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Kate McCord

Auteur de In the Land of Blue Burqas

3 oeuvres 221 utilisateurs 8 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Kate McCord is not her real name. To protect herself and the men and women she talked with, all of the names in this book have been changed. Though in the midst of a high-powered career, Kate left it all, sold everything, and went to Afghanistan to start a non-governmental organization with the, afficher plus goal of helping Afghan women. She taught herself the local language and served there for more than five years. Now she wants you to know the Afghan men and women she has come to love. afficher moins

Œuvres de Kate McCord

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Excellent insights into the land, culture, religion and people of Afghanistan. The author had a very unique and effective way of sharing the teachings of Jesus Christ with the people of Afghanistan. A very interesting and challenging read.
 
Signalé
lengroff | 6 autres critiques | Feb 19, 2023 |
The author seems to be a lovely, faithful, honest, loving, caring and (mostly) culturally humble person. I enjoyed reading about her time in Afghanistan and what she learnt while she was there. I think that Americans and many of the rest of us in the West also need to learn many of the lessons she mentions, such as gratitude, the joy of giving, and for men to treat women with respect.
 
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KWharton | 6 autres critiques | Sep 3, 2020 |
My emotions were all over the place reading this, even more so than in Kabul Beauty School. The authors of these 2 books could not be more different, religion aside.

I know I would never be interested in doing what the author did, nor Deborah Rodriguez from the other book either. I would not want to cope with sporadic water ( having OCD with no access to available running water would be my worst nightmare ), spotty electricity, bad drivers, constant staring and never ending attempts at converting me. It is also a fairly no hope situation, as in this country converting to another religion means execution.

One of the most disturbing things in this book is that someone told the author that if anyone owns a Bible he is automatically Christian and therefore must be executed. What ???

They marry their little girls off to men who sometimes are old enough to be their fathers, without even knowing who the man is. I can not even begin to imagine being told at 12, I will soon be a bride and have to have sex and endless amounts of male offspring in the 4th grade. Unthinkable to my Western mind, child's rights/protection stance as an ex social worker in child welfare. It is worse than living in the Dark Ages. Women are covered from head to toe, have to walk soundlessly, get beaten regularly, rarely leave the mud huts they live in, most are illiterate and infant mortality is high.

I would never in a million years put myself in harms way and live in such wretch conditions only to be told by some man there that his Koran says anyone who is not Moslem should be killed.

There are far more causes I support with my heart and wallet that actually does a bit of good.

This would not be one of them - but God bless her soul for doing what she felt called to do even if it meant getting kidnapped, murdered or blow up by a bomb. The holiday from hell.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
REINADECOPIAYPEGA | 6 autres critiques | Jan 11, 2018 |
If you are having a bad day...read this and be encouraged that you are not alone and things can be MUCH worse. You could be a woman in Afghanistan.
True story of a woman's experiences as a worker with an NGO in a smal village in that country. Her love for the women especially and her conversations there with the people she worked with and met will open your eyes to many things. I dare you to read this book!
 
Signalé
chickadee2 | 6 autres critiques | Jul 5, 2017 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
3
Membres
221
Popularité
#101,335
Évaluation
½ 4.4
Critiques
8
ISBN
8
Langues
1

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