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Mayada, Daughter of Iraq: One Woman's…
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Mayada, Daughter of Iraq: One Woman's Survival Under Saddam Hussein (edition 2004)

by Jean Sasson

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470853,137 (3.76)8
Not only the story of a woman intimately connected to Iraq's cultured, ancient history, this title also offers a powerful witness to the terror and horror wrought by Saddam on the lives and souls of its ordinary citizens.
Member:Aprilmercedes
Title:Mayada, Daughter of Iraq: One Woman's Survival Under Saddam Hussein
Authors:Jean Sasson
Info:NAL Trade (2004), Paperback, 352 pages
Collections:Your library
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Mayada, Daughter of Iraq: One Woman's Survival Under Saddam Hussein by Jean Sasson

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English (5)  Dutch (3)  All languages (8)
Showing 5 of 5
8401335191
  archivomorero | Jun 27, 2022 |
Mayada. What can I say about this book? It is hard because I am in the minority thinking this is not such a great book.

Yes I do agree it was interesting to get to know a bit of gossip about Saddam Hussein but most interesting was of course the history of Iraq and I noticed many readers really thought that was interesting and I agree.

Why I did not like the book as much as others did is because of the way Jean Sasson writes. She seems to be more a romance writer and I have read other books by her but with this book it started to become a hinder.. She is always trying to make the muslim world a beautiful world but that is not easy when you are talking about women in a cell being tortured by very cruel muslim men, but then made the women that had been in that jail for years and being tortured many times, laugh and joke a lot.
Very unrealistic

In one passage she writes about the most beautiful man she had ever seen.

Quote: while she was in that terror cell: Maya stared at the ceiling,remembering one of the most physically exquisite men she had met.
An image of his handsome face floated before her eyes. She recalled how a playful smile often dimpled his mouth.
He was so handsome it was rumored that many women fell in love with him at first sight. His name was Ali Hassan Al-Majid aka Chemical Ali.end of quote

She made me so curious I decided to look him up.


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WTF!!!!!!!!!!!!!


So most of the women in this book are gorgeous with green eyes and are victim.

I am not so sure about that anymore after reading [bc:Infidel|81227|Infidel|Ayaan Hirsi Ali|https://d.gr-assets.com/books/1388256729s/81227.jpg|1133588]
and noticing how these women act when they have freedom. They still want to hold on to the old ways.

When reading about Iraq in this book I could not help but realize how cruel many people out there were.See the last centuries and it has always been in turmoil. So if I make the link to what is happening in Europe at the moment where many muslims are silently and not so silently supporting isis, I now understand that the Western countries should not have interfered back then. They are a totally different people than we are here while in Europe many have studied are educated and lived peaceful, accepting people from other religions,cultures and different sexual orientation, many of them think gays should be hanged, women can be used and are not worth much.

Now it seems Europe is going backwards. Gays have to be more careful again. Jews do not feel so safe as they did before and I did not even begin about the muslim terrorism. Women can not walk on the streets without being called whore even when wearing jeans and a normal top so perhaps that is why I get annoyed when she is writing about so much cruelty but still feels the need to romanticize it.

Yes I know a lot of people will not like what I am saying and I will probably be called a racist but I am sick of being silenced out of fear. ( )
  Marlene-NL | Mar 12, 2016 |
"Mayada" is a fascinating story of a lady named Mayada that Jean Sasson met and befriended while she was in Iraq. Mayada's story is one that will keep you riveted and inspired. While working as a news reporter she was imprisoned in Iraq. The way Mayada and all of the shadow women (the others in her cell) were treated was both abominable and shocking.

I would also highly recommend the author's latest book "Yasmeena's Choice". This reminded me of "Mayada" very much because the story was also harrowing and fascinating. Jean Sasson has such a gift when it comes to writing true stories because she really goes out of her way to tell the full story and to educate the reader. ( )
  Reader2201 | Nov 12, 2013 |
An important book to learn more about the middle east but not a pleasant book to read because the subject was so grueling and cruel. ( )
  KateWa20 | Jun 16, 2011 |
"Mayada Al-Askari was born into a powerful Iraqi family. When Saddam Hussein
and his Ba'ath party seized power, Mayada little imagined the devastation that
it would wreak upon her life. But soon she found herself alone in Baghdad, a
divorced mother of two, earning a meagre living printing brochures - until the
morning in 1999 when she was arrested by Saddam's secret police and dragged to
the notorious Baladiyat Prison, accused of producing anti-government propaganda.
There she was thrown into a cell already housing seventeen other 'shadow
women'. These women came from different backgrounds, but all shared the same
fate: imprisonment and torture without trial, and the threat of execution. To
block out the screams of other prisoners, like latter-day Scheherazades, the
shadow women told each other their stories. Mayada's tales of her privileged
former life were a source of particular fascination, including her own
encounters with Saddam himself." --back cover
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  collectionmcc | Mar 6, 2018 |
Showing 5 of 5
Mayada vokste opp i Irak, der hun arbeidet som journalist. Hun overlevde krigen mellom Iran og Irak, Golfkrigen og sanksjonene, men hun led gjennom nesten hver eneste fase av det moderne Iraks turbulente historie.

Under Saddam Hussein var Irak blitt til et stort bur. Hver eneste iraker levde med frykten. Plutselig forsvant Mayada. Hun ble fengslet og torturert, men klarte å unnslippe. Her er hennes dramatiske historie, sjokkerende og skremmende, som virkeligheten var under Saddam Hussein.
added by kirstenlund | editwww.cappelendamm.no (Aug 27, 2004)
 
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Not only the story of a woman intimately connected to Iraq's cultured, ancient history, this title also offers a powerful witness to the terror and horror wrought by Saddam on the lives and souls of its ordinary citizens.

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