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Destiny Disrupted: A History of the World Through Islamic Eyes Kindle Edition

4.6 out of 5 stars 2,024 ratings

Destiny Disrupted, “a must-read for anyone who wants to learn more about the history of the Islamic world,” (San Francisco Chronicle) tells the history of the world from the Islamic point of view, and restores the centrality of the Muslim perspective, ignored for a thousand years.

In
Destiny Disrupted, Tamim Ansary tells the rich story of world history with the evolution of the Muslim community at the center. His story moves from the lifetime of Mohammed through a succession of far-flung empires, to the tangle of modern conflicts that culminated in the events of 9/11. He introduces the key people, events, ideas, legends, religious disputes, and turning points of world history, imparting not only what happened but how it is understood from the Muslim perspective.

He clarifies why two great civilizations—Western and Muslim—grew up oblivious to each other, what happened when they intersected, and how the Islamic world was affected by its slow recognition that Europe—a place it long perceived as primitive—had somehow hijacked destiny.

With storytelling brio, humor, and evenhanded sympathy to all sides of the story, Ansary illuminates a fascinating parallel to the narrative usually heard in the West.
Destiny Disrupted offers a vital perspective on world conflicts many now find so puzzling.
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Editorial Reviews

Review

"Ansary has written an informative and thoroughly engaging look at the past, present, and future of Islam. With his seamless and charming prose, he challenges conventional wisdom and appeals for a fuller understanding of how Islam and the world at large have shaped each other. And that makes this book, in this uneasy, contentious post-9/11 world, a must read."

-- "Khaled Hosseini, author of The Kite Runner and A Thousand Splendid Suns"

"Since the history of the Islamic peoples has been generally ignored or glossed over quickly by Western nations, Ansary, a Muslim American, rectifies this lack. Beginning with the life of Mohammed and the quarrel over his rightful successor, the author lays out a fascinating panoply of Islamic religious ideals, culture, doctrinal variations, and struggles for power over the following centuries, often in conjunction with familiar events taking place in the West. The rise of European civilizations, formerly considered by Muslims as practically barbaric, and their subsequent domination of much of the world is treated at length as the "destiny disrupted." The tone of the book is reasonably fair and firm but not hostile. The author is an excellent narrator, with a clear and pleasant voice. Since Islam is a major force in today's world, studying its history and way of life should be a priority for Americans."

-- "SoundCommentary.com (starred review)"

"This is the audiobook about Islam you've been waiting for. Ansary's presentation of Islamic history, ideas, and values, explained from an American point of view, makes clear material that can seem opaque in a lengthy textbook or lecture series. Ansary's strong, warm voice adds enormously to his powerful discourse. His matter-of-fact tone prevents the listener from being overwhelmed by his apparently effortless authority regarding the early Khalifa, Mongol dynasties, Liebnitz, and 9/11. His slight Afghan accent makes his presentation more personal."

-- "AudioFile"

About the Author

Tamim Ansary is the award-winning author of Destiny Disrupted and West of Kabul, East of New York. He has been a major contributing writer to several secondary-school history textbooks offering an Islamic perspective.

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B06XCFZ24V
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ PublicAffairs
  • Accessibility ‏ : ‎ Learn more
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ April 28, 2009
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 4.9 MB
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 416 pages
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0786741502
  • Page Flip ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.6 out of 5 stars 2,024 ratings

About the author

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Tamim Ansary
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Tamim Ansary was born in Kabul, Afghanistan, and came to the United States as a junior in high school. Culture and cultural perspective have been among his lifelong preoccupations. His new book, The Invention of Yesterday, looks at world history as the story of ever-increasing human interconnectedness: history from the perspective of the emerging global "we". Ansary has also written a history of the world through Islamic eyes, a history of Afghanistan from an insider's point of view, a literary memoir about straddling a cultural fault line in the world (Islam and the West), a historical novel set against the background of the First Anglo-Afghan war, and some 30 nonfiction books for children. In Road Trips, he tells the story of morphing from an Afghan into an American just as the sixties were giving way to the seventies. Ansary's Destiny Disrupted won the Northern California Book Award for nonfiction in 2009, and his first memoir West of Kabul, East of New York was selected as a One City One Book pick by both San Francisco and Waco, Texas. In 2001, an email he sent to 20 friends reputedly became the first viral phenomenon of the Internet Age, reaching tens of millions around the world within days.

