![]() Planting Instructions: Dig a hole large enough to accommodate the roots without bending them.Flower Form: Heart shaped (larger than eximia) pendulous racemes to 9" long.Foliage Type: Finely dissected medium green leaves.Light Requirements: Partial Shade, Full Shade.Botanical Name: Dicentra spectabilis alba.Bleeding Hearts is essential reading for scholars, activists, policymakers, and anyone who wants to understand the fine line we all tread between democracy and autocracy. Based on his own fieldwork and engaging interviews with those who resorted to violence, there is no better introduction to this topic. How do we explain the sudden shift in allegiance among many of these very activists who subsequently joined the ranks of the violent movement against the state? In Bleeding Hearts, Abdallah Hendawy, a pro-democracy activist in Egypt at the time and since a trained sociologist and scholar, offers a most insightful and compelling explanation of this transformation. In Egypt, during ‘Arab Spring’ 2011, pro-democracy activists committed to non-violent tactics filled Tahrir Square for the eighteen days that culminated in the overthrow of an autocratic president who had ruled the country for thirty years. ![]() General readers through faculty professionals. Although the author's sample is relatively small, it is backed by more substantial secondary literature on radicalization and Egypt generally. ![]() As he elaborates, “the combination of trauma, guilt, anger, and despondency put these individuals in a trigger state … comprised the perfect storm … to resolve unsettled grievances" (p. Hendawy argues that their radicalization was the result of government-sponsored torture, marked by its penchant for humiliation. 53), and offers ethnographic profiles of various insurgents who peacefully protested in 2011 but changed tactics by 2013. In Bleeding Hearts, Hendawy seeks answers to the question: why did some peaceful advocates of change switch tactics and later adopt violence? He eschews the terms terrorism and extremism because of their ambiguity and frequent misuse by Middle Eastern governments, preferring the simplicity of “violent insurgents” (p. Abusive state practices traumatized the activists and created a litany of unsettled grievances without recourse, giving rise to a formidable desire for revenge against those who violated them – both individuals and the institutions they represent.įrom January to February 2011, the world watched as a wave of peaceful, organized protests swept through Egypt, ending the nearly 30-year dictatorship of former President Hosni Mubarak. The book ultimately concludes that repressive political environments, particularly the systematic authoritarian practices by state security agencies against political activists, are largely responsible for radicalization. He demonstrates how and why select Egyptian activists turned to violent tactics in the course of their political engagement. Hendawy thoroughly examines the tumultuous events that followed the 2013 military takeover and the journey of several radicalized individuals. Through multiple interviews, ethnographic observations, field work, and qualitative data analysis, Hendawy challenges the dominant theoretical paradigms on radicalization that often attribute this complex phenomenon to ideological or religious beliefs. Abdallah Hendawy sheds light on stories of several political activists who abandoned their commitment to nonviolence and took up arms against the state. Bleeding Hearts: From Passionate Activism to Violent Insurgency in Egypt examines the wave of violence that broke out in Egypt in the aftermath of the 2013 military takeover against the country’s first democratically elected president.
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