Jihad Academy
By (Author) Nicolas Hnin
Translated by Martin Makinson
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
1st August 2016
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Social groups: religious groups and communities
Geopolitics
320.557
Paperback
176
Width 129mm, Height 198mm
130g
Framed by Hnins personal experience as a hostage of ISIS alongside James Foley, Jihad Academy debunks the myths surrounding Islamic extremism and provides a clear and revealing insight into the sects strange and distorted world. By invading Iraq in 2003 and not intervening in Syria since 2011, the West helped fuel radicalisation and continues to fuel it, by making diplomatic compromises with dictators, by refusing to heed the suffering of populations, and by failing to offer a convincing counter-narrative or a political alternative. Hnin shows how Western societies share the responsibility for the creation of the new jihadists, explains how they are moulded and how the West has played Islamic States game and spread its propaganda, allowing it to enlist more and more recruits ready to fight for a distorted vision of Islam. In the final chapters he advances possible strategies for repairing what can still be repaired.
Nicolas Hnin is a freelance journalist who has worked in Iraq and Syria for most of his career. From the fall of Baghdad to the capture of Raqqa, he has witnessed often at close quarters with the jihadists the events that led to the emergence of Islamic State. In June 2013 he was taken hostage along with three other journalists by ISIS among his captors was Jihadi John. He was held in an underground cell with among others, James Foley. He was released after negotiations between his captors and the French government with his fellow journalists in April 2014. He lives in France. Martin Makinson is a French-Australian national who has lived and worked all over the Middle East as an archaeologist and teacher. He currently divides his time between France and the Middle East.