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Zoya's Story: An Afghan Woman's Struggle for…
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Zoya's Story: An Afghan Woman's Struggle for Freedom (2002)

by John Follain

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Zoya's mother was a member of RAWA, and her father of another under ground group. They were both killed when she was a girl, and she eventually became a member of RAWA itself. She was born about 1979,and she grows up under President Najibullah ("the puppet regime," as she calls it.), then witnesses the Taliban taking power. An interesting note; in her book the energy the Soviets spent in fighting in Afghanistan is linked to the downfall of the Soviet Union in 1989. RAWA sent her abroad to speak on its behalf, and she met her coathors in Rome. I wish more had been said about how they collaborated on the book; you sense that she told her story, they asked questions and wrote it. It's a very human story. In it one gets the sense that RAWA actually functions in a similar way to the madrassas, or Taliban schools, in that they attempt to become replacement parents to the orphans or students, and are definitely teaching them a certain way to look at the world. They are also indoctrinating warriors, not just educating children. Nonviolent warriors, but warriors just the same. It's not that I don't agree with the cause, as I understand it, it's just sad. ( )
  ziziaaurea | Oct 31, 2010 |
Zoya recounts the atrocities inflicted on the woman and innocent people of Afghanistan people by both the Taliban and the Mujaheddin warlords. For such a young girl she has seen and suffered so much but is wise beyond her years. ( )
  dianestm | Mar 2, 2009 |
The book reads like a matter of fact description of Zoya's life. The events surrounding her life and what she does were anything but typical. ( )
  drinkingtea | Apr 20, 2006 |
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To the women of Afghanistan, victims of inhuman suffering inflicted by fundamentalism.
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At the head of the Khyber Pass, when we reached the border with Afghanistan at Torkham, our car stopped short of the Taliban checkpoint.
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Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0060097833, Paperback)

Kabul was always more beautiful in the snow. Even the piles of rotting rubbish in my street, the only source of food for the scrawny chickens and goats that our neighbors kept outside their mud houses, looked beautiful to me after the snow had covered them in white during the long night.

Though she is only twenty-three, Zoya has witnessed and endured more tragedy and terror than most people experience in a lifetime. Born in a land ravaged by war, she was robbed of her parents when they were murdered by Muslim fundamentalists. Devastated, she fled Kabul with her grandmother and started a new life in exile in Pakistan. She joined the Revolutionary Association of the Women of Afghanistan (RAWA), an organization that challenged the crushing edicts of the Taliban government, and she took destiny into her own hands, joining a dangerous, clandestine war to save her nation.

Direct and unsentimental, Zoya vividly brings to life the realities of growing up in a Muslim culture, the terror of living in a perpetual war zone, the pain of losing those she has loved, the horrors of a woman’s life under the Taliban, and the discovered healing and transformation that lead her on a path of resistance.

(retrieved from Amazon Wed, 02 Jan 2013 23:46:37 -0500)

(see all 2 descriptions)

Follows the experiences of a twenty-three-year-old member of the Revolutionary Association of the Women of Afghanistan who witnessed the rise of the Taliban and risked her life to challenge the edicts against women in her country.

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