Whispers of war : an Afghan freedom fighter's account of the Soviet invasion
Material type: TextPublication details: New Delhi Sage 2017ISBN: 978-93-860-6277-2Subject(s): AfghanistanDDC classification: 958.1045 Summary: Whispers of War: An Afghan Freedom Fighter’s Account of the Soviet Invasion is the real-life tale of a young political leader, Masood Khalili. Son of Ustad Khalilullah Khalili, the great Afghan poet, he motivated his people and led them in their fight against the ‘Red Army’. Alongside his friend Commander Ahmad Shah Massoud, Khalili traveled by foot, on horseback and on donkey, sharing the tales of pain, despair and despondence of his countrymen and women. In letters to his beloved wife Sohaillah, he writes of his journey through the Himalayan range, accompanied by a team of foreign journalists. The book is an account of the search for ever elusive peace in a country ravaged by war—a war that changed the landscape of the country and the fabric of its society.Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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BK | Stack | 958.1045 KHA/W (Browse shelf (Opens below)) | Available | 54126 |
Browsing Kannur University Central Library shelves, Shelving location: Stack Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
958.104 GIR/K Killing the cranes : a reporter's journey through three decades of war in Afghanistan | 958.1044 FUL/S The Soviet occupation of Afghanistan | 958.1045 COO/U Unholy wars : Afghanistan, America, and international terrorism | 958.1045 KHA/W Whispers of war : an Afghan freedom fighter's account of the Soviet invasion | 958.1045 YOU/A Afghanistan--the bear trap : the defeat of a superpower | 958.1046 AND/L The lion's grave: dispatches from Afghanistan | 958.1046 BIC/W Walking the precipice : witness to the rise of the Taliban in Afghanistan |
Whispers of War: An Afghan Freedom Fighter’s Account of the Soviet Invasion is the real-life tale of a young political leader, Masood Khalili. Son of Ustad Khalilullah Khalili, the great Afghan poet, he motivated his people and led them in their fight against the ‘Red Army’. Alongside his friend Commander Ahmad Shah Massoud, Khalili traveled by foot, on horseback and on donkey, sharing the tales of pain, despair and despondence of his countrymen and women. In letters to his beloved wife Sohaillah, he writes of his journey through the Himalayan range, accompanied by a team of foreign journalists.
The book is an account of the search for ever elusive peace in a country ravaged by war—a war that changed the landscape of the country and the fabric of its society.
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