The Monks of Tibhirine: Faith, Love and Terror in Algeria Book + PRICE WATCH * Amazon pricing is not included in price watch

The Monks of Tibhirine: Faith, Love and Terror in Algeria Book

In the spring of 1996, armed men broke into a Trappist monastery and took seven monks hostage, using them as pawns in a plot to free imprisoned terrorists. Two months later, the monks' severed heads were found in a tree, their bodies never recovered.Read More

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  • Amazon Review

    Few Americans heard about it, but the story gripped Europe (and especially France) during the summer of 1996: The mysterious kidnapping and murder of seven Trappist monks living in the Algerian village of Tibhirine at their monastery of Notre-Dame de l'Atlas. John W. Kiser III tells their story, or at least what parts of it can be known; much of what happened to them remains unclear, including the motives of their captors. Parts of The Monks of Tibhirine are grim, but this is an unavoidable fact of the case. The monks' bodies, for instance, never have been found--except for their heads. Kiser describes the scene: "The monks' desiccated faces, hollow eye sockets, and exposed teeth made them look like mummies." (Apparently they had been buried, then disinterred.) Readers looking for a nonfiction thriller won't find it on these pages, however. Much of the book is a history of monks living in Algeria, and much of the rest chronicles the good relationships the seven doomed monks shared with their Muslim neighbors. Their devotion to both their faith and their neighbors is inspiring; the way they died is abhorrent. --John Miller

  • Product Description

    In the spring of l996 armed men broke into a Trappist monastery in war-torn Algeria and took seven monks hostage, pawns in a murky negotiation to free imprisoned terrorists. Two months later their severed heads were found in a tree; their bodies were never recovered.

    The village of Tibhirine had sprung up around the monastery because it was a holy place protected by the Virgin Mary, revered by Christians and Muslims alike. But napalm, helicopters, and gunfire had become regular accompaniments to the monastic routine as the violence engulfing Algeria drew closer to the isolated cloister high in the Atlas Mountains.

  • 0312302940
  • 9780312302948
  • John W. Kiser
  • 13 March 2003
  • Saint Martin's Press Inc.
  • Paperback (Book)
  • 352
  • New edition
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