Customer reviews

4.6 out of 5 stars
2,024 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers find the book highly informative, providing a timeline of objective facts and events throughout 1400 years of history. Moreover, the narrative is easy to read, written in a narrative style, and customers consider it an interesting read from a unique perspective. Additionally, the book is engaging and fascinating, with customers appreciating its humor. However, the Islamic perspective and pacing receive mixed reactions from customers.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

231 customers mention "History"216 positive15 negative

Customers appreciate how the book explains the history of the world through Islamic perspectives, providing a detailed timeline of objective facts and events over 1400 years.

"...to September 11, 2001, the author provides a masterful, engaging overview of Islamic history...." Read more

"...I am a map fetishist. The book has maps. They are instructive, but not all of them are correct and consistent...." Read more

"...of what, more than likely, we simply learned as a timeline of objective facts and events, to understand how seeing the same events through a Muslim..." Read more

"...Somehow this book came into my hands and it explains so much, from the origins of Islam to nearly the present...." Read more

168 customers mention "Readable"157 positive11 negative

Customers find the book well written and easy to read, with one customer noting its masterful narrative.

"...and bringing the reader right up to September 11, 2001, the author provides a masterful, engaging overview of Islamic history...." Read more

"...Old Testament, but from my experience with this fascinating and revolting text, I say: no way were the Jews of the Old Testament monotheists!..." Read more

"...Ansary writes very simply. His prose would pass muster for a high school textbook. But his simplicity is eloquent and lucid...." Read more

"...can be hit or miss, but Ansary really hits a great tone that's easy to listen to and indeed fits his conversational writing approach, and he nails..." Read more

150 customers mention "Readability"150 positive0 negative

Customers find the book enjoyable and well worth the effort to read, appreciating its unique perspective on world history.

"...the Islamic view of world history is fantastic, and well worth reading for any history fan, especially those like me who have been provincial in..." Read more

"...I spend considerable time reading, highlighting and annotating this fine book, I'm invariably at a loss to tell someone what the title is." Read more

"...Overall, this is a great book in this era of social media where everyone seems to be his own sheikh but without solid background in Islamic history...." Read more

"...While this is a good, solid history of the Islamic world, I did not, for the most part, feel that I received a deeper understanding of the Islamic..." Read more

57 customers mention "Interest"57 positive0 negative

Customers find the book fascinating and insightful, describing it as an eye-opening historical account of world history.

"...the author reveals, not only is that story significant, it is also fascinating...." Read more

"...The concept (tell history from a different angle) is intriguing, but the implementation is not always entirely convincing to me...." Read more

"...He discusses, in fascinating, well-documented detail how our civilizations grew up seemingly oblivious to each other...." Read more

"...There are few interesting historical anecdotes from the lives of the first few Khalifahs I was not aware of...." Read more

23 customers mention "Humor"23 positive0 negative

Customers enjoy the book's humor, finding it witty and genuinely funny, with one customer noting how well the author incorporates American idioms into the narrative.

"...hits a great tone that's easy to listen to and indeed fits his conversational writing approach, and he nails all the pronunciation that another..." Read more

"...His humor is subtle and often self-deprecating; the tone feels evenhanded and fair. I'd also recommend his memoir, West of Kabul, East of New York." Read more

"...This book is actually really funny. Lots of well placed sarcasm and a fair critique of both Europe and Asia...." Read more

"This book is written is a good and easy to read style...." Read more

51 customers mention "Islamic perspective"34 positive17 negative

Customers have mixed reactions to the Islamic perspective in the book, with some appreciating how it addresses motivations of extreme groups, while others find it biased.

"...a civilization (an umma), and yes it is an 'ism' that prescribes a social and moral framework...." Read more

"...from the major divisions of Islam to offer frank and informative commentary on the diversity (and unity) of that faith...." Read more

"...There are too many inaccuracies in this edition. I am a map fetishist. The book has maps...." Read more

"...to see fairly and with humor, this book is extremely informative of how history plays out politically, socially, and economically...." Read more

24 customers mention "Pacing"8 positive16 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the pacing of the book, with some finding it very balanced while others describe it as unsatisfying.

