COUNTRY
AfghanistanPOPULATION
30,419,928 (July 2012 est.)GDP PER CAPITA
$1,000 (2011 est.)RELIGIONS
Sunni Muslim 80%, Shia Muslim 19%, other 1%AT THE CENTER
RELATED RESOURCES
ORGANIZATIONS (1)
QUOTES (14)
Hamid Karzai on Terrorism as a Political Mutation
January 23, 2008
Article 17: Education
January 4, 2004
Article 1: The State
January 4, 2004
January 23, 2008
Article 17: Education
January 4, 2004
Article 1: The State
January 4, 2004
PUBLICATIONS (2)
The Taliban and the Crisis of Afghanistan
January 1, 2009
Taliban: Militant Islam, Oil, and Fundamentalism in Central Asia
January 1, 2000
January 1, 2009
Taliban: Militant Islam, Oil, and Fundamentalism in Central Asia
January 1, 2000
Afghanistan
People (3)
Afghan society and politics are simultaneously united by Islam – one of the few agents of social cohesion in a land split along ethnic and tribal lines – and threatened by militant Islamism. Though Zoroastrians, Buddhists and Greeks all left an imprint on Afghanistan’s early history, Islam has dominated its religious landscape since the 9th century. When the Soviets invaded in 1979 to support the country’s new communist government, Islam united the multiethnic opposition to the atheist regime. Once the insurgency succeeded in 1989, the country plunged into civil war. The radical Taliban regime gained power in 1996 but was deposed by a US-led invasion in 2001. However, its supporters remain a significant power in large parts of the country. The current Constitution of Afghanistan guarantees freedom of religion but mandates that Islam is the state religion and no law may contradict Islam. Islam remains a major political force, with numerous Islamic political parties as well as an ongoing Taliban insurgency.
Abdullah Abdullah is best known in the US for challenging Hamid Karzai in the 2008 Afghan presidential election, but his political career dates back to the anti-Soviet and anti-Taliban campaigns of the 1980s and 90s. After the American-led invasion in 2001, Abdullah served as Foreign Minister under President Karzai for five years. In this role, he had the delicate task of explaining the prominent role of religion in the newly re-established Islamic Republic of Afghanistan to a largely secular...
Full List of Publications
Thomas F. Farr is Director of the Religious Freedom Project at the Berkley Center for Religion, Peace, and World Affairs and a Visiting Associate Professor of Religion and International Affairs at Georgetown’s Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service. A former American diplomat and leading authority on international religious freedom, Farr has published widely, including "Diplomacy in an Age of Faith" in Foreign Affairs (March/April 2008), and World of Faith and...
Thomas F. Farr is Director of the Religious Freedom Project at the Berkley Center for Religion, Peace, and World Affairs and a Visiting Associate Professor of Religion and International Affairs at Georgetown’s Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service. A former American diplomat and leading authority on international religious freedom, Farr has published widely, including "Diplomacy in an Age of Faith" in Foreign Affairs (March/April 2008), and World of Faith and...
Hamid Karzai has served as the President of Afghanistan since 2002, a position that reflects his considerable experience in Afghan politics. After finishing graduate work in India in 1983, Karzai joined the mujahideen resistance during the Soviet-Afghan war. He then worked in the Foreign Relations unit of the mujahideen interim government until civil war broke out. During the 1990s Karzai promoted a Loya Jirga (grand council) as a peaceful answer to the conflict. In the wake of the American...