On the Brink: The Story of One French Teenager Who Almost Joined ISIS

The teen was first approached by ISIS in Nov. 2014.

“I always wanted to preserve [my son] from this,” Fathima said, her face obscured in darkness to conceal her identity. ABC News has also used pseudonyms for the mother and her son.

It was Nov. 2014 -- just months after ISIS declared its caliphate across Iraq and Syria -- when her son, Omar, was first approached by Muslim men on the streets across from their suburban home.

Omar had never seen the men before, but that didn’t stop them from attempting to radicalize the teenager who was already becoming more interested in religion.

“They said this [Syria] is where we have to help the Muslim brothers,” Omar told ABC News.

Omar said he was intrigued by the videos and wanted to go to Syria to help. He said he had no knowledge of the violence ISIS was capable of committing around the world.

Fathima also knew about ISIS, but said she was hesitant to talk to her son about the group for fear he would go online and become tempted to travel to Syria. She said she faced the issue parents around the world can probably identify with: Tell a child not to do something, and it makes them want to do it more.

“He sent me a [text] message saying, ‘Look at the terrorist attack, look at the terrorist attack,’” Fathima said. “I smiled and said, 'He’s finally going to realize, finally.' I was very shocked by the terrorist attack. And I answered to him, ‘You see Daesh? That’s what Daesh does. Those are not Muslims.’”

Omar said he saw the ISIS recruiters only once more.

“I explained to them that Daesh said they made the attack on the Charlie Hebdo,” Omar said.

When the men acknowledged the ISIS connection, Omar said he never looked back.

Omar received help from Djamel Guessoum, the director of Arsej, an organization that seeks to help youth on the verge of radicalization in the St. Denis suburb of Paris. Djamel often works with neighborhood imams, who explain to Muslim youth that terrorist ideology is counter to the Islamic faith.

“I’m very lucky because I’m very close to my son so he tells my everything. In other families, especially in Muslim culture, Muslims don’t share with their parents,” Fathima said. “A teenager that’s alone and gets a certain message … they are kind of the perfect target.”

Fathima said she fears that Muslims who are not well integrated into French society can be easily attracted to Daesh by recruiters like the ones who almost took her son.

She has watched Muslim mothers on French TV, asking for help because their sons have gone to fight with ISIS in Syria. Fathima said she would not have done the same, fearing it would push her son further away from her.

One of Omar’s friends who went to Syria is now dead. It’s a grim reminder of what could have been the conclusion to Omar’s own story.

When asked about how he would like to help the Syrian Muslims he was so concerned about in those ISIS propaganda videos, Omar responded simply.

“I would love to do humanitarian stuff. That’s the only way.”

ABC News used a translator for the interview with Fathima and Omar.