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Love in a Torn Land: Joanna of Kurdistan: The True Story of a Freedom Fighter's Escape from Iraqi Vengeance
by Jean Sasson
Published: 2007-03-05
Hardcover : 352 pages
Hardcover : 352 pages
7 members reading this now
2 clubs reading this now
2 members have read this book
2 clubs reading this now
2 members have read this book
In this incredible true love story, bestselling author Jean Sasson shares Joanna al-Askari's personal journey of fear and fortitude through a Baghdad childhood and life as a Kurdish freedom fighter during the Iran-Iraq War. Inspiring and unforgettable, Love in a Torn Land shares Joanna's ...
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Introduction
In this incredible true love story, bestselling author Jean Sasson shares Joanna al-Askari's personal journey of fear and fortitude through a Baghdad childhood and life as a Kurdish freedom fighter during the Iran-Iraq War. Inspiring and unforgettable, Love in a Torn Land shares Joanna's passionate and unflagging determination to survive and fight—for love, life, and the freedom of her beloved Kurdistan.
Excerpt
Sprinkled by StardustIn Suleimaniyah
When I woke up the following morning, the sapphire sky was sunny, and fluffy white clouds were forming. Songbirds were singing. The house was filled with the sounds of children playing.
When in Suleimaniyah, the carefree atmosphere always felt like festival time. Grandmother’s house overflowed with family. The adults would sleep on cotton mattresses laid out on the bedroom floors while children slept on the flat roof. The women of the household would rise early to cook a feast. All our favorite Kurdish dishes were prepared, such as Kuftay Suleimaniyah, which was ground rice pastry stuffed with mincemeat, and Doulma, vegetables stuffed with rice, or my personal favorite, a special sweet called Bourma, which was very thin puff pastry with pecan nuts, drenched in honey or syrup. Tea was available at all times, kept hot in enormous Samawars, special copper Turkish urns. ... view entire excerpt...
Discussion Questions
From the Author:1) Do you think that Joanna’s decision to join the freedom fighters in their struggle against Saddam Hussein benefited the Kurd’s fight for freedom? If so, why?
2) Why do you think the Iranian government allowed Iraqi freedom fighters, such as Joanna and her husband and their comrades, exile at the same time Iran was embroiled in a bitter 8-year war with Saddam?
3) Why do you think that the Kurds in Northern Iraq are now prospering and living in peace when so much of Iraq is embroiled in so much turmoil?
4) Do you feel differently about the Kurds after reading Love in a Torn Land: Joanna of Kurdistan?
5) How do such stories of far-away places and people benefit readers in the west?
Notes From the Author to the Bookclub
A Note to BookMovement Members from Jean Sasson: Few people have heard about the desperate plight of the Kurds living in Northern Iraq, or of their miraculous survival of a silent holocaust that took the lives of 200,000 innocent civilians. After meeting a beautiful and courageous Kurdish woman, Joanna al-Askari, and hearing her searing true story of triumph over evil, I knew that I wanted to bring her story to the world, and in the process, give the plight of the Kurdish people a face, and a voice. When Joanna was a teenager, she fell in love with a handsome freedom fighter, and later fled Baghdad to join him in the rugged mountains of Kurdistan. From the first moment of her marriage, Joanna was in danger. After being hit by chemicals, she temporarily lost her sight. Determined to survive she fled only to be bombed and buried in rubble, surviving yet again to face further danger. After climbing the highest mountain in Kurdistan, she lost her unborn child before she and her husband sought exile in Iran. There she faced a difficult pregnancy and gave birth under horrific conditions. But the brave Joanna prevailed. I hope readers will join with me to declare that “never again,” will we stand silent while hundreds of thousands of innocent people are murdered, for no reason other than being a Kurd.Book Club Recommendations
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