He reached his own personal tipping point when American troops searched his home and, in the process, almost inadvertently managed to dishonor and disgrace his family by the way they treated his father. The former student knew that revenge for a disgrace of this magnitude required blood to be spilled, and he immediately walked out of his village and made his way back to
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Wednesday, October 15, 2008
The Sirens of Baghdad
Mohammed Moulessehoul, who writes as Yasmina Khadra, is a former officer of the Algerian army, an army that for the better part of the last two decades has primarily involved itself with fighting several well organized terrorist organizations within Algeria ’s borders. Some critics, including many Algerians, have accused the army of being as bad as the terrorists it professes to fight, labeling it little more than the government’s own band of terrorists. Whatever the case may be, Khadra’s experience certainly places him in the position to offer insights into the minds of those who dedicate their lives to the destruction of the West and everything for which it stands.
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Really liked your review on this. We are so often given one side to a situation, as are they, and it is good to try to understand a mindset so different to our own. While violence is always abhorrent to us, I believe there are always 2 sides to a story and this sounds as though it gives some insight as to why the Iraqi's hate us so much.
ReplyDeleteLeah, this one will definitely make you think about the mindset on the other side of the equation. The author is in a unique position to expose that view to Western readers. I lived in Algeria during much of he worst of what went on there during the terrorist period and I found this all to be very believable.
ReplyDeletei read it in french and loved it! i give it a 5/ just memorable!!! :D
ReplyDeleteI tried it in French but found that I'm fast losing my French-speaking and reading skills since leaving Algeria 7 years ago.
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