Inside Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood

Inside Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood 2015-01-08T18:22:15-04:00

The protesters who led Egypt’s revolt last January were young, liberal, and linked-in. They were the bloggers who first proposed the demonstrations against Hosni Mubarak on Twitter; the Facebook-based activists who invited their “friends” to protest; and Wael Ghonim, the 30-year-old Google executive who, after Egypt’s state security agency detained him for 12 days, rallied the crowds to hold Tahrir Square. Far from emulating Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, they channeled Thomas Paine, calling for civil liberties, religious equality, and an end to Mubarak’s dictatorship. Their determination, punctuated by the speed of their triumph, fueled optimism that the long-awaited Arab Spring had finally sprung — that the Middle East would no longer be an autocratic exception in an increasingly democratic world.

http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/n.php?n=why-golda-meir-was-right-2011-08-23


Browse Our Archives

Follow Us!