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The ‘true dream’ in contemporary Islamic/Jihadist dreamwork: a case study of the dreams of Taliban leader Mullah Omar

open access: yesContemporary South Asia, 2006
The intention of this paper is to consider and evaluate the hypothesis that Mullah Omar, the Taliban leader, was inspired and guided by true night dreams, al-Ruya, to found and lead the Taliban revolution in the 1990s in Afghanistan.
Edgar, I.
exaly   +2 more sources

Mullahs, Muslims, and Marital Sorting

Journal of Political Economy, 1979
In 1974 Lee Benham investigated the hypothesis of a symbiotic transmission of human capital associated with marriage and its effect on the husbands earnings within the context of the United States marriage market. In the interest of seeing if Benhams results apply in a more traditional marriage market the data used in this study are from a sample ...
openaire   +1 more source

Mullahs, Martyrs, and Men

Men and Masculinities, 2003
A core component of the Islamic Revolution’s ideology was reformulation of gender discourse wrapped around an Islamic hypermasculinity. Attention has been focused on women’s roles and rights in the Islamic Republic, and men are assumed to universally have benefited from the regime’s policies.
openaire   +1 more source

Iran's Mullahs and the Arab Masses

The Washington Quarterly, 1983
Abstract For the Muslim mass of the Arab world, the success of Iran's revolution represented the advent of a new heroic age of Islamic assertion and glory, the long-awaited confirmation of the power of faith over Western secularism. But as Khomeini's promised land recedes further away into the distant horizon, the spontaneous love affair between Muslim
openaire   +1 more source

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