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Women's Fiction
Zoya's Story: An Afghan Woman's Struggle for Freedom

Zoya's Story: An Afghan Woman's Struggle for Freedom

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Great book!
Review: I loved the book and love the courage of Zoya. Women like Zoya should become all oppressed women's role models!
This book is entertaining and the same time educating!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Excellent story of a woman with courage
Review: I thought this book was excellent and the story made me think twice about what I have and what other people live through. Zoya has true courage along with her RAWA sisters.

It is so nice to hear that there are people behind the scenes still fighting for their country, especially women. I believe one day all their great work will help Afghanistan get back to the place their love and remember it to be.

Definetly worth a read.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Excellent story of a woman with courage
Review: I thought this book was excellent and the story made me think twice about what I have and what other people live through. Zoya has true courage along with her RAWA sisters.

It is so nice to hear that there are people behind the scenes still fighting for their country, especially women. I believe one day all their great work will help Afghanistan get back to the place their love and remember it to be.

Definetly worth a read.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Putting a name & face to the numerous victims
Review: It is so sad to read about Zoya & the numerous other women's plight in their war-torn country. They do not only suffer from the physical effects of war but more so on the debilitating suppression on womanhood brought about by culture & religion. Putting a name & face to these numerous victims we often hear about brings their woes closer to heart. It makes me realize how much we take for granted simple things we enjoy in life that would equate to a beating or degradation to their kind.

I admire what Zoya & RAWA is doing for the Afghan women. I wish them more power & success in their endeavors.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Lesson about Freedom
Review: This book opened my eyes. I had heard about all the restrictions on women in Afghanistan, but reading about them from Zoya's perspective brought them to life. I think all women should read this book. It shows us that people do not have to sit and take whatever the world offers them. One person can make a difference.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Zoya's Story: an Afghan Woman's Struggle for Freedom
Review: This was an informative, well written account of Zoya's life as an Afghan woman. Since September 11 Americans have been inundated with news reports about the Taliban and Afghanistan. This book goes inside the country and puts a human face on recent events in Afghanistan. I started reading Zoya's Story this morning and did not put it down until I had finished it. Some may be surprised by the end of the book, in which Zoya says that refugees do not want to return even though the Taliban have lost control. They are just as fearful of the Northern Alliance now taking power.

This book is a reminder that no one, especially women, should take their rights and freedoms for granted.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Veil of Resistance, Courage, and Sorrow
Review: Those that live through the destruction of their homeland will have their lives forever changed. The rest of us only have to glimpse into the window of a world in which we are only too grateful to be far removed from.

From her youngest days as a child, to a full fledged member of the Revolutionary Association of the Women of Afghanistan (RAWA), Zoya tells her story simply but it holds much impact. Her courage and determination are remarkable as she tells of a childhood occupied by the Russians, driven out by the Mujahideen, and overthrown by the Taliban. As every new oppressor, each more savage then the previous tore her country apart, she continued her work to reveal the truth to the world, to fight for a women's right to education, and to bring relief to refugees who have lost everything.

Her story and message is one of continued hope for her country that has been betrayed so many times, and she seems unshaken in her loyalty to her country and her mission. She continues her covert work to this day, and like her RAWA sisters, continues to keep her true identity hidden.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An Inspiration to all Women
Review: What can I say about this book. It made me cry, but it also gave me hope. I admire Zoya's courage and strength. It took me on a journey of Afghanistan and its people. I saw her grandmother praying on the pad, I was there when she almost fell down, because she couldn't see through the burqa. I can't tell you how much this book can change you as a person. You have to read it for yourself and experience the heart of a child and the courage of a woman. That is Zoya. I would like to know what she is doing now.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Zoya's Story" An Afghan Woman's Struggle for Freedom
Review: When I first started to read this book, I thought I had already read it because the beginning is very similar to My Forbidden Face. But then after a few more pages, it changes completely. This book is about a young woman named Zoya who becomes involved in a group called RAWA, which is a group that stands up for women's rights. She describes in detail the hardships that she must endure living in Kabul and Pakistan. If you are at all interested in women's rights, then this is a book for you. It's a quick read but I know you'll love it.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Peaceful revolution to change their world of violence.
Review: Words are not enough to portray the emotion packed into the telling of Zoya's Story. Brought up with parents who believed in education, democracy, human rights, feminism, and above all a mother deeply involved in "The Revolutionary Association of the Women of Afghanistan", also known as RAWA, Zoya's story begins as a young child in the city of Kabul. We follow her earlier days through the Russian occupation, then the Mujahideen of the Northern Alliance, made up of warlords that raped and murdered their own people, and finally through the insanity of the Taliban, a perverse adherence to nothing that even slightly resembles the teachings of Mohammed and the pronouncements made in the Koran, where women became something to be hidden, not to laugh or voice a word.

Zoya was educated and cared for by RAWA and by the age of 16 became an active member in this organization that reaches out to thousands of Afghan women, supporting them financially, educationally, and psychologically. Though only 23 years of age at the telling of this story, Zoya has lived far more than a lifetime. Her patriotism runs so deep it will wrench your heart. She believes that the future of her beloved Afghanistan lies in the intellects and hearts of the children, at any cost they must be educated so they can meet the needs of a democratic society in the future. Small groups of children are hidden away in safe houses where they are educated, in a country where it is in threat of death for a woman to learn and the only lessons to be given are study of the Koran.

I was appalled by the atrocities, unspeakable tortures, and hatred put forth in the name of religion and suffered by the Afghan people under the reign of the fundamentalists. Yet I was strengthened by the knowledge that there are educated people working diligently to return this country to a well-deserved peace after years of unjustifiable war at the hands of those men in power. May Allah grant their prayers and smile down upon them.

This was truly one of the best books I ever read. Accurate, and filled with a candor that leaves you with a need to do something to make this world just a little bit better. Most of all it made me realize, I should be thankful every day of my life for the freedom I have as an American. Kelsana 6/10/02


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