"...The footnotes are sparse and suggest less critical work with primary and secondary sources than the bibliography might imply, and a critical..." Read more

"...What is particularly notable is the author’s very balanced, neutral view of things, considering how difficult it can be to compare these world views...." Read more

"...This is one of the most pernicious and dangerous books ever written and cannot be dismissed as a myth...." Read more

"...I wanted to see how Islam saw the world...and it is a depressingly selfish view. Same as the stereotypical West." Read more

Excellent Book!
4 out of 5 stars
Excellent Book!
Destiny Disrupted: A history of the World Through Islamic Eyes By Tamim Ansary This is a rich compendium of Islamic history that chronicles important events in a highly descriptive manner atypical of the regular history books we know. It explains major roadblocks of Islamic history starting from the Pre-Islamic era through the history of the prophet Mohammad (SAW) down to the modern times. It has a very lucid introduction (please do not skip it) that tries to help give you the background to the multi layered events most of which are turbulent that characterized the Islamic history. Personally, I highly recommend this book to beginners like me who know little about Islamic history but keen to learn from an informed perspective devoid of primordial prejudices and biases. What I really like about the book is the writing style making it look like a novel. Tamim Ansary will take you along with him through the historic moments of Islamic history and make you feel as if you were truly there. Reading about the Mongols invasion, I almost felt as if I lived and survived that defining period. It was written in a very simple language suitable for beginners. Let me mention however, the author is an American Afghan who emigrated to the US in the 1970s and probably a muslim too. It was difficult for me to ascertain where Tamim belongs from the Islamic sectarian perspective as he seems to be everywhere in trying to narrate the history. This book might not be for you if you hate surprises and probably have a biased mindset about Islamic past and still want to live with the history painted by your Sheikhs. One major area missing in the book is the little time spent dwelling on the major events during the Abbasid era such as the Baitul Hikma and all the tremendous progress made through the Islamic Golden age in sciences. If you need more about it then you probably have to consult another book I recently read called ‘The House of Wisdom: how Arabic Science saved ancient knowledge and gave us renaissance’ by the unrepentany atheist Jim Al-khalili. Another shortcoming of the book, in my opinion is the lack of treatise of an important milestone in the Islamic exegesis. This has to do with the advent of the 4 juristic schools in Islam, viz Hanafy, Maliki, Hanbaly and Shafii. Overall, this is a great book in this era of social media where everyone seems to be his own sheikh but without solid background in Islamic history. Personally, this book deserves a 4 star out of 5.
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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on April 20, 2014
    As Americans moved past the initial shock of September 11, 2001, they began to ask a number of searching questions: Who were those people? What motivated them to give their lives for something so terrible? Who supported their senseless violence? And why do they hate us?

    We soon learned that those nineteen men who hijacked four airliners and destroyed the lives of thousands were self-proclaimed Muslims. They did not represent any one nation. Their common bond was the culture of radical Islam. Upon learning that, Americans then wanted to know what it was about the terrorists' religion that led them to believe that their actions were justified. Did they represent only the lunatic fringe? Or were their convictions and deeds much closer to the heart of Islam?

    President George W. Bush gave his answer when he told Americans, "These acts of violence against innocents violate the fundamental tenets of the Islamic faith." But not everyone was so sure. In a 1996 book titled The Clash of Civilizations, Harvard professor Samuel P. Huntington had claimed that the cultures of the Muslim world and of the West were inherently at odds with each other, and that the lines between them were what he called "the battle lines of the future." In the post-9/11 discussion, many observers suggested that the Huntingdon thesis anticipated those unspeakable events that had now come to pass. So who was right?

