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Holy War 101
EFL. Hat tip LGF
Dec. 1 issue â Abdul Bariâs school day begins at 4 a.m. The freckle-faced, outgoing 9-year-old, an Afghan poppy farmerâs son, wakes up on the tile floor he shares with four dozen other students at the Jamia Uloom Islamia religious academy, in the untamed mountains of Pakistanâs tribal areas. After morning prayer services, he fixes tea for the older boys and himself, eating a bit of bread before classes start at daybreak. Students spend most of the day reciting the Qurâan; memorizing every one of its 6,666 verses is the main requirement for graduation. Still, this madrassa is the only formal schooling most of these boys will ever have. So they learn civics from a white-bearded scholar named Amanullah, 65, who teaches them about the Taliban. âThere was a real Islamic regime,â the old man says. âThey fixed 25 years of problems in no time, using Islamic laws.â
6666 verses, eh? Theyâre one on Nicolae Carpathia.
ANOTHER FACULTY member, Mullah Taj Mohammad, 40, gives a current-events lesson, warning of the evils that lurk in non-Islamic lands: âIâve heard that many Muslim girls have infidel boyfriendsâand clink glasses of alcohol with Jews.â Thatâs not the worst of it, he says: âAmericans are killing Muslims in Afghanistan and Iraq, and they are busy trying to poison Muslim minds everywhere with films, music and television.â Abdul is an eager learner. He dreams of enlisting in the jihad against Afghanistanâs U.S.-backed president, Hamid Karzai. âKarzai is a killer of Muslims,â the boy says. âWhen I grow up Iâll fight him, and then weâll see whoâs a man and whoâs a woman.â
Ummm... Yeah. Have you filled out your organ donor card? And your advance directives? | The Afghan war, code-named Operation Enduring Freedom, is getting nastier. In the last six monthsâthe bloodiest period since the Talibanâs fall in late 2001âhundreds of people have been killed, many of them civilians, including two foreign relief officials and nearly a dozen Afghans working for international agencies. Last week the United Nations announced that it was suspending its refugee-repatriation proâgram and pulling all foreign workers out of southeastern Afghanistan. âWeâre going to have to refight Enduring Freedom because we didnât finish the job,â predicts retired Marine Gen. Anthony Zinni, former head of U.S. Central Command.
Posted by: Atrus 2003-11-24 |
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=21706 |
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