Lost to the World: A Memoir of Faith, Family, and Five Years in Terrorist Captivity

Shahbaz Taseer's memoir of his five-year-long captivity at the hands of the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan.

In late August 2011, Shahbaz Taseer was driving to his office in Lahore when he was dragged from his car at gunpoint and kidnapped by members of the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU), a Taliban-affiliated Uzbek terrorist group. Shahbaz's father, the late Pakistani governor, had recently been assassinated. His crime: speaking in support of a Christian woman who had been accused of blasphemy and sentenced to death. Though Taseer himself wasn't much interested in politics, he was somewhat of a public figure, and he represented a more tolerant, internationally connected Pakistan that the IMU despised.

What followed was nearly five years of torture and harrowing danger while Taseer was held captive, his fate determined by the infighting of the IMU, the Taliban, and ISIS. Lost to the World is his memoir of that time-a story of extraordinary sorrow but also of goodness and faith. While deeply dramatic, this tale is also comedic; for Taseer, humor, as much as the Koran, provided a light by which to see his own humanity, even under the most inhumane conditions, and to find a way back to his family.

In a time when Western leaders use fear-mongering rhetoric to paint all followers of Islam as dangerous fundamentalists, Lost to the World illustrates the chasm between Muslim terrorists and ordinary Muslim citizens, and how terrorist organizations gain strength from the war on terror.

A Macmillan Audio production from Farrar, Straus and Giroux.

1141358783
Lost to the World: A Memoir of Faith, Family, and Five Years in Terrorist Captivity

Shahbaz Taseer's memoir of his five-year-long captivity at the hands of the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan.

In late August 2011, Shahbaz Taseer was driving to his office in Lahore when he was dragged from his car at gunpoint and kidnapped by members of the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU), a Taliban-affiliated Uzbek terrorist group. Shahbaz's father, the late Pakistani governor, had recently been assassinated. His crime: speaking in support of a Christian woman who had been accused of blasphemy and sentenced to death. Though Taseer himself wasn't much interested in politics, he was somewhat of a public figure, and he represented a more tolerant, internationally connected Pakistan that the IMU despised.

What followed was nearly five years of torture and harrowing danger while Taseer was held captive, his fate determined by the infighting of the IMU, the Taliban, and ISIS. Lost to the World is his memoir of that time-a story of extraordinary sorrow but also of goodness and faith. While deeply dramatic, this tale is also comedic; for Taseer, humor, as much as the Koran, provided a light by which to see his own humanity, even under the most inhumane conditions, and to find a way back to his family.

In a time when Western leaders use fear-mongering rhetoric to paint all followers of Islam as dangerous fundamentalists, Lost to the World illustrates the chasm between Muslim terrorists and ordinary Muslim citizens, and how terrorist organizations gain strength from the war on terror.

A Macmillan Audio production from Farrar, Straus and Giroux.

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Lost to the World: A Memoir of Faith, Family, and Five Years in Terrorist Captivity

Lost to the World: A Memoir of Faith, Family, and Five Years in Terrorist Captivity

by Shahbaz Taseer

Narrated by Adam Karim

Unabridged — 8 hours, 21 minutes

Lost to the World: A Memoir of Faith, Family, and Five Years in Terrorist Captivity

Lost to the World: A Memoir of Faith, Family, and Five Years in Terrorist Captivity

by Shahbaz Taseer

Narrated by Adam Karim

Unabridged — 8 hours, 21 minutes

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Overview

Shahbaz Taseer's memoir of his five-year-long captivity at the hands of the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan.

In late August 2011, Shahbaz Taseer was driving to his office in Lahore when he was dragged from his car at gunpoint and kidnapped by members of the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU), a Taliban-affiliated Uzbek terrorist group. Shahbaz's father, the late Pakistani governor, had recently been assassinated. His crime: speaking in support of a Christian woman who had been accused of blasphemy and sentenced to death. Though Taseer himself wasn't much interested in politics, he was somewhat of a public figure, and he represented a more tolerant, internationally connected Pakistan that the IMU despised.

What followed was nearly five years of torture and harrowing danger while Taseer was held captive, his fate determined by the infighting of the IMU, the Taliban, and ISIS. Lost to the World is his memoir of that time-a story of extraordinary sorrow but also of goodness and faith. While deeply dramatic, this tale is also comedic; for Taseer, humor, as much as the Koran, provided a light by which to see his own humanity, even under the most inhumane conditions, and to find a way back to his family.

