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State of Emergency: Travels in a Troubled World (2016)

by Navid Kermani

Other authors: See the other authors section.

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441578,168 (4)2
This book ventures into the world beyond Lampedusa: the crisis belt that stretches from Kashmir across Pakistan and Afghanistan to the Arab world and beyond, to the borders and coasts of Europe. Celebrated author Navid Kermani reports from a region which is our immediate neighbour, despite all too often being depicted as remote and distant from our daily concerns. Kermani has visited the places where no CNN transmitter truck is parked and yet smouldering fires threaten world peace. In his widely praised, wonderfully agile and careful prose, he reports on NATO's war in Afghanistan and the underside of globalization in India, on the civil war in Syria and the struggle of Shiites and Kurds against the 'Islamic State' in Iraq. He was the only Western reporter present at the suppression of the mass protests in Tehran, travelled with Sufis through Pakistan, talked with Grand Ayatollah Sistani in Najaf, and observed the disastrous Mediterranean refugee route in Lampedusa.  Kermani's gripping reports allow us to understand a world in turmoil, to share the suspense and the suffering of the people in it. As if by magic, he brings individual lives and situations to life so vividly that complex and seemingly distant problems of world politics suddenly appear crystal clear. Our world too lies beyond Lampedusa.… (more)
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Ein sehr interessantes Buch!
Die Reportagen die der Autor seit 2005 aus Krisenregionen des Orients geschrieben hat, aus Kaschmir, Indien, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Iran, Syrien, Palästina und, als einziger europäischer Station, Lampedusa, geben mir vor allem folgendes Gefühl:
Es ist purer Zufall, dass ich hier bin, das ich in Frieden lebe. Es ist pures Glück und definitiv nicht mein Verdienst, dass weder ich noch meine Kinder alle die Schrecknisse, die der Autor teilweise ganz beiläufig erzählt, erleben. Umso erbärmlicher finde ich es, wie in unserem Land die Meinung forciert wird, wir könnten uns einfach dagegen abschotten, dass es - auch durch unser Zutun! - anderen so schlecht geht. Mich hat vieles sehr beschäftigt, aber am meisten vielleicht Palästina. Das liegt wahrscheinlich daran, dass ich schon in Israel war. Denn ratlos lassen mich all diese Reportagen zurück, sie geben mir keinen Ansatz für Lösungen. Aber sie geben mir das Verständnis dafür, dass der Islam eine menschenfreundliche Religion sein kann und nicht dass, was wir momentan wahrnehmen. Sie zeigen auch, dass selbst die Taliban nicht nur schwarz-weiß gesehen werden können.
Sie zeigen Vielfalt und das finde ich positiv. Sie zeigen Grausames und das finde ich sehr sehr traurig. ( )
  Wassilissa | Sep 29, 2016 |
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Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Kermani, NavidAuthorprimary authorall editionsconfirmed
Crawford, TonyTranslatorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
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The tea house where I was the youngest of the regulars, twenty years ago, has expanded but lost none of its charm.
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This book ventures into the world beyond Lampedusa: the crisis belt that stretches from Kashmir across Pakistan and Afghanistan to the Arab world and beyond, to the borders and coasts of Europe. Celebrated author Navid Kermani reports from a region which is our immediate neighbour, despite all too often being depicted as remote and distant from our daily concerns. Kermani has visited the places where no CNN transmitter truck is parked and yet smouldering fires threaten world peace. In his widely praised, wonderfully agile and careful prose, he reports on NATO's war in Afghanistan and the underside of globalization in India, on the civil war in Syria and the struggle of Shiites and Kurds against the 'Islamic State' in Iraq. He was the only Western reporter present at the suppression of the mass protests in Tehran, travelled with Sufis through Pakistan, talked with Grand Ayatollah Sistani in Najaf, and observed the disastrous Mediterranean refugee route in Lampedusa.  Kermani's gripping reports allow us to understand a world in turmoil, to share the suspense and the suffering of the people in it. As if by magic, he brings individual lives and situations to life so vividly that complex and seemingly distant problems of world politics suddenly appear crystal clear. Our world too lies beyond Lampedusa.

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