• The Call

    by Krithika Varagaur
    Price $15.99

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    The Call

Virtual Event: Krithika Varagur

presenting

The Call:
Inside the Global Saudi Religious Project

in conversation with KAREN ELLIOTT HOUSE

Date

May
7
Thursday
May 7, 2020
7:00 PM ET

Location

Join our online event (or pre-register) via the link in the event description.

Tickets

Free - $5 contribution suggested at registration

Harvard Book Store's virtual event series welcomes award-winning journalist KRITHIKA VARAGUR—Harvard alumna and The Guardian's Indonesia correspondent—for a discussion of her book The Call: Inside the Global Saudi Religious Project. She will be joined in conversation by Pulitzer Prize–winning reporter KAREN ELLIOTT HOUSE, author of On Saudi Arabia: Its People, Past, Religion, Fault Lines—and Future.

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About The Call

Everyone talks about "Saudi money," but no one really knows what it is. Journalist Krithika Varagur, a longtime chronicler of religion and politics, tells the story of Saudi influence as it has never been told before, in a book reported across the breadth of the Muslim world, from Nigeria to Indonesia to Kosovo.

The Call connects the dots on Saudi Arabia's campaign to propagate its brand of ultraconservative Islam worldwide after it became oil-rich in the 20th century. Varagur visits diverse outposts of its influence, from a Saudi university in Jakarta to a beleaguered Shi'a movement in Nigeria. She finds that the campaign has had remarkably broad and sometimes uniform effects, from the intolerance of religious minorities to the rise of powerful Saudi-educated clerics. The kingdom has spent billions of dollars on its da'wa, or call to Islam, at many points with the direct support of the United States. But what have been the lasting effects of Saudi influence today? And what really happened to their campaign in the 21st century, after oil revenues slumped and after their activities became increasingly subject to international scrutiny? Drawing upon dozens of interviews, government records, and historical research, The Call lays out what we really talk about when we talk about Saudi money.

Praise for The Call

The Call provides a first-hand deep dive into the facts of how Saudi Arabia spawned Salafi movements abroad that now are largely self-sustaining, as the kingdom yields to global pressure (and the reality of diminished oil revenues) by curbing its external spending to spread fundamentalist Islam. These days when so few journalists bother to dig for facts, preferring to pontificate, Krithika Varagur’s work stands out.” —Karen Elliott House, author of On Saudi Arabia and winner of the Pulitzer Prize for international reporting

"A comprehensive analysis of Saudi Arabia’s decades of proselytizing its ultra conservative Islamic views throughout the world. Based on meticulous research and field work, this is the best account in print of how our ally has spread its intolerance and extremism but also how that has evolved over time. A must read for Islam watchers." —Bruce Riedel, director of the Brookings Intelligence Project and the CIA's former Saudi Arabia station chief

Karen Elliott House
Karen Elliott House

Karen Elliott House

Karen Elliott House is a graduate of the University of Texas at Austin. She studied and taught at Harvard University’s Institute of Politics and was a senior fellow at the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University.

Photo Credit: Pryde Brown

Krithika Varagur
Krithika Varagur

Krithika Varagur

Krithika Varagur is an award-winning American journalist, essayist, and humorist based in Indonesia. Her work focuses on religion and politics. She is The Guardian’s Indonesia correspondent, was previously the Financial Times’ reporter in Indonesia, and has been published widely in other outlets including the Atlantic, the New York Times, the New York Review of Books, the New Republic, Foreign Policy, NPR, and the London Review of Books.

Join our online event (or pre-register) via the link in the event description.
Event Series: Virtual Event Series

Harvard Book Store’s award-winning event series continues online! Named "Best of Boston: 2020 Best Virtual Author Series" and "2021 Best Virtual Author Series" by Boston magazine.

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