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ArtikelBeyond Faith  
Oleh: [s.n]
Jenis: Article from Bulletin/Magazine
Dalam koleksi: Time Magazine vol. 170 no. 06 (Aug. 2007), page 24.
Topik: Abdul Rashid Ghazi; Islamabad's radical Red Mosque
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  • Perpustakaan PKPM
    • Nomor Panggil: T7
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Isi artikelOn the subcontinent, Islam is more than a creed. It possesses the power to unite a nation--yet divide a people. A few weeks before Abdul Rashid Ghazi died in a shootout with Pakistani special forces, he told me about a young woman who had asked him to make her a suicide bomber. I was drinking tea with Ghazi, the deputy leader of Islamabad's radical Red Mosque, in his small office just off the mosque's main entrance. Outside, a man--a boy really, with barely a beard--paced nervously, an AK 57 gripped tightly in his hands. Inside, one of Ghazi's assistants updated the mosque's website, which promoted his campaign to spread Shari'a, or Islamic law, throughout the land. Another assistant was affixing labels to a stack of newly burned DVDs portraying American "aggression" in Afghanistan and Iraq. It was these heinous acts, said Ghazi, that inspired his young female acolyte to seek martyrdom. "Had I wanted to use her, I could have, because she was completely ready. But I sent her back, saying we don't need her, inshallah
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