Sectarian war : Pakistan's Sunni-Shia violence and its links to the Middle East

著者

    • Ahmed, Khaled

書誌事項

Sectarian war : Pakistan's Sunni-Shia violence and its links to the Middle East

Khaled Ahmed

Oxford University Press, 2011

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注記

Includes bibliographical references (p. [341]-346) and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

Sectarian War is an account of how the Shia-Sunni conflict was relocated from the Middle East to Pakistan after the rise of Revolutionary Iran in 1979, through the mediating agency of the rulers in Pakistan and the proliferation of the religious seminaries funded by Saudi Arabia. It examines the death of General Zia in the context of the sectarian conflict, goes into the process of production of apostatizing fatwas in Pakistan followed by violent action by organizations formed from the non-state actors used by the state for its covert wars. Sectarian War also delves into the state of the Shia communities in the Middle East and their historical connections with South Asia. It examines the rise of Shia culture in Lucknow and its formative influence on the rise of the Shia in Iraq, with a parallel scrutiny of the rise of Wahhabism and its infiltration of India in the eighteenth century, and records the origins and history of organizations doing sectarian terrorism in Pakistan and their linkages to Al Qaeda whose trajectory into a sectarian identity is also traced to the rise of Al Zarqawi as a parallel leader in Iraq. Sectarian War facilitates an understanding of the phenomenon of terrorism in Pakistan today.

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