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Behind the Burqa: Our Life in Afghanistan and How We Escaped to Freedom

Behind the Burqa: Our Life in Afghanistan and How We Escaped to Freedom
By Batya Swift Yasgur

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Advance Praise for Behind the Burqa

"Whenever and wherever adults make war, children die and women are subjected to fear and humiliation. This is true of Afghanistan too. Read this harrowing book. The tragic yet heroic tale of two women is told with great simplicity. They will haunt you."
–Elie Wiesel, Nobel Peace Prize Laureate

"The stories of Sulima and Hala achingly articulate the twin and enduring legacies of misogyny and violence. A critical historical document, Behind the Burqa ultimately reveals the unbreakable strength of Afghan women."
–Eve Ensler, author of The Vagina Monologues
Founder and Artistic Director, V–Day

"Behind the Burqa provides important information about conditions in Afghanistan, as well as the plight of asylum–seekers in the United States. I highly recommend this book to all people who are concerned about human rights, both at home and abroad."
–Senator Sam Brownback, (R. Kansas)
ranking member, Immigration Subcommittee, Committee on the Judiciary

"This book is a gripping reading experience, and it also offers important suggestions for those who would like to participate in making our asylum politics more humane."
–Eleanor Acer, Director, Asylum Program, Lawyers Committee for Human Rights

"This book shows the injustices suffered by innocent women seeking asylum in the U. S. and the power of religious faith to provide hope and courage even in prison."
–Fauziya Kassindja, author of Do They Hear You When You Cry

"Sulima and Hala epitomize the worldwide struggle of women for equality and justice. Their story is gripping and illuminating."
–Jessica Neuwirth, President of Equality Now


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #578918 in Books
  • Published on: 2002-11-12
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 256 pages

Editorial Reviews

Review
"The stories of Sulima and Hala achingly articulate the twin and enduring legacies of misogyny and violence. A critical historical document, BEHIND THE BURQA ultimately reveals the unbreakable strength of Afghan women."(Eve Ensler, Author, The Vagina Monologues, Founder and Artistic Director, V–Day)

"...a fascinating story..." (Publishing News, 2 August 2002)

This memoir from two sisters who fled Afghanistan 20 years apart distinguishes itself from the spate of books about women in similar circumstances by the sheer breadth of its coverage. Through these first–hand accounts of oppression, abuse and downright misery, readers come to understand that the much–maligned Taliban only picked up where the Mujihaddin left off in curtailing women′s rights. In fact, as "Sulima" and "Hala"′s mother points out, "(The Taliban) is better than the Mujihaddin. The laws are strict and harsh, but at least we know what to expect. They′re not just randomly breaking into houses and killing people.... If we keep all the rules, then we will be safe." The sisters′ tales of domestic abuse and other now familiar yet hair–raising injustices may crystallize the turbulent historical timeline, but it seems that their individual voices have been muted in translation. Unfortunately, it′s so difficult to distinguish one from the other that much of the impact of this well–intentioned book is lost. (Oct.) (Publishers Weekly, September 30, 2002)

Review
"...A critical historical document, BEHIND THE BURQA ultimately reveals the unbreakable strength of Afghan women." (Eve Ensler, Author, The Vagina Monologues, Founder and Artistic Director, V–Day)

"...a fascinating story..." (Publishing News, 2 August 2002)

"...The sisters′ tales of domestic abuse and other now familiar yet hair–raising injustices may crystallize the turbulnt historical timeline..." (Publishers Weekly, September 30, 2002)

From the Inside Flap
Faceless behind their burqas under the harsh and ruthless rule of the Taliban, the women of Afghanistan were, for decades, voiceless as well. Terrorized and persecuted during twenty years of war, famine, and despotism, two generations of Afghan women have come of age under conditions of oppression and privation unimaginable and unpublicized in the West.

In Behind the Burqa, you’ll meet two sisters whose thirst for freedom and independence led them to extraordinary acts of courage, defiance, and desperation. For fear of reprisal, "Sulima" and "Hala" cannot, even now, reveal their true identities. What they do reveal in remarkable detail is the private torment of women in Afghanistan and their decades–long public struggle for political rights, education, and equality.

Sulima paints a vivid portrait of growing up in a strict Muslim household. She tells the chilling story of how her own brothers betrayed her in the name of family honor–and she recounts the important role she played in the formation of Afghanistan’s first women’s rights and literacy movements in the 1970s. Sulima also relates the events that led to the stark choice she was forced to make between being sent to prison and leaving her country forever.

Hala, sixteen years younger than Sulima, describes a childhood plagued by the rise of the Mujihaddin and the unspeakable brutality of mobs intent on ridding Afghanistan of all Western influence. Through her eyes, we witness a midnight raid on her family’s home, the poverty and starvation that beset the nation during its years of war and anarchy, the perils of running a clandestine school for girls under the Taliban regime, the terrors of being arrested and brutalized, and the dangers of fleeing Afghanistan. Just as shocking is the story of her arrival as an asylum–seeker in the United States–and her determination at the hands of immigration authorities.

This unforgettable tale of bravery, struggle, and survival reveals an Afghanistan only hinted at in news reports and government statements. Sulima and Hala introduce dozens of their "sisters," whose colorful personalities, capabilities, and hopes for the future were for so long hidden. Behind the Burqa will anger you, it will frighten you, and, ultimately, it will inspire you with the compelling and suspenseful stories of these women, their tragedies, their triumphs, and their fierce determination to prevail against the odds.


Customer Reviews

A Truly Amazing and Revealing Book by Two Exceptional Afg5
This book tells two stories. The first by one sister ,Sulima ,who in her quest to campaign for equal rights for women in Afghanistan endures unimaginable suffering,hardship and betrayal.She has to flee her beloved country and settle in the Western world. The strength and courage that she shows put me to shame and her intelligence, compassion and ability to work are never failing.
The second is by her sister, Hala, who despite the prospect of extreme brutality or even death,ran a school for children which was totally forbiden under the Taliban. Her story tells us the harsh and barbaric reality of how cruel these men were. It also tells us of the terrible way in which she was treated as an asylum seeker in America.
Reading this book is both shocking and humbling and make's one realise how much is taken for granted by those living in "free countries". Sulima and Hala are truly exceptional characters.