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Since the Islamic Revolution began in 1979, millions of Iranians have fled to Turkey seeking refuge from religious and political persecution. In 1988, I was one of them. For more than four decades, Baha'is in Iran have been stripped of all human rights. This is my story about what life was like living under Islamic rule. It's a story about determination, perseverance, and Faith. I was 25 when I fled Iran with two friends. We crossed the forbidding Zagros Mountains in the height of winter, seeking asylum in Turkey. More than a year later, I arrived in America, speaking little English, knowing no one, and understanding little about the country except what I gleaned from television.
One More Mountain is the inspirational true story of young man willing to risk it all and provides a never-before-seen look at what life in Iran is still like for those who have no power, no voice, and no freedoms.
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By (author): Noushin EhsanProduct Code: NMMWAISBN: 979-8402958081Pages: 345Availability: In stock
Price: $29.00
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Review This Product From an unconventional childhood to world-class architect, Noushin Ehsan, AIA, has never shied away from reinventing herself and opening new doors. This is her story, from her childhood in Iran to her education and life in the United States to her travels, work, and efforts to educate others in China and many other parts of the world. Throughout her life she faced many difficulties but she always found ways to persevere.
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By (author): Farsheed FerdowsiProduct Code: USMJISBN: 979-8985669718Publisher: Jazab PressPages: 462Availability: In stock
Price: $24.95
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Review This Product Under the Staircase is a biography of Fatollah Ferdowsi, a remarkable man who was executed by the Islamic Republic of Iran on the morning of January 4, 1982. His only crime was his belief. He was a member of the Baha'i Faith, a persecuted minority in Iran. The regime gave him a choice: "Recant your faith and go free, or you will die." Fatollah remained steadfast. He chose faith over life—the eternal over the ephemeral. Fatollah Ferdowsi's journey to martyrdom is meticulously researched and narrated by his youngest son, Farsheed. Under the Staircase is, in a larger sense, the story of the entire community of Iran's Baha'is, who have endured more than a century and a half of severe persecution and who have responded to their predicament with determination
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Author: June Manning ThomasProduct Code: SLIHISBN: 978-1643362595Publisher: University of South Carolina PressPages: 320Availability: In stock
Price: $29.99
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Review This Product The battle for equality in education during the civil rights era came at a cost to Black Americans on the frontlines. In 1964 when fourteen-year-old June Manning Thomas walked into Orangeburg High School as one of thirteen Black students selected to integrate the all-White school, her classmates mocked, shunned, and yelled racial epithets at her. The trauma she experienced made her wonder if the slow-moving progress was worth the emotional sacrifice. In Struggling to Learn, Thomas, revisits her life growing up in the midst of the civil rights movement before, during, and after desegregation and offers an intimate look at what she and other members of her community endured as they worked to achieve equality for Black students in K-12 schools and higher education.
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Author: Dr. Jonathan KingProduct Code: CPISISBN: 979-8776301643Availability: Not Available for Back Order
Price: $12.99
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Review This Product The Chosen Path is an anthology of stories that chronicles the unique lives of forty-five people from different walks of life who became Baha'is from every corner of the globe. This book highlights individuals from a wide array of religious backgrounds - Christian, Jewish, Muslim, Buddhist, Zoroastrian, Hindu, Agnostic, Atheist, the Occult - who were once searching for the truth, and ultimately found their way to becoming adherents of the Baha'i Faith. Each story is personal and touching in its own way, and shows the diverse paths and backgrounds that make up the Baha’i community.
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Nineteen is a book of nineteen lessons learned from Haydn Robarts, whose short life profoundly changed all around him. Written by his father, it combines a personal memoir, universal lessons, insights from religion and science, and perspectives from Haydn and his parents. The result is a work that ultimately inspires an awareness, an awakening, and a mindset toward living this precious life with purpose and clarity. Haydn was a remarkable young man whose dignified response to his own suffering provides essential wisdom and hopeful possibilities for your own life.
