This paper will examine the role played by the former veterans of Algeria's war of independence (the mujahideen) in the construction of Algeria's collective memory. I will argue that these veterans were able to embrace a broader vision of Algeria's national destiny while weaving themselves into the local historical narratives of their regions, when the legitimacy of the centralised state was threatened by a decade of civil unrest and violence, known within Algeria as the 'dark decade'. The term 'dark decade' is used locally to refer to the 1990s, a period bracketed by the controversial parliamentary elections of 1990-91 and the election of President Abdelaziz Bouteflika in 1999. Much of the evidence presented in this paper is from archival material I collected at the Algerian National Archives, the Sanctuary of the Martyr and other research centres in the country from 2006-2007. The veterans' ability to navigate both national and local political arenas explains their largely...
Comments
(Leave your comments here about this item.)