Abdallah Azzam, the Palestinian cleric who led the mobilization of Arab fighters to Afghanistan in the 1980s, played a crucial role in the internationalization of the jihadi movement. Killed in mysterious circumstances in 19...

Buy Now From Amazon

Product Review

Abdallah Azzam, the Palestinian cleric who led the mobilization of Arab fighters to Afghanistan in the 1980s, played a crucial role in the internationalization of the jihadi movement. Killed in mysterious circumstances in 1989 in Peshawar, Pakistan, he remains one of the most influential jihadi ideologues of all time. Here, in the first in-depth biography of Azzam, Thomas Hegghammer explains how Azzam came to play this role and why jihadism went global at this particular time. It traces Azzam's extraordinary life journey from a West Bank village to the battlefields of Afghanistan, telling the story of a man who knew all the leading Islamists of his time and frequented presidents, CIA agents, and Cat Stevens the pop star. It is, however, also a story of displacement, exclusion, and repression that suggests that jihadism went global for fundamentally local reasons.

Similar Products

MBS: The Rise to Power of Mohammed bin SalmanBetween the God of the Prophets and the God of the Philosophers: Reflections of an Athari on the Divine AttributesHomegrown: ISIS in AmericaThe ISIS Reader: Milestone Texts of the Islamic State MovementYour Sons Are at Your Service: Tunisia's Missionaries of Jihad (Columbia Studies in Terrorism and Irregular Warfare)Black Wave: Saudi Arabia, Iran, and the Forty-Year Rivalry That Unraveled Culture, Religion, and Collective Memory in the Middle EastTo the Mountains: My Life in Jihad, from Algeria to AfghanistanRoad Warriors: Foreign Fighters in the Armies of JihadPower to the People: How Open Technological Innovation is Arming Tomorrow's TerroristsJihadi Culture: The Art and Social Practices of Militant Islamists