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Author: Doris McKayProduct Code: FMHISBN: 978-0-85398-645-4Publisher: George RonaldAvailability: In stock
Price: $18.95
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Doris McKay became a Bahá’í in 1925 through the teaching efforts of Howard and Mabel Ives. This book tells the story of Doris and her husband Willard’s life as early American Bahá’ís, of their friendships with people such as the Ives, Grace and Harlan Ober, Louis Gregory, May Maxwell, Martha Root, Dorothy Baker, and others. It tells the story of the McKay’s work in the racial amity field and their eventual pioneering move to eastern Canada in the 1940s.
Doris tells her story with clear-sightedness, zest, and love. This book provides an intimate glimpse into the spiritual life of a dedicated Bahá’í teacher and the development of the Bahá’í Faith in America.
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By (author): Audrey MellardProduct Code: WRSISBN: 978-0-85398-641-6Publisher: George RonaldPages: 156Availability: In stock
Price: $14.95
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Review This Product The compelling narrative of Manuchihr Farzaneh-Moayyad, a Baha'i who was arbitrarily arrested, imprisoned and executed in Iran, and of his wife Mehri, who was herself imprisoned before her dramatic escape across the Iranian desert on camelback with her young daughter to refuge in Pakistan and, at last, to her new home in Scotland.
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By (author): Anisa Abdul-Razzaq Abbas Translated by: Alhan IrwinProduct Code: WHTISBN: 978-1-61851-190-4Publisher: One Voice PressPages: 331Availability: In stock
Price: $19.95
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On a December day in 1973, Anisa Abdul-Razzaq Abbas heard a knock at the door of the Baghdad home she was visiting. She opened the door to greet two men from the Iraqi Al-Amn security force, who immediately placed her under arrest. Her crime: being a member of the Bahá’í Faith, a religious minority in her native Iraq.
Over the next six years, Anisa—along with other members of the Bahá’í community who were arrested at that time—would spend three years in Iraq’s infamous Abu Ghraib prison and a further three years in Al-Rashaad prison before her release in 1979. During her years of incarceration, Anisa would rely on her faith to meet the myriad challenges of prison life. Day after day, she and her fellow-prisoners experienced levels of cruelty and injustice that most would find unthinkable. Separated from her husband, who was being held in the men’s prison, and from her children who were without both parents, Anisa was sustained through her darkest days by the steadfast devotion and sacrificial love of her family, and by the strength and solidarity offered by her fellow Bahá’í prisoners.
Anisa’s story is one of patience, courage, and steadfastness in the face of religious prejudice and state-sponsored oppression, and it is a reminder to us all of the resilient strength of the human spirit.
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Review This Product This courageous and hopeful memoir is a portrait of a childhood in Iran cut short, a young woman's journey to flee oppression, and the story of a refugee who learns what it means to come home.
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At 14, Richard (Ricky) Abercrombie was besieged by prejudice because of his multi-racial background and angered by unsatisfactory answers to his heartfelt questions about religious truth. The time was 1960, and the place was Greenville, South Carolina. Ricky began carrying a gun, skipping school, and numbing his painful emotions with alcohol. His parents were worried and his future looked bleak. What happened next – an invitation to a birthday party at the home of a Bahá’í family – changed his life forever. Ricky became intrigued by Bahá’í teachings on racial equality, peaceful strategies for social justice, and the fundamental unity of religion. As he investigated these teachings, Ricky experienced a profound spiritual awakening that led him to give up the gun, stop drinking, and engage in life with hope and joy. His friends and family initially opposed his dangerous new association with racially integrated groups, but Ricky’s steadfastness drew them into investigating his new beliefs themselves. This true story of how a rebellious teenager transformed his own character and affected the lives of dozens of friends and family members is a cover-to-cover delight.
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Review This Product A memoir of the life of Hussein Ahdieh, where he shares his journey from a rural village in Iran to life in New York City. Ahdieh also shares details about the history of the Bahá’í Faith in Iran and his family's personal involvement in the Bahá’í community over the years.
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