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Journey from the Land of No
A Grildhood Caught in Revolutionary Iran
Roya Hakakian
About the book:
"We stormed every classroom, inscribed our slogans on the blackboard
. . . Never had mayhem brought more peace. All our lives we had been
taught the virtues of behaving, and now we were discovering the
importance of misbehaving. Too much fear had tainted our days. Too
many afternoons had passed in silence, listening to a
fanatic's diatribes. We were rebelling because we
were not evil, we had not sinned, and we knew nothing of the
apocalypse. . . . This was 1979, the year that showed us we could make
our own destinies. We were rebelling because rebelling was all we
could do to quell the rage in our teenage veins. Together as girls we
found the courage we had been told was not in
us."
In Journey from the Land of No
Roya Hakakian recalls her childhood and adolescence in
prerevolutionary Iran with candor and verve. The result is a
beautifully written coming-of-age story about one deeply intelligent
and perceptive girl's attempt to find an
authentic voice of her own at a time of cultural closing and
repression. Remarkably, she manages to re-create a time and place
dominated by religious fanaticism, violence, and fear with an open
heart and often with great humor.
Hakakian was twelve years old
in 1979 when the revolution swept through Tehran. The daughter of an
esteemed poet, she grew up in a household that hummed with
intellectual life. Family gatherings were punctuated by witty,
satirical exchanges and spontaneous recitations of poetry. But the
Hakakians were also part of the very small Jewish population in Iran
who witnessed the iron fist of the Islamic fundamentalists
increasingly tightening its grip. It is with the innocent confusion of
youth that Roya describes her discovery of a
swastika - "a plus sign gone awry,
a dark reptile with four hungry
claws" - painted on the wall near
her home. As a schoolgirl she watched as friends accused of reading
blasphemous books were escorted from class by Islamic Society guards,
never to return. Only much later did Roya learn that she was spared a
similar fate because her teacher admired her writing.
Hakakian
relates in the most poignant, and at times painful, ways what life was
like for women after the country fell into the hands of Islamic
fundamentalists who had declared an insidious war against them, but we
see it all through the eyes of a strong, youthful optimist who somehow
came up in the world believing that she was different, knowing she was
special. At her loneliest, Roya discovers the consolations of writing
while sitting on the rooftop of her house late at night. There,
"pen in hand, I led my own chorus of words, with a
melody of my own making." And she discovers the
craft that would ultimately enable her to find her own voice and
become her own person.
A wonderfully evocative story,
Journey from the Land of No reveals an Iran most readers have
not encountered and marks the debut of a stunning new talent.
About the author:
Roya Hakakian is a former associate producer at CBSs 60 Minutes and a
documentary filmmaker. She is the author of two acclaimed volumes of
poetry in Persian and is a contributor to National Public Radios All
Things Considered. She lives in Connecticut. Visit her at
2005-06-28: Roya Hakakian.com.
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