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| Politics |
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Good Muslim, Bad Muslim: An African Perspective |
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Columbian University Professor of Government and Anthropology, Mahmood Mamdani, demonstrates how the label of "good Muslim" or "bad Muslim" changes depending on circumstance, but that the only constant litmus test seems to be pro-American sentiment. Official America, argues Mamdani, itself has played a large role in manufacturing a Muslim (political) identity which could be subservient to foreign policy goals, a historical occurence illustrated by front-line areas of the Cold War, such as Africa.
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Has Islam failed? Not by Western Standards. |
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Philosophy professor Michael Neuman questions the rhetoric of Islam's supposed failure in relation to Christendom (Bernard Lewis). In terms of providing for its citizens, violence or competent leaders, the Christian West does not appear so enviable. It was not Christianity or democracy that gave rise to the admitted economic and technological superiority of Western Europe, and thus America, but the "formation of cohesive, undemocratic nation states."
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How I Nearly Became a Terrorist |
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Derek Cohen, a white Jewish leftist recounts his brush with a radical resistance movement while growing up in South Africa under apartheid. The author has some important insights into the atmosphere that breeds terrorism and how the lines between innocent civilians and collateral damage can sometimes be blurred in the minds of radical revolutionaries. |
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The Myth of the All Powerful Jewish Lobby |
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While dated, this article from a back issue Z magazine provides a means of seeing the current conflict in a different light. It is followed by a thoughtful commentary by an American Muslim.
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Lessons from Palestine |
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Edward Said, writing in Al Ahram Online, draws lessons for the future from the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
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Freud, Zionism, and Vienna |
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Edward Said makes a personal commentary on Zionist tactics used against him, setting them in the context of the current struggle
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Roots of Chechen Resistance |
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Mass Deportations, Book Burnings and Censorship Konstantin Gamsakhurdia The history of the Chechens is significant not only for that people of 1 million souls, it is also a hallmark of Russian power politics during the czarist, Communist and post-Communist periods. From the perspective of Chechnya's South Caucasus neighbors, the Georgian-born, Swiss-based author of this article analyzes the deep-rooted Chechen drive for independence through the centuries, which, like that of numerous other mountain peoples, has often involved banditry and freebootery. The author, an orientalist and historian, is the eldest son of Sviad Gamsakhurdia, Georgia's first freely elected president.
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