August 1, 2011
Shakespeare has given us quite a romantic image of young, forbidden love. From Romeo and Juliet to The Winter’s Tale, he’s portrayed it as the noblest of passions. But in countries like Afghanistan where love is still considered a flimsy base for a long lasting union and where girls are either forced into marriages or ...
Tags: Afghanistan,
arranged marriages,
civil war,
family honor,
first love,
forbidden love,
forced marriages,
Halima Mohammedi,
Hazara,
honor killings,
love in afghanistan,
love is blind,
New York Times,
Rafi Mohammed,
Romeo and Juliette,
Tajik,
The Winter’s Tale,
women in Afghanistan,
young love
May 4, 2011
We shouldn’t need an official report to enlighten us about the situation of mothers around the world. We should already know. It’s all well and good for Save the Children to give us a yearly report of what mothers are facing from the top of Mommyville (Norway) to the pits of it (Afghanistan). People need ...
Tags: best place to be a mom,
childbirth,
health care,
impoverished women,
infant death,
maternal death,
mortality rate,
Mother's Day,
poverty,
Save the Children,
State of the World's Mothers 2011,
war,
women in Afghanistan,
women's health,
women's rights
February 15, 2011
A Thousand Splendid Sunsby Khaled Hosseini is a story about love, hope, survival, and the strength of women. The story follows the lives of two women living in Afghanistan during times of civil war and upheaval, who are forced into situations they don’t want to be in. The first part of the book follows the ...
Tags: A Thousand Splendid Suns,
abusive husband,
Afghanistan,
book review,
Khaled Hosseini,
plural marriage,
polygamy,
sexism,
The Kite Runner,
Tuesday book club,
women in Afghanistan