My hope for peace / Jehan Sadat.
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- 9789774162732
- 956.053 22
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355.031 MI. H 2009 حلف الناتو | 355.033062 / TO.S 1996 صفحة من تاريخ مصر في عهد محمد علي | 355.547 / MI.B 1993 The book of five rings / | 355.8 / SA.M 2009 My hope for peace / | 355.8 / SA.M 2009 My hope for peace / | 358.3 / OS.A 2007 أسلحة الدمار الشامل | 358.312 / FU. S COST 317 : socio-economic effects of the Channel Tunnel : final report of the Action. |
Includes bibliographical references (p. 191-194) and index.
Introduction -- Eleventh of September, sixth of October -- Islam’s truths and misconceptions -- My own faith -- Toward peace -- Sadat’s principles -- On being a Muslim woman -- On my own -- Saved by love -- Afterword.
Widow of the assassinated Egyptian president Anwar Sadat, Jehan Sadat (A Woman of Egypt) fashions a gracious plea for better understanding between the East and West, especially in terms of the fundamentals of Islam and the derailed Middle East peace process. Sadat is avowedly feminist, having established programs for women's literacy and empowerment during her husband's presidency (he served from 1970 until his assassination in 1981), attained her own advanced degrees in her 40s and indeed was a visible Muslim first lady who accompanied her husband around the world. In these eight elegant, evenhanded essays, she delineates Sadat's principles for peace, put in motion when he signed the Camp David Accords with leaders Carter and Begin in 1978, by addressing the misconceptions about Islam (exacerbated since 9/11), specifically that all Muslims are extremists, against democracy and bent on subjugating their women. She sketches briefly the sticking points to the peace process, namely Israeli intransigence and the Arab-Israeli tit-for-tat in escalating violence, and stresses firsthand the senselessness of assassinations and terrorism. Her essay On Being a Muslim Woman gently rebuffs the Western notion that Muslim women need to be liberated from Islam, offering examples of famous Egyptian feminists as well as employing her own notable achievements. Sadat provides an important, insistent voice for continued advancement in peace and social justice.
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