In Egypt’s 2012 elections, the Muslim Brotherhood came to power after many years of repression, an unprecedented victory for the country’s most active opposition movement. The Brotherhood’s journey can be divided into several stages. One of the most important, which has not received enough attention, is the imprisonment of many of its major figures. Long before the coup that overthrew President Mohamed Morsi in 2013, the Arab nationalist President Gamal Abdel Nasser brutally put down the movement with mass arrests. The Brotherhood’s members dominated Egypt’s prisons, but they were far from the only activists in the system, which also held communists, Zionists, and other Jewish prisoners. This article uses the memoirs of the incarcerated enemies of the state to examine the struggles of these groups inside Egypt’s prisons and show how the institutions served as platforms to promote the ideological struggle against the regime.
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