My Life with the Taliban’ is the autobiography (written in 21 small chapters along with an epilogue and assisted by Character List in the beginning and a Chronolgyy and Glossory at the end) of Abdul Salam Zaeef who was the Taliban’s ambassador to Pakistan in 2001 and one of the most well-known faces of the movement following the 9-11 attacks and a principal actor in its domestic and foreign affairs.. The book has been translated for the first time from the Pashto, which shares more than a personal history of an unusual life. The recent history of Afghanistan is the focus of this traumatic life story. It is an account about how a poor village boy ended up being the ambassador of Afghanistan to Pakistan, and thus being kidnapped; ...
Detained Without Cause is a collection of oral history accounts by six New York based Muslim immigra...
Sasha Jesperson reviews the bestselling book on the West’s relationship with Al-Qaeda, finding a poi...
The 9/11 attacks are apparently a milestone for the United States (US) and the world alike. Right af...
The book under review “My Forbidden Face” has been written by a young Afghan woman from ...
Review book by James Fergusson Publication date: May, 2010 ''I just can't understand the Amer...
Overview: Ziauddin Yousafzai is a man who was born and raised in Pakistan. He is a devout Muslim and...
Author Thomas Barfield introduces readers to the bewildering diversity of tribal and ethnic groups i...
The author has been a general of the Afghan Mujahedin Army and one of the leading personalities of t...
Matthew Partridge finds Michael Scheuer‘s work to be extremely useful as a guide to the motivations ...
"Afghanistan in Ink: Literature Between Diaspora and Nation." Nile Green and Nushin Arbabzadah. C Hu...
Exploring the roots of militant Islam in South Asia and how it has grown to become a source of profo...
One of our foremost authorities on modern Afghanistan, Barnett R. Rubin has dedicated much of his ca...
This article deals with the social background and the life worlds of the followers of the Taliban mo...
Afghanistan’s Taliban are back in power. How did they get there? How can their discriminatory polici...
Malalai Joya, who was the youngest member of the Afghan Parliament elected in the 2005 elections, wa...
Detained Without Cause is a collection of oral history accounts by six New York based Muslim immigra...
Sasha Jesperson reviews the bestselling book on the West’s relationship with Al-Qaeda, finding a poi...
The 9/11 attacks are apparently a milestone for the United States (US) and the world alike. Right af...
The book under review “My Forbidden Face” has been written by a young Afghan woman from ...
Review book by James Fergusson Publication date: May, 2010 ''I just can't understand the Amer...
Overview: Ziauddin Yousafzai is a man who was born and raised in Pakistan. He is a devout Muslim and...
Author Thomas Barfield introduces readers to the bewildering diversity of tribal and ethnic groups i...
The author has been a general of the Afghan Mujahedin Army and one of the leading personalities of t...
Matthew Partridge finds Michael Scheuer‘s work to be extremely useful as a guide to the motivations ...
"Afghanistan in Ink: Literature Between Diaspora and Nation." Nile Green and Nushin Arbabzadah. C Hu...
Exploring the roots of militant Islam in South Asia and how it has grown to become a source of profo...
One of our foremost authorities on modern Afghanistan, Barnett R. Rubin has dedicated much of his ca...
This article deals with the social background and the life worlds of the followers of the Taliban mo...
Afghanistan’s Taliban are back in power. How did they get there? How can their discriminatory polici...
Malalai Joya, who was the youngest member of the Afghan Parliament elected in the 2005 elections, wa...
Detained Without Cause is a collection of oral history accounts by six New York based Muslim immigra...
Sasha Jesperson reviews the bestselling book on the West’s relationship with Al-Qaeda, finding a poi...
The 9/11 attacks are apparently a milestone for the United States (US) and the world alike. Right af...