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The following is an intresting article I found
it was posted on Judaism - The Jewish Website
by Phyllis Chesler How my eyes were opened to the barbarity of Islam.
Once I was held captive in Kabul. I was the bride of a charming, seductive and Westernized Afghan Muslim whom I met at an American college. The purdah I experienced was relatively posh but the sequestered all-female life was not my cup of chai -- nor was the male hostility to veiled, partly veiled and unveiled women in public.
When we landed in Kabul, an airport official smoothly confiscated my US passport. "Don't worry, it's just a formality," my husband assured me. I never saw that passport again. I later learnt that this was routinely done to foreign wives -- perhaps to make it impossible for them to leave. Overnight, my husband became a stranger. The man with whom I had discussed Camus, Dostoevsky, Tennessee Williams and the Italian cinema became a stranger. He treated me the same way his father and elder brother treated their wives: distantly, with a hint of disdain and embarrassment.
This article originally appeared in the The Times.
Published: Sunday, March 11, 2007
© Copyright Times Newspapers Ltd
it was posted on Judaism - The Jewish Website
by Phyllis Chesler How my eyes were opened to the barbarity of Islam.
Once I was held captive in Kabul. I was the bride of a charming, seductive and Westernized Afghan Muslim whom I met at an American college. The purdah I experienced was relatively posh but the sequestered all-female life was not my cup of chai -- nor was the male hostility to veiled, partly veiled and unveiled women in public.
When we landed in Kabul, an airport official smoothly confiscated my US passport. "Don't worry, it's just a formality," my husband assured me. I never saw that passport again. I later learnt that this was routinely done to foreign wives -- perhaps to make it impossible for them to leave. Overnight, my husband became a stranger. The man with whom I had discussed Camus, Dostoevsky, Tennessee Williams and the Italian cinema became a stranger. He treated me the same way his father and elder brother treated their wives: distantly, with a hint of disdain and embarrassment.
This article originally appeared in the The Times.
Published: Sunday, March 11, 2007
© Copyright Times Newspapers Ltd
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