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mujahideen
(redirected from mujahidin)

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Wikipedia, Hutchinson 0.02 sec.

mujahideen

 Arabic mujahidun (“those engaged in jihad”)

In its broadest sense, those Muslims who proclaim themselves warriors for the faith. Its Arabic singular, mujahid, was not an uncommon personal name from the early Islamic period onward. However, the term did not gain popular currency as a collective or plural noun referring to “holy warriors” until the 18th century in India, where it became associated with Muslim revivalism. In the 20th century the term was used most commonly in Iran and Afghanistan. In Iran the Mojahedin-e Khalq (“Mujahideen of the People”), a group combining Islamic and Marxist ideologies, engaged in a long-term guerrilla war against the leadership of the Islamic republic. The name was most closely associated, however, with members of a number of guerrilla groups operating in Afghanistan that opposed invading Soviet forces and eventually toppled the Afghan communist government during the Afghan War (1979–92). Rival factions thereafter fell out among themselves precipitating the rise of one faction, the Taliban. Like the term jihad—to which it is lexicographically connected—the name has been used rather freely, both in the press and by Islamic militants themselves, and often has been used to refer to any Muslim groups engaged in hostilities with non-Muslims or even with secularized Muslim regimes.



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As Hauner has written, "keeping the mujahidin divided [was] the best way to prevent the re-emergence of a larger Pashtunistan Question.
Although they mistakenly report that the Laskar Jihad joined the Indonesian Council of Mujahidin (p.
The first grew out of Sheikh's encounters with Somali families who had sought refuge in northeast Kenya after the outbreak of civil war in the early '90s; the second out of his discovery of the three million Afghans who had similarly fled to northern Pakistan to escape the Soviet occupation, the warring mujahidin factions, or the Taliban.
 
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