Mullah Muhammad Omar's Interpretation Of The Taliban

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In Afghanistan, an unremitting amount of chaos and conflict seems to plague the land. In recent years, a group named the Taliban attempted to restore order and unity to the country through very controversial methods and ideas. In Arabic, the word “Taliban” means “students.” The Taliban is a malicious political movement in Afghanistan fueled by the beliefs of Wahhabism, an extreme form of Islam that follows a very literal interpretation of the Quran. The Taliban was created by Mullah Mohammed Omar in the 1990s and was the primary political power of Afghanistan until 2001. The Taliban, in the eyes of the global community, is considered a major offender of human rights because of their terrorist tactics and most notably, their oppression of …show more content…

At the time, mujahideen or “freedom fighter” groups fiercely battled the Soviet military. When the Soviets withdrew from the country, the country fell into greater chaos. Civil war was rampant, caused by hundreds of different former mujahideen groups battling each other for resources such as land and weapons. A man named Mullah Muhammad Omar was the mastermind behind the whole Taliban movement. He is an Afghan native who grew up in a very poor family with firm roots in Wahhabism. Mullah Muhammad Omar is a tall, slim, one-eyed man with an un-charismatic personality with a much focused mindset. In 1994, Mullah Muhammad Omar had a vision in his sleep, claiming that the prophet Muhammad himself told him to rise to power in order to end the chaos in Afghanistan. Being the devout Islamic fundamentalist he was, he began giving speeches and recruiting young students from Pakistani madrassas, religious schools, who shared the same narrow-minded view of Islam as him. Only starting out with about fifty, the Taliban numbers grew rapidly into about fifteen-thousand and began carrying out their goal of controlling …show more content…

During that time, they began to widely implement their extremist beliefs and practices on their own people. For example, if a Taliban militia soldier saw a woman in public not fully-covered in proper cloaks, the soldier would brutally punish her through stoning, or simply being shot. Also, they led approximately fifteen massacres between 1996 and 2001, which were organized killings led by Taliban officials in order to show an example to other civilians of what will happen if they challenge