Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Books open our minds to the Middle East

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Books open our minds to the Middle East

    Fort Worth Star Telegram, TX
    July 20 2008



    Books open our minds to the Middle East


    By ELIZABETH AGNVALL- Special to the Star-Telegram


    They stare at me accusingly each time I walk into the basement, with
    their straight spines and serious covers: Vali Nasr's The Shia
    Revival, William Roe Polk's Understanding Iraq, Akbar Ahmed's Journey
    Into Islam. Excellent books. Highly recommended.

    For several months they lay impressively on my bedside table, but then
    I piled the books I was actually reading on top of them and one day '
    in a fit of tidying ' I moved them to the basement bookshelf.

    I pulled them off the shelves several times, but I find it tough to
    read about places in books where I read daily about dead mothers,
    sons, soldiers and children in the newspaper. And yet I feel an
    obligation to learn something about these far-away places that are now
    such an intricate part of our lives. Not just Iraq, but Iran, Turkey,
    Afghanistan and Pakistan. The places capable of raising people who are
    willing to kill themselves to kill thousands of others; the places
    where some of our deepest prejudices are now aimed.

    So I started searching for books that could help me understand the
    culture and context of these lands without needing to work my way
    through thousands of years of history.

    I started with a book given to me as a gift: The Bastard of Istanbul
    (Viking, $24.95) by Elif Shafak. It tells the story of a family of
    women in Istanbul: two grandmothers, four sisters and one daughter who
    live in relatively chaotic harmony. One of the sisters, the beautiful
    and unorthodox Zeliah Kazanet, is the mother to 19-year-old Asya, a
    devotee of Johnny Cash and existentialism who does not know the
    identity of her father.

    Asya is also raised by her three aunts: Banu, a devout Muslim and
    soothsayer; Cevriye, a widowed high school teacher and Feride, a
    mentally unstable paranoid. The aunts' brother, Mustafa, left Turkey
    as a young man and has never returned, but his stepdaughter,
    Armanoush, is obsessed with her Armenian heritage and makes a secret
    trip to visit Mustafa's family.

    The fate of the Armenian people in Turkey after WW I is woven into the
    book from several points of view. But this isn't just about the
    conflict between Armenians and Turks. It's about controversies between
    mothers and daughter, sisters, lovers and friends. It's about a
    modern-day family in Istanbul where one sister wears the scarf out of
    respect for her religion and three think it's disrespectful to women
    to do so. In other words, it's about life ' the same sort of messy,
    complicated lives that most of us have.

    And in reading Shafak's book, I think I understand more about Turkish
    society and the Armenian mind-set. Yes, a scholarly work might have
    given me a more objective point of view, but I wouldn't have grasped
    the culture and conflicts of the people with the same depth.

    Shafak, who divides her time between Istanbul and Tucson, Ariz., was
    put on trial for this book for "denigrating Turkishness" under Article
    301 of the Turkish Penal Code. I wonder if those who judged her really
    read the book. Besides the obvious fact that it's ridiculous to put
    someone on trial for anything they've written, this work, if anything,
    celebrates Turkey in many ways.

    Iran and the revolution

    In the shadow of disturbing news about possible U.S. conflict with
    Iran over nuclear issues, I next picked up The Septembers of Shiraz by
    Dalia Sofer, which is about a Jewish family during the Iranian
    revolution in 1979. Alcohol became illegal, along with singing,
    listening to music and women appearing in public with uncovered
    hair. Although Jews were fairly well accepted under the Shah of Iran,
    they were now suspect.

    Isaac Amin is a jewel dealer who is arrested and imprisoned in 1981'
    in the midst of Iran's war with Iraq ' and accused of being a Zionist
    spy. Amin's wife is overwhelmed with fear while searching for him as
    his 9-year-old daughter decides to fight back in her own dangerous
    way. The family's son, who is studying in New York, feels trapped and
    helpless waiting to hear news of his family.

    Sofer was born in Iran and fled the country at the age of 10 to live
    in the United States with her family. Sofer's debut novel is largely
    autobiographical. She tells the story from her father's point of view
    and draws on her memories of the land that exiled her.

    Like all of us, the characters are complex in their desires,
    prejudices and beliefs, in the wrongs and heroics they commit.

    In a country where nearly two-thirds of Americans ages 18-24 can't
    find Iraq on a map of the Middle East, even after thousands of
    U.S. soldiers have died there, reading books about cultures we are so
    ignorant of but that have such a great impact on our lives is a way of
    rising above our prejudices and fears.
Working...
X