In a time when Western leaders use fear-mongering rhetoric to paint all followers of Islam as dangerous fundamentalists, Lost to the World illustrates the chasm between Muslim terrorists and ordinary Muslim citizens, and how terrorist organizations gain strength from the war on terror.

A Macmillan Audio production from Farrar, Straus and Giroux.


Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly

10/10/2022

Taseer, the son of assassinated Pakistani governor Salman Taseer, delivers a harrowing memoir about his abduction in Pakistan. In August 2011, Taseer was kidnapped by members of the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan and held captive for five years, during which time he was repeatedly drugged with ketamine, beaten, and taken to the country outside Lahore, “to a place where men go to vanish, either by choice or by force.” Taseer’s torture, spearheaded by a sadistic ringleader known as Muhammad Ali, was videotaped to extract a ransom from his family, and as the months turned into years, Taseer contemplated suicide: “Death preoccupied my mind.” But there were glimpses of hope; a guard allowed Taseer to listen to Manchester United soccer games on the radio and, though the guard was one of the tormenters, Taseer recognized how, with a small but important act, “He’d saved my life.” Later, he was released by a different guard, but never found out why. Taseer’s story is both chilling and infused with bravery and wisdom (“Hindsight can be cruel, especially if you are judge, jury, and executioner”). This testament to the resilience of the human spirit will inspire any reader. Agent: David McCormick, McCormick Literary. (Nov.)

From the Publisher

"Taseer’s story is both chilling and infused with bravery and wisdom. This testament to the resilience of the human spirit will inspire any reader." —Publishers Weekly

“What a book. Lost to the World is a survival narrative unlike any other. In this unforgettable page-turner, true-life miracles and high-tech death fall from the sky. Our hero endures medieval torments, witnesses acts of sudden kindness, and escapes one surreal prison and battlefield after another. Above all, Shahbaz Taseer’s account of his captivity and liberation is, like Papillon and Unbroken, a deeply moving testament to the triumph of the human spirit.” —Héctor Tobar, Pulitzer Prize–winning author of Deep Down Dark

“Shahbaz Taseer draws you into his endless imprisonment. I was afraid of turning the page, afraid of what lay ahead. I found myself oscillating between tears and laughter. This memoir is a complete tour de force of emotions. I am convinced that it was Taseer’s compassion and resilience that kept him alive and that he was guided by the faith he had in his family and the courage instilled in him by his father.”
—Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy, Academy Award–winning filmmaker and journalist

Kirkus Reviews

2022-09-08
A Pakistani businessman recounts his harsh captivity under the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan.

On Aug. 6, 2011, Taseer, the son of a prominent Pakistani media tycoon and politician who was assassinated in January of the same year, was abducted on his way to his office in Lahore. The kidnappers hid Taseer first in a safe house in Lahore, then spirited him away to Mir Ali, the border region of Northern Waziristan run by warlords. The Uzbek cell was headed by the brutal terrorist Muhammad Ali, who seemed to enjoy tormenting Taseer with twisted Quranic logic and torturing him without mercy while being filmed to extort ransom money from his family. Ali considered Taseer his “golden goose,” and he made exorbitant demands that Taseer’s family could not meet. The kidnappers kept the author in squalid conditions, without electricity, “chained and barely able to move,” with nothing but a Quran to read. For the first time in his life, he notes, he began reading it “seriously,” and he challenged his captor on his fraudulent interpretation of the text and his “great pious superiority.” Taseer maintained his courage and sanity by thinking about his father, who withstood months of solitary confinement in prison in the 1980s. After drone strikes on the camp, Taseer was moved to Ali’s home complex, and Ali’s compassionate mother-in-law put a stop to his torture. When full-scale war broke out between the Taliban and the government, Ali shifted allegiances from the Taliban to the Islamic State group. During the ensuing chaos, Taseer was able to slip way, ending four and a half years in captivity. The fluid, often dramatic narrative is punctuated with raw, graphic details, but the author stops short of rendering deep political or religious insights. Nonetheless, Taseer’s story alone makes the book a page-turner.

A rare story of actual survival from brutal terrorists.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940176472912
Publisher: Macmillan Audio
Publication date: 11/15/2022
Edition description: Unabridged
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