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Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi might be the most enigmatic man in the Middle East.
At once, he is both Egypt’s first-ever democratically elected leader and a divisive figure with unprecedented powers. He swiftly ended, in one simple stroke in August, six decades of military rule. And he has since plunged the country into its deepest political crisis in years.
As an energetic, street-led opposition forms against Morsi’s recent moves — including a decree that granted him wide authority and the hurried passage of a controversial draft constitution — the former Muslim Brotherhood leader has lurched through the crisis with a series of mercurial and sometimes contradictory statements that have done little to temper the unrest.
His erratic leadership style, heavily influenced by the Brotherhood, is now in the spotlight as the future of Egypt hangs in the balance.
“Morsi is a real leader, not a dictator,” said Ibrahim Al Iraqi, a leader of the Brotherhood and its political arm, the Freedom and Justice Party (FJP), in a province near Cairo. “He doesn’t take decisions easily — he is a man who studies things carefully. A scientific man.”
Indeed, born to a family of farmers in a conservative village in the Nile Delta in 1951, Morsi was awarded with an Egyptian government scholarship to study material engineering at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles in 1978.
It is there that he earned his PhD, moving on to teach at California State University, Northridge. But later, he said he found American culture to be immoral and in decline. And by the time he returned to Egypt in the mid-1980s, he was already dedicated to the Brotherhood, itself undergoing a revival after years of repression and arrests.
Morsi — who also served at the time as the dean of the faculty of engineering at Egypt’s Zagazig University — then built a reputation for himself as a devoted and ideologically rigid Brotherhood operative, according to the organization’s members and academics that study the movement.
He favored a more conservative agenda for the secretive, decades-old Islamist movement, and he saw internal dissent as damaging to the cause.
Original piece is http://www.salon.com/2012/12/23/whos_the_real_mohamed_morsi/