Naming a library
This appears to be the first time that a library has been dedicated to the name of the man who founded al Qaeda.

There are no portraits of bin Laden inside, nor books authored by him, and Maulana Abdul Aziz tells curious media personnel that it is a fitting memorial to a hero, and will contain only books on Islamic teaching. PHOTO: AFP
As an icon, Osama bin Laden has been fading from view. The new library would have gone unnoticed by the wider world had not local people seen the sign outside and alerted the media — who were swiftly on the trail both nationally and internationally. As an entity, al Qaeda is no longer the power in the land it once was, with operations moving to other parts of the world such as the Arabian peninsula and Africa. Anti-American sentiment still runs high in Pakistan, today fed by drone strikes which are themselves fading as the talks with the TTP stutter on and we enter a tense hiatus, neither at war nor at peace, and with the violence seemingly happening in slow motion rather than on fast-forwards. Bin Laden dedicated his life to the overthrow of both the states of Pakistan and Afghanistan, failing in both instances. Perhaps, that should be the most fitting memorial — a library dedicated to bloody failure, a puerile legacy at best.
Published in The Express Tribune, April 21st, 2014.
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