At home with Osama bin Laden from the UK Telegraph details reports on the new memoir "Growing Up Bin Laden" from Osama bin Laden's first wife Najwa and son Omar, about the al-Qaeda mastermind who treated his family harshly - but had a gold colored Mercedes and a speedboat..
Najwa married her cousin Bin Laden when he was 17 and she was 15 and went on to bear him seven sons, including Omar, and four daughters.
He went on to take a total of six wives and kept them in seclusion in spartan homes in Saudi Arabia and Sudan where they were not allowed to use electrical appliances, according to the book to be published in Britain in November.
"My father would not allow my mother to turn on the air conditioning that the contractor had built into the apartment building," Omar said. "Neither would he allow her to use the refrigerator that was standing in the kitchen."
The young couple travelled to the United States soon after the 1979 Iranian revolution, where Bin Laden met Abdullah Azzam, the radical Palestinian cleric regarded as his ideological mentor.
Soon after he began journeying to Pakistan to support the anti-Soviet resistance. He would impress his sons with tales of battles against the Soviet forces occupying Afghanistan during the 1980s, but became increasingly strict on his return from the war.
However the book also reveals that Bin Laden, who is accused of masterminding the September 11 attacks and remains at large eight years later despite the world's biggest manhunt, had at least one gold-coloured Mercedes and once bought a speedboat.
Najwa said: "Nothing gave him more satisfaction than having a full day to take a speedy drive to the desert, where he would leave his automobile while he took long walks."
Forced into exile in the Sudan for denouncing the Saudi royal family's acceptance of US troops in the country, he tried to prepare his family for hardship by making them sleep rough in the desert and climb mountains.
However in lighter moments his sons admired his horsemanship and he liked to show off his mathematical ability by challenging people to beat his arithmetic with a calculator.
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