"Throughout an extraordinary career as a lawyer, writer, activist, and dissident, Shirin Ebadi has spoken out clearly and strongly for her native Iran - and her voice has resonated far beyond that country's borders. As a dedicated human rights advocate and winner of the Nobel Peace Prize, Ebadi has almost single-handedly given both Iran and the world reason to hope for a better future." "Now, in this memoir, Ebadi provides an eyewitness account of one woman's courageous stand at the crossroads of history. Best known as a lawyer who defends women and children in politically charged cases that most in her profession refuse to touch, Ebadi recounts her public career and reveals her private self: her faith, her experiences, and her desire to lead a traditional life even while serving as a rebellious voice in a land where such voices are muted or brutally silenced." "Ebadi describes her girlhood in a modest Tehran household, her education, and her early professional success in the mid-1970s as Iran's most accomplished female jurist. She speaks eloquently about the ideals of the 1979 Islamic Revolution, and of her deep disillusionment with the direction Iran has since taken under the guidance of the hard-line clerics. She recounts the ignominy of her demotion to clerk in the courtroom over which she once presided, when the religious authorities declared women unfit to serve as judges. She speaks out against the oppressive patriarchy of Iran, where conservative rulers have stripped women of their basic rights and all citizens of their political freedom." In reading Shirin Ebadi's story, however, we come to see not a larger-than-life presence but a devoted daughter, wife, and mother, a down-to-earth woman who would never consider leaving on a lecture tour (or doing a stretch in prison) without first preparing enough meals for her husband and two daughters to last the duration of her absence. Ebadi is an everywoman, albeit one who has braved imprisonment, harassment, as
Azadeh Moaveni Boeken
Azadeh Moaveni's werk duikt in de kruising van gender en conflict, voortbouwend op uitgebreide journalistieke ervaring in het Midden-Oosten. Haar schrijven onderzoekt de ingewikkelde verbanden tussen individuele verhalen en bredere politieke dynamieken. Door middel van haar onderzoeken en analyses biedt ze diepgaande inzichten in de maatschappelijke impact van conflicten, met een bijzondere focus op de ervaringen van vrouwen. Haar aanpak benadrukt het cruciale belang van het begrijpen van de menselijke dimensie binnen mondiale crises.





Guest House for Young Widows
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SHORTLISTED FOR THE BAILLIE GIFFORD PRIZE FOR NON FICTION AND THE RATHBONES FOLIO PRIZE. A GUARDIANAND OBSERVERBOOK OF THE YEAR. An intimate, deeply reported account of the women who made a shocking decision: to leave their ordinary lives behind and join the Islamic State. These women, some still in school, some with university degrees, many with cosmopolitan dreams of travel and adventure, left their homes and lives in the West to join what they thought would be a movement of justice and piety. Instead, they found themselves trapped in the most brutal terrorist regime of the twenty-first century. Azadeh Moaveni tells their stories with little intervention, providing just enough context for us to see how and why they were pulled into this world.
Honeymoon in Tehran
- 368bladzijden
- 13 uur lezen
In "Honeymoon in Tehran," Azadeh Moaveni, a Middle East correspondent, returns to Iran amid the rise of President Ahmadinejad. While covering the nation's struggles for freedom, she unexpectedly falls in love and contemplates starting a family, ultimately facing the harsh realities of life in Iran and the decision to leave for her family's future.
Lipstick Jihad
- 260bladzijden
- 10 uur lezen
The story of the Iranian-American author's search for identity between two cultures torn apart by a violent history paints a portrait of Iran's next generation.
Viaggio di nozze a Teheran
- 349bladzijden
- 13 uur lezen