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A sequel to the New York Times bestseller Terror and Liberalism It created a worldwide furore when Tariq Ramadan was barred from US entry to accept a prestigious appointment at Notre Dame University. After all, as a major profile in The New York Times Magazine observed, Ramadan is one of the Muslim worlds most charismatic and influential figures, with a long career at prominent European universities advocating peaceful coexistence with the West. But in a gripping portrait, Paul Berman - one of Americas leading public intellectuals (Foreign Affairs) - details Ramadans disturbing ties to radical Islam, especially through his grandfather, the founder of Egypts Muslim Brotherhood, the founding ideology behind al-Qaeda. And Berman notes a troubling tendency among Western liberals - and many Western journalists - to overlook Ramadans questionable tenets in the rush to embrace a moderate. By comparing Ramadans own writing with his coverage in the press, Berman touches on many of todays most important issues - the debate over the veil in French schools, contemporary anti-Semitism, anti-feminism, and the presence of home-grown Islamic fundamentalism in the West - and presents a stunning commentary about the medias inability to detect dangerous ideas in contemporary society.
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