The Personal Column

An Unexpected Light - Travels in Afghanistan by Jason Elliot

Cover picture
Publisher: Picador
Year: 2000
First Published: Picador 1999
ISBN: 0-330-37162-2
Date reviewed: 01.06

Just about everything I would want to say about this excellent book is in JT's review in travel literature, but I will just add one thought.

As a Persian scholar and someone who has travelled widely in the region, Elliot has a sympathy for Islam. His condemnation of the way that today's Western media portray it as a homogenous and generally dangerous ideology is understandable. The negative impact of the West's - particularly the USA's - policies towards Afghanistan and the wider region comes over strongly. The lack of understanding is mutual, though: what hits the non-religious reader like a cosh is the way that in a country like Afghanistan, Islam and life are inseparable. Life is Islam, and Islam is life, in a way which I doubt has a parallel in all but the most extreme sections of Christianity and Judaism. The prospect of achieving tolerance and understanding on all sides while religion - and let me make it clear I mean all religions - retains such a hold on society seems bleak.


Design, text and graphics by Tony Turton.
Copyright © 2006 Tony Turton
First published 18 Jan 2006

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