Afghanistan and Pakistan...



Under the Persimmon Tree
Suzanne Fisher Staples
Najmah, a young Afghan girl whose name means "star," and Elaine, an American woman whose Islamic name is Nusrat, are both concerned with their families and their futures after the Taliban's fighting disrupts their lives. Najmah must find a way to safely find her way to Pakistan so she can search for her father and brother. Meanwhile, Nusrat finds a way to help refugee children by teaching them in her backyard under her persimmon tree. Will Najmah be reunited with her family before her cruel uncle takes her back to Afghanistan?
From Kirkus Reviews: "Time: one month after September 11, 2001. Place: Northern Afghanistan. Enter 12-year-old Najmah, abandoned when her father and brother are taken away at gunpoint to fight for the Taliban and, soon after, her mother and baby brother die in an air attack. Then, enter Nusrat, a fair-haired New Yorker who has been living and teaching in Pakistan's Peshawar since her husband Faiz decided to work for an Afghan clinic. Through shifting points of view in alternating sections, readers learn about young Najmah's dangerous journey to a refugee camp, and of Nusrat's nagging worry about her husband from whom she's not heard in far too long."
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The Breadwinner
Deborah Ellis
Life in Afghanistan is so different from our lives in the U.S. This story, told with eleven year old Parvana's voice, gives the reader a glimpse into a world where girls and women are not allowed out of their homes without male escorts. In a country with political unrest, the family struggles to survive by working to provide food and a home. Parvana takes on the role of a boy so that she can help provide for her family when her father cannot. Through the eyes of a boy, Parvana's experience shape her as a young woman. This is the first in a trilogy. Following The Breadwinner are Parvana's Journey and Mud City.
From School Library Journal: "For 11-year-old Parvana and her family, survival in war-torn Afghanistan is difficult. The Taliban have decreed that women stay inside their homes, unless completely covered by a long, tentlike garment with a veil over the face. Girls can no longer go to school. Parvana's only relief is accompanying her father to the market where he works as a letter writer and sells family possessions. After he is arrested and taken away, Parvana becomes the breadwinner, dressing as a boy and taking over her father's job."


