    Enter the latest book by Tamim Ansary, Destiny Disrupted. As it is with so many non-fiction books these days, once the title catches your attention, it's the subtitle that tells you what the book is actually about: A History of the World Through Islamic Eyes. Ansary might just be the very best person to write a book like this. He was born in 1948 in Kabul, Afghanistan, his father an Afghan and his mother an American. At age sixteen, he came to the United States where he graduated from Reed College, in Portland, Oregon, in 1970. Later, he traveled extensively in the Islamic world before settling on the American west coast where he has lived and worked as a writer ever since. Not only does he know both hemispheres, he describes himself as "resolutely secular" from a very early age.

    Ansary's basic argument suggests that the relationship between the Islamic East and the Christian West is never going to be simple. Why? Because their back stories are long and complicated and now tangled. As the author explains,

    "Throughout much of history, the West and the core of what is now the Islamic world have been like two separate universes, each preoccupied with its own internal affairs, each assuming itself to be the center of human history, each living out a different narrative—until the late seventeenth century when the two narratives began to intersect. At that point, one or the other had to give way because the two narratives were crosscurrents to each other. The West being more powerful, its current prevailed and churned the other one under.

    "But the superseded history never really ended. It kept on flowing beneath the surface, like a riptide, and it is flowing down there still. When you chart the hot spots of the world—Kashmir, Iraq, Chechnya, the Balkans, Israel and Palestine, Iraq—you’re staking out the borders of some entity that has vanished from the maps but still thrashes and flails in its effort not to die" (pp. xx-xxi).

    As you might have guessed, Ansary gives no easy answers to the question I raised at first. What he does, however, is much more significant. Starting with the civilization that flourished in ancient Mesopotamia and bringing the reader right up to September 11, 2001, the author provides a masterful, engaging overview of Islamic history. He includes, of course, the story of the life of Mohammed, the careers of his successors, the Crusades of Christians from the west and invasions of Mongols from from the east, the complex Ottoman Empire which eventually crumbled, and the rise of modern, secular Islamic states, followed by a conservative reaction, the evidence of which we see today. But beyond that, he explains how the Muslim story impacts and fits into the larger picture called world history. Here and there, Ansary takes the time to explicitly state what his storytelling implies. Here are a few of his most significant points:

    First, any credible account of world history will give appropriate space to the story of Islam. And as the author reveals, not only is that story significant, it is also fascinating. Most Westerners would never guess, for example, that in the 13th century Muslims were able make a stand against the invading Mongols by using a prototype gun they called a "hand cannon"; or that when William Shakespeare was writing his plays, the superpowers of the world were three Muslim empires; or that the steam engine was invented in the Islamic world three centuries before its development in the West.

    Second, although the West has traditionally ignored Islam, quite often a knowledge of Muslim history sheds light on our well-known western version of world history. A good example of this is the anti-philosophy project taken up by the great Muslim scholar Ghazali. Ansary tells how this man, by all accounts a towering academic, wrote a book explaining the Greek philosophical tradition, giving special attention to Aristotle. In a second book, according to his plan Ghazali set out to dismantle the system he had described in the first book. But, as fate would have it, the first one traveled far and wide, sometimes unaccompanied by the all-important refutation contained in the second. Consequently, and ironically, Ghazali's excellent description of Aristotelian thought led to a boom in its popularity most everywhere the first book was read. Fast forward to more than a century later, when an Italian Dominican priest named Thomas Aquinas set out to square the Church's teaching with Aristotle's philosophy. How many westerners realize that that influential work of Aquinas, which runs to dozens of volumes, owed so much of its inspiration to a Muslim?

    Third, the common American notion that Islamic terrorists hate the freedom of the United States is just plain wrong. Contrary to the rhetoric of George W. Bush, for example, those who plan to carry out a literal jihad against the U.S. do not resent the liberty of America. Instead, their rage is directed against what they regard as the boundless decadence and imperialism of the West, especially the United States. Along this line, Ansary relates what has to be one of the great geo-political tragedies of the twentieth century. In August 1953, the Central Intelligence Agency funded the violent ousting of Mohammed Mosaddeq, the recently-elected prime minister of Iran. Mosaddeq, who took a secular modernist approach to governing, looked to be the ideal Muslim leader. However, upon coming to power, he canceled Iran's lease with British Petroleum and announced that Iran would take control of its oil. As Ansary remarks, "Nice try." Eventually, the world learned that the United States actually sponsored the bloody coup that toppled Mosaddeq. Ansary observes that it would be hard to overstate "the shudder of anger it sent through the Muslim world" (p. 334). Since the end of World War II, the memory of a handful of events like the one just described has convinced a large percentage of the world's Muslims that the United States is, again, not only morally decadent, but hopelessly imperialistic.

