Mayada- Daughter of Iraq touched me: and how!
“Greed seems to attach itself to cruelty.” –Mayada
Mayada- Daughter of
Iraq is a heart-wrenching
tale of a woman’s fight for survival in Saddam’s prisons when he ruled the
country with an iron hand.
Saddam, as the world knows, led the Baath Party and became
the President of Iraq in 1979. He was sick: a megalomaniac who was paranoid
about his own security and suspicious of every human being, including his
family members. This led him to commit countless inhuman acts, including waging
wars against Iraq’s neighbours - Iran and Kuwait.
The book primarily focuses on the miserable and terrible
lives the poor Iraqis are forced to live whether outside or inside his prisons.
The protagonist, Mayada Al - Askari, belonged to a rich and
highly influential family. The extent of how influential the family was can be
seen from how powerful her grandparents from both sides of her family were.
Loyalty towards, and love for, the country was the hallmark of Mayada’s
forefathers. Mayada, a single mother of two young kids, and an independent
working woman was, like many Iraqis, arrested and thrown into prison (Cell 52),
on the mere suspicion of printing anti-government pamphlets - no trial, no
proofs.
It was then that Mayada’s life took a turn for the worse - from
being a happy mother and a proud Iraqi to becoming a victim of ruthless torture
sessions in Cell 52 of Baladiyat. In that cell she came across cellmates dark
as shadows who, just like her, had been imprisoned and tortured regularly.
As I read through the book it was extremely disturbing to
know how people, men and women alike, were beaten mercilessly: their nails
pulled out, electric prods used to hurt them, beaten black and blue till their
bodies were one open wound. Sodomy and
rape was common! And all of this, just to make them confess to things they’d
not done! Some, rather than face prolonged torture, confessed. The end result?
Immediate execution. Others went through the torture and even died in the
process. While in prison, each breath was a torture and there seemed no hope of
release. Mayada herself had lost all hope the moment she saw ‘52’. It brought
back painful memories linked to the number. “I will never get out of this” was
her sentiment. The cell door seemed to scream, “All hope abandon ye who enter
here.” Paragraph after paragraph seemed to let out cries of pain and suffering,
screaming for sympathy and hoping for justice.
The book very powerfully expresses the deep bond that bound
the tortured women of Cell 52. Though strangers, their common fate brought them
together in care and concern.
Among others, the one aspect that touched me like no other
was the person of Samara. An extraordinary shadow woman, she easily befriended
her cellmates and was immensely kind to all. Her strong intuition of Mayada’s
eventual release prompted her to enthuse Mayada not to lose hope but hang in
there.
I was touched by the final section of the book when Mayada, a
free woman now in Amman, writes to Samara hoping she has survived Baladiyat now
that Saddam had lost all power.
Unlike Jean Sassoon’s Princess Trilogy which was based on the
aggressive male dominance in Saudi Arabian society, Mayada- Daughter of Iraq describes a woman’s struggle for survival
in her beloved homeland - Iraq. While my heart reaches out to the victims of
injustice and oppression, I appreciate the sheer courage and determination of
the author who explored the lives of people in patriarchal and/or authoritarian
societies, and wrote about it. I congratulate her and look forward to reading
her other works.

nice blog keep posting more
ReplyDeleteThank you! :)
Delete✌👌superb ...keep it up ...
ReplyDeleteThank you, Zainab. :)
DeleteThis prompts me to read the book. Nice blog. Keep writing more.
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for the encouragement. You should definitely give it a read. :)
DeleteWill be reading the book for sure...
ReplyDeleteNicely put...
Keep up the good work..
Looking forward to more posts on ur blog...
Thank you, Nishith. :)
DeleteI am Jean Sasson, the author of Mayada, Daughter of Iraq. Mayada became my best and dearest friend after coming to know her that dark summer of 1998. I am so pleased that you see the importance of Mayada's story. She was a woman who loved her children, and her country, and remained devoted to them until her death last November of cancer. She fought like the bravest warrior to live for her children. My heart is broken losing her. She is in my mind and in my thoughts on a daily basis. Yet I know that she will live forever through the pages of the book I wrote about her life, and she is a person worth remembering. I love you Mayada! You are missed every day. Thank you, again for this lovely tribute to a most special and brave woman.
ReplyDeleteHi ma'am. Thank you so much for reading, and your comments. I am overwhelmed! It's sad to know about Mayada's demise. But she is going to remain in our hearts forever.
DeleteThank you, Batul... I appreciate your review and comments. My readers are the BEST! (smile) Yes, the saddest thing that she left us -- she was too young, she had two children she did not want to leave, and had a lot of living left she wanted to do... But, the decision of when we all leave this earth is not left up to use. And, she is still alive in all our hearts. Thank you, again, dear Batul...
ReplyDeleteRightly said. Let us at least pray for her children. And thank you, again, for your response. It is a huge amount of encouragement. :)
DeleteSorry, I meant to say, "not left up to US."
ReplyDeleteGreat work ✌
ReplyDeleteThank you so much, Devangana. :)
ReplyDeleteEnjoying following your blog! And, I'm always attracted to those who read and try to understand other cultures...
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