ideas, prison officials can at least prevent them from contaminating others.

Not all of DeRadex’s inhabitants have been convicted on terrorism charges or even have a history of violence. But they are known and feared for their charismatic personalities and ability to draw others to the radical Islamist cause.

During a recent tour of the facility, the DeRadex prisoners sat in solitary cells or carried blue yoga mats to the exercise yard as makeshift prayer rugs. Some wore their prison pants cuffed above the ankle, in the jihadist style. In several cells, inmates had scratched Islamist graffiti onto walls and cell windows, including the name “Bel Kacem,” a reference to Fouad Belkacem, founder of the extremist organization Sharia4Belgium. Belkacem is serving a 12-year sentence in another Belgium prison. Many of his recruits traveled to Syria and joined the Islamic State.

The inmates are allowed to go to the gym and exercise yard, and they practice their religion as they choose. Some inmates take botany classes at a garden in Ittre Prison, shown here.

“Every time we put them with the rest of the detainees, they engage in recruitment activities,” said Valérie Lebrun, a 49-year-old Belgian criminologist who is the head of Ittre. “They become the imam. They push others to pray and change behavior.”

But most of the inmates’ time is spent in small cells equipped with a wooden bunk, toilet and sink. The cells include wall brackets for mounting a television, if the inmates want one and can pay a monthly fee.

An interior gateway at Ittre Prison. At this facility and others across Europe, many inmates who were arrested for traveling to Iraq or Syria will be free again in as little as three to five years.

Ittre officials offer counseling on nonviolence, but they make no effort to change the prisoners’ extremist views about religion. While controversial within criminal justice circles, the lack of emphasis on “deradicalization,” as the tactic is called, reflects a deliberate choice, explained Valérie Lebrun, a 49-year-old Belgian criminologist who is the head of Ittre.

Within the regular prison populations, officials watch for changes in behavior that suggest radicalization is underway, such as when inmates modify their prison uniforms in jihadist style, or insist on wearing underwear when taking a shower, a reflection of conservative Islamist views about covering the body. In such cases, officials encourage inmates to meet with moderate imams and counselors who work with the prisons on a voluntary basis.

But nonviolence, not deradicalization, remains the primary goal, Lebrun said. The reality is, prisons are ill-equipped to offer religious instruction, she said, and when they try, the efforts don’t often work.

“It’s extremely difficult to change someone’s ideas,” she said. “However, trying to convince them not to resort to weapons in order to defend their ideas is much more attainable.”

Some in Belgium argue that the prison officials simply aren’t trying hard enough.

“The prisons are trying to quarantine the virus, but they don’t really address the problem,” said Ilyas Zarhoni, a Brussels imam who runs community programs that seek to counter extremist ideology. “We need experts in ideology, experts in psychology. The costs will be high, but it’s nothing compared to what we could be dealing with when these people get out.”

Already, Zarhoni said, juvenile detainees who spent time in Iraq or Syria are being released to schools and neighborhoods while still loyal to the radical Islamist cause. Among their peers, they are more likely to be viewed with admiration than with reproach.

“They’re seen as heroes,” Zarhoni said. “They’ve used weapons — how cool is that?”

Stefan Schürmann, an officer at JVA Frankfurt prison, stands by one of the doors. There are no isolation units for inmates at the prison, but there is a cadre of guards newly trained in spotting signs of radicalization.

Changing inmates’ thinking

A few hours’ drive to the southeast, prison officials in the central German state of Hesse are trying a different approach, a kind of experiment in behavior modification that is playing out in real time.

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At the JVA Frankfurt prison, there are no isolation units where extremist inmates are kept together. Instead, all prisoners share the same space, under a regimen of unusually close surveillance and intervention by a cadre of guards newly trained in spotting signs of radicalization. German officials, blessed with bigger budgets and larger professional staffs compared with their smaller neighbors, are seeking to neutralize the radicalization threat one inmate at a time, with intense — and occasionally aggressive — management of each individual case.

Visitors to the prison in June observed as a manager demonstrated how guards are taught to look for warning signs in inmates’ appearance, behavior and personal belongings.

Poking through one prisoner’s duffel bag, the officer set aside a strand of prayer beads and a mat — both regarded as acceptable items for a practicing Muslim — but then paused to examine a copy of the Koran.

“Here we have a Koran, which is normally not an issue at all,” said the official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, citing prison policy. “However, this is a Lies Stiftung edition, which has been banned and we can therefore not allow it.” Lies Stiftung Korans contain commentary associated with Salafism, a conservative form of Sunni Islam embraced by members of the Islamic State.

A green Saudi flag in the prisoner’s belongings was seen as a problem. Prison officials worry that nationalist symbols could trigger conflicts. Because of its religious symbolism, a Saudi flag in the possession of a non-Saudi also could suggest ties to the Salafist movement.

A CD was also confiscated, because, as the official explained, it contained sermons by a cleric regarded by the prison staff as radical.

“This suggests that the prisoner may have been radicalized,” the officer said. “We have to observe him carefully — his contacts, what he reads — and try and get as much information on him as possible.”

The Hessian program, called Network for Deradicalization in the Penal System, or NeDiS, seeks to change inmates’ thinking. Those who are labeled as radical — whether they are Islamists or members of right-wing extremist groups — find themselves under intensive scrutiny. They are offered different kinds of counseling or therapy, including meetings with an imam or chaplain while in prison, and outreach programs after their release.

“Every radical Islamist convict will be released from the correctional facilities some day,” Eva Kühne-Hörmann, the Hessian minister of justice, said in an interview. “If we do not use the terms of imprisonment to influence this group of persons by taking the corresponding actions for deradicalization, we run the risk of releasing radical Islamists, who are devoid of any personal perspective, into German society.”

The JVA Frankfurt prison’s chapel is used by different faiths for religious services. For Muslims, volunteer imams from the community offer alternative messages for inmates exposed to extremist ideology.

Cells at JVA Frankfurt prison in central Germany have a dorm-like feel, with curtains and a writing table. There are no isolation units here, but inmates are carefully monitored for signs of radicalization.

“We are in the early stages,” says guard Stefan Schürmann, left, of the prison’s deradicalization efforts. Prison officials acknowledge that some inmates will remain radicalized, and the best they can hope for is to stop them from spreading hateful messages to others.

Christians and Muslims share the same space in JVA Frankfurt prison, as officials try to foster an atmosphere of tolerance and mutual respect.

Among inmates, there is grumbling about the newly intense scrutiny and skepticism about its effectiveness. One Hesse inmate, an avowed admirer of former al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden, said he was harassed by prison officials after leading a prayer group inside the prison. The inmate, who identified himself by his nom de guerre Abu Shaheed, was convicted of robbery in 2014, a crime he acknowledges was part of a foiled attempt to obtain money for a move to Syria to join the Islamic State. The inmate was interviewed with permission of prison authorities.

“My mistake was not asking the officer beforehand,” he said about the prayer group. “Then an officer arrived and said I should stop. I was almost done, and others said to him that he should wait. But he’d already pressed the alarm buzzer. Beep, beep, beep.”

Several officers then scuffled with him in a corridor, injuring his shoulder, he said.

Abu Shaheed said he opposes violence and thinks his decision to join the Islamic State was a mistake. But he clings to the same ideology, now infused with anger about what happened to him after the prayer meeting.

“They put me in the special lockup, the entire night and the next day,” he said. “For what? Because I wanted to pray?”

‘They are coming back’

Will either of the approaches make a difference? Across Europe, criminal justice officials acknowledge that they are seeking to engineer solutions to a problem for which there is scant scientific data, and no guarantees of success. What is known is that previous approaches failed, disastrously. And the scale of the problem in recent years has only gotten worse.

Since the founding of the Islamic State in 2014, several of Europe’s biggest terrorist attacks were led by former prison inmates, some of whom became radicalized while behind bars. Abdelhamid Abaaoud, the leader of the deadly attacks on Paris in November 2015, grew up in an immigrant neighborhood in central Brussels and was jailed multiple times for assault, burglary and receiving stolen goods. In prison, the onetime street hustler and partyer became an acolyte of an older inmate, an Islamist who the prisoners dubbed “Papa Noel” because of his bushy gray beard. Abaaoud adopted the older man’s religious dogma and, after his release from prison, left for Syria to join the terrorists.

Months later, some of Abaaoud’s Belgian friends and former prison mates would participate in the March 2016 attack on the Brussels airport, the act that awakened Belgians to the scale of the country’s Islamist problem. It was that event that prompted Belgium to join Germany and other European countries in adopting stricter laws that made it a crime to travel to Islamic State territory or offer support to Islamist militant groups.

Since then, returnees from Iraq and Syria have been systematically arrested and put behind bars. Thus, while the Islamic State’s self-proclaimed caliphate no longer exists, the number of arrests related to “jihadist terrorism” continues to climb, from 395 in 2014, to 705 last year, according to statics released in June by Europol.

But many who are now in prison will be soon be free. According to last month’s Europol report, the average prison sentence in Belgium for inmates convicted of supporting terrorist groups is five years.

“We had a problem: Young people were going to the caliphate. And now we have a different problem: They are coming back,” said Brahim Laytouss, an Antwerp, Belgium, imam and director of the Islamic Development and Research Academy, a nonprofit group that seeks to reeducate radicalized inmates. “There are hundreds in our prisons here in Belgium, and probably 150 that could be considered dangerous. And my organization only has the resources to deal with 10 at a time.”

A van drives through the JVA Frankfurt prison.

Quentin Ariès contributed to this report. Mekhennet reported from Brussels, Antwerp and Frankfurt. Warrick reported from Brussels and Antwerp.

About this story

Video by Michael Pohl, Souad Mekhennet and Sarah Parnass. Photographs by Virginie Nguyen Hoang in Belgium and Sebastien Van Malleghem in Germany. Design and development by Jake Crump.

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