Tuesday, March 26, 2019

Jihad, Pakistan and India :: Politics Political Essays

Jihad, Pakistan and India Every psyche is entitled to his or her own opinion. Whether it is complimenting a new outfit or distrusting a society, people may think whatever they like. In the article Jihadis by Pankaj Mishra, different settings on society are taken. From the opinions of Pakistani relationships with Indians, or the different outlooks on the Taliban putsch in Afghanistan, this article provides a detail description of a person born in India but inflexible to change his life. The narrator, Mishra, is first introduced shortly after a brief condition of the Middle East before the tragic events of September 11, 2002. Described as being from India, he is now a London reporter piece of writing various articles for English and American magazines. Through his encounters the reader receives an inside ruling on Middle Eastern life and history. Beginning with Pakistans political history, a foundation is set describing various ruling powers such as General Zia-ul-haqs military takeover from Zulfikar Ali Bhutto in 1977 and the final Taliban takeover of Afghanistan in the 1990s. The cruelty inflicted by these harsh takeovers is apparent by descriptions of culmination down schools, smashing TVs, and VCRs, and tearing up photographs (Mishra 103). Different reasons for supporting and fall in the Taliban and other organizations are also explored. For example, a young man named Rahmat, tangle he had no other choice but to join the Taliban in taking over Afghanistan after his fathers business was in ruins and his brother was in jail. After all the warnings, the Taliban rendered him what he could not offer himself at that time food and shelter. Trying to get an insiders view on Taliban life, Mishra is escorted by Jamal, a befriended assassin.

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