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Jenny Nordberg, the reporter who broke this story for The New York Times , constructs a dramatic account of Afghan women and girls clandestinely living on the other side of the gender divide that grants half its population almost no rights and little freedom. Offering a new and original story about Afghanistan and its women, The Underground Girls of Kabul investigates the hidden practice of bacha posh that has affected generations, while examining its parallels to our own history.
The act of reaching for more freedom by impersonating a man is one that can be recognized by women everywhere. The Underground Girls of Kabul is now available in paperback. What do you do if you are in a war zone and you see something that you absolutely do not understand? And also, by the way, that you should leave. You will also begin to wonder what else we may be missing, and if there might be more to Afghanistan than the often-told story of victims and perpetrators; of suppression and fundamentalism; of good and evil.
Of men and women. Those questions have been on my mind for the past five years, and have become this book. I had to remain inside a deeply conservative society and explore questions about religion, gender and sexuality β all forbidden topics in Afghanistan. And how we have gone about it. Some extremely brave Afghan women have revealed their most intimate secrets to me for this book. They have also spoken about how they define freedom and what it feels like to have tasted it and to have been forced to let it go.
The women in this book have all taken a journey to infiltrate the other side β that of men and boys β in a real-life nature versus nurture experiment that I could hardly even have made up as a work of fiction. Thank you so much for your interest in this book. These Afghan testimonies may also remind readers of how our grandmothers blood glucose control at times had to employ subversive methods that are very similar.
And how we sometimes still do, just because some of us were born as girls. Twitter Facebook. In Afghanistan, where society is ruled almost entirely by men, the birth of a son is cause for celebration and the arrival of a daughter is often mourned as a failure. The Book. An Introduction from the Author. All rights reserved. Site by Little Digital Co.