    Fourth, when the West and the Muslim world address each other, their messages almost always miss the target. The two sides often speak past, rather than with each other. Ansary explains: "One side charges 'You are decadent.' The other side retorts, 'We are free.' These are not opposing contentions; they're nonsequiters. Each side identifies the other as a character in its own narrative. In the 1980s, Khomeini called America 'the Great Satan,' and other Islamist revolutionaries have echoed his rhetoric. In 2008, Jeffrey Herf, a history professor at the University of Maryland, suggested that radical Islamists are the Nazis reborn, motivated at core by anti-Semitism and hatred of women. It's a common analysis." (p. 350).

    Fifth, although Islam certainly is a religion, comparable to other religions like Hinduism and Christianity, it is many more things than that. Ansary says that Islam is also "a social project," belonging to the same category as communism, parliamentary democracy, and fascism. One can also think of Islam as a civilization, in the same class as Chinese, Indian, or Western civilization. And, Islam can also be seen "as one world history among many that are unfolding simultaneously, each in some way incorporating all the others" (p. 356).

    To summarize, in Destiny Disrupted, Tamim Ansary has presented the English-speaking world with an understanding of the sweep of history--and, therefore, an understanding of the way things are--from an Islamic point of view. By doing that, he has opened up a door that can lead at least "our side" towards a much-needed mutual tolerance. Anyone who wants to understand Islam and how it relates to world history and the present situation should read this book.
    44 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on December 13, 2009
    Ansary, an American from Afghanistan, wrote a short and entertaining history about the Muslim world for a Western audience. This `alternative history' has been highly praised by some of my amazon friends. I am mostly with them, but not completely. The concept (tell history from a different angle) is intriguing, but the implementation is not always entirely convincing to me. What we get is a Western perspective on a Muslim perspective of a history of encounters between the Muslim world and the West. There are some new insights for me, so I still rate the book 5 stars, but for some minor but plentiful irritations, I theoretically deduct half a star.

    For the time before Islam arose, Ansary uses the term `middle world' in contrast to the Mediterranean world: while `Western civilization' was build around the sea and was largely based on sea lanes, the future Muslim world started out as a region based on land routes and trade connections. This is the region from Turkey and Egypt eastward to Central and South Asia.
    I had not been aware how peripheral the crusades were to the Muslim world's perception. Clash of civilizations? Hardly. Where was that civilization of the Franks? And the events really did not penetrate much into the Muslim part of the world, nor into the popular awareness.
    I had also not realized how devastating the Mongol attack on the Muslim world had been, not just in terms of mass murder (Ansary uses the term `holocaust'), but also because of the desertification of the Iran/Afghanistan region: the irrigation infrastructure was destroyed!
    I definitely need to read more on the Ottoman Empire.

    When Europe started its revival after the dark ages, the Muslim world was blooming and busy with itself, so the growth of the rival remained unnoticed for some time. Ansary's theory is that Europe overtook Islam in scientific and economic dimensions because the development of science in Islam was obstructed by the dominance of religious dogma. Europe freed itself of these chains with the reformation and the growth of mercantilist nation states. (While I find this convincing, I am sure some of my catholic friends will protest.)

    I have some issues with the book, which may all be minor in the overall reckoning, but they annoy me enough to take away half a star.
    There are too many inaccuracies in this edition.

    I am a map fetishist. The book has maps. They are instructive, but not all of them are correct and consistent. Start with the one on the present Muslim world, page xvi of the introduction: The Asia version here is just not right. Yes, there is a Muslim majority island in the Philippines, but it isn't Luzon!
    And how come Bali and East Timor are painted black? And is Bangladesh really that small? And was Pakistan forgotten?
    And then, page 2, map of the `middle world': why does China have to be moved to Siberia?
    And then: page 196 has a map showing the 3 Muslim empires of the Ottomans, Safavids, and Moghuls as `Muslim world'; but 5 pages later we get a map showing the sea routes from Europe to the Asian markets, and suddenly the Moghul empire is not part of the Muslim world any more. Inconsistent!
    And by the way, the Kingdom of Leon was not `north of Spain'! Unless the author or publisher has redefined Spain, Leon is in the north of Spain. Maybe that is pedantic, but I like books to be made with a professional effort!

    Apart from maps, I stumbled over this description of the early years: the Jews in the 6th century Arabia are said to be `resolutely monotheistic'; this may be so, but then Abraham's religion is also later called `resolute monotheism'. I take exception to that. I do not claim to be an expert on the Old Testament, but from my experience with this fascinating and revolting text, I say: no way were the Jews of the Old Testament monotheists! Ansary is making the mistake of confusing `worship one god' with `believe that only one exists'.
    More a question to the experts than a complaint: Ansary repeats the myth (?) that Islam saved Aristotle's texts from extinction, via Arabic translations of the Greek, which were then re-translated. I thought the ancient Greek texts had also been preserved in European monasteries. I think that the preservation happened both ways, therefore the claim in the name of Arab science is not compelling.

    I found the chapter on the prophet's life shockingly uncritical. Similarly, the caliphas are painted in pink.
    A typical sentence reads: the anecdotes are too consistent to dismiss. Really? Actually, this sentence annoys me. Is the author so naïve to believe that tradition would have let any other anecdote survive? Doesn't he know how tradition works and selects?
    The prophet was a nice simple kind man, says Ansary. The execution of all Jewish men in town was just par for the course, right?

    And as a (former) Lutheran I take exception to the statement that Luther nailed his 95 theses to the Wittenberg church door on Halloween day. That is taking anachronism too far.

    Now I am coming back to my headline: which destiny was disrupted and why? I think Ansary has shied away from his implied question: why did the blooming Muslim empires collapse without much of a gasp at the onslaught of European imperialism? Complacency and arrogance are the normal answers in this kind of situation. Could history repeat itself? Personally, I rather hope not.
    34 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

  • Yu
    5.0 out of 5 stars Fantastic history of the Middle World!
    Reviewed in Japan on August 1, 2024
    This book gives a clear brief description of the history of the Middle World with some deep thoughts on the recent history!
  • g brns
    5.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
    Reviewed in Australia on July 16, 2016
    Great read.
  • B. Warren
    5.0 out of 5 stars Learning someone else's story
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on December 18, 2013
    We are good at seeing the world though our own eyes, through our own traditions. And we tend to assume that our perspective is the truth, when it is actually only our understanding of `the truth'... something which exists outside of us. How much of how we view the world today is based on the way we were taught history, through the lens of western historians and policy makers? This book "Destiny Disrupted" is the story of world history seen through a particular lens: that of Muslims, who have their own 1400 year history which was not much intertwined with Europe. We can learn a good bit both about Islam and about world history by taking in this different perspective, written by a Muslim who is not afraid to be self-critical, to distinguish between what is known and what is believed about history, and who loves to tell it as a good story. Ansary has spent years writing in an accessible style for western readers, and this is an enjoyable and informative read.

    I wonder how other Muslims respond to this book, and hos much his perspective is influenced by his Afghan heritage, with its Persian influences.
  • Alfredo
    5.0 out of 5 stars Simply perfect
    Reviewed in Italy on February 6, 2020
    Very fast seller. And very reliable, and very kind.
    Simply perfect.
  • Amazon Kunde
    5.0 out of 5 stars The title is selfexplanatory
    Reviewed in Germany on July 2, 2021
    People in the review section losing their minds because this book contradicts western narrative about a few things.
    This is a book about the view on history from Islamic eyes. Of course thinks will be written in a different way when you tell the story out of a pov.
    In conclusion: this book is amazing.
    I really enjoyed reading it and learnt a lot about Islam and the Middle East itself.
    It really made me question a lot about what I thought of „history“ so far.
    If you like it or not, people will always write and tell things differently when it benefits them. Do your fact checks through multiple sources and get your own understanding.

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