Born in Somalia, raised a Muslim, the author denounced Islam after 9/11 and now fights for the rights of Muslim women in Europe, the enlightenment of Islam, and security in the West.
When Ayaan left Somalia, she went to Holland and she was impressed. She was offered assistance in finding a place to live and to work. However, before she got there, her belief was that Holland was in infidel country. According to muslims, they were to oppose and reject their way of life. But it was run so much better than the place muslims came from, ex. Somalia… shouldn’t the places where allah worshipped and his laws obeyed be peaceful and wealthy and the unbelievers poor and at war? This left the author torn between how she grew up and where she was currently living. She saw differences and tried to understand was what she taught really right?
Eventually, she came to believe that the quran is not a holy document, but a historical record, written by humans. Is it one version of events, as perceived by the men who wrote it 150 years after the prophet Muhammad died.
The author finds herself “on the brink of becoming an apostate”.
She became a member of Parliament in Holland in