From Publishers Weekly
The 12 women Afkhami interviewed for this intimate portrait of lives in political exile have settled in the U.S., many becoming American citizens. A few, like Fatima Ahmet Ibrahim, a feminist who called for women's rights within the bounds of traditional Islamic culture in her native Sudan, long to return home. "Like a plant pulled from its soil, its roots withering in the cold air," Ibrahim laments, "I am out of my element in the West." Others do not feel at home in their country of origin nor their adopted land. "Being in exile is being outside, at the edge," says Marjorie Agosin, a Chilean human-rights activist who teaches at Wellesley. Afkhami, who left Iran in 1978 when her feminist views became unpopular shortly before the revolution there, begins this remarkable collection with an account of her own exile. The stories resonate with the reader long after the pages are closed. Afkhami exhibits considerable skill in the essence of these women's journeys. Richly detailed, the stories seem cinematic in their narrative, so much so that one forgets this isn't a screen treatment but the oral history of 13 women's flight from political oppression. Photos not seen by PW.
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
From Library Journal
The women in this book are typical of waves of women refugees crossing borders every day, seeking to fulfill their lives in ways denied them at home. Though it is frightening to be without a home or the comfort of family, difficulty breeds strength, and struggling to hold onto the past in an unfamiliar milieu paradoxically expands horizons. Some may remain foreigners living abroad; but some, like these women, no longer the victims of patriarchal domination, build bridges to the next generation. The feminist infrastructure they have built cannot be destroyed. Their biggest problem is teaching men how to cope with the change in their women. Some, like Maria Teresa Tula (Hear My Testimony, LJ 5/1/94) and Alicia Partney (The Little School, Cleis Pr., 1991) have told their stories before, but this book offers an overall picture. A good buy for womens' studies collections.
Louise Leonard, Univ. of Florida Libs., GainesvilleCopyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.