[Read] The Face Behind the Veil For Online

  • 4 years ago
https://kolmxsess522.blogspot.com/?book=0806538783
Candid, moving, fascinating, and ultimately inspiring, The Face Behind the Veil is a remarkable chronicle of identity and faith, a celebration of women who are changing the face of America and Islam, even as America influences who they are and what they believe. The Converts: ""I am so much more spiritual that it's unbelievable. I have morals and values that I never possessed when I wasn't Muslim."" --Fatima Az Zahra, former Midwestern party girl turned Muslim matronThe Blenders: ""I feel [America] is home. I live in the car."" --Sabrina Hossain, soccer momThe Discriminated: ""As one TV news boss bluntly said: 'You should give up the idea of being in front of a TV camera. It's just not going to happen.' I was wearing a head scarf."" --Edina Lekovic, a broadcast journalist and top UCLA studentThe New Traditionalists: ""I would rather die with this [hijab]on than live without it."" --Dr. Amena Haq, who feels her return to tradition makes her a more caring doctorThe Changers: ""I know firsthand that no amount of politeness has been enough to get the powers that be to prioritize our rights."" --Sarah Eltantawi, one of the founders of the Progressive Muslim Union of North AmericaFor years, the image of the Muslim woman in America has been clouded with secrecy, as mysterious as the face behind the veil. Is she garbed in the traditional hijab and chador? Is she subservient to a male-dominated culture and religion, with few rights and little freedom? Does she grocery shop, do her nails, go to college, have sex? Who are these women?In this extraordinary and moving book, journalist Donna Gehrke-White provides a rare, revealing look into the hearts, minds, and everyday lives of Muslim women in America--a fast-rising population--and opens a window on a culture as diverse as it is misunderstood. Here, in their own words, are the many different voices of doctors, soccer moms, rebels, reformers, former political prisoners, survivors, activists--women of faith, courage, hope, and change--all Muslims, all Americans.There are women like Sahar Shaikh, who grew up on Girl Scouts and rock and roll in suburban Miami but felt that something was missing from her life until she took up the veil and returned to her spiritual roots; like Zainab Elberry, an Egyptian activist insurance executive in Nashville who sees no need for the hijab and no conflict between her feminism and her Muslim beliefs. We meet Cathy Drake, a convert from Virginia who could be the perfect Republican red-state mom, home-schooling her kids and driving a minivan, except that Cathy wears the traditional scarf and converted to Islam after 9/11. There's Salma Syed, who escaped the religious intolerance, terror, and violence of her Indian homeland to find peace and security in the American suburbs. And there are pioneers like Sarah Eltantawi, who are trying to advance women's rights in the mosque, and W. L. Cati, a once obedient housewife who left both her abusive husband and her faith in order to help other women escape similar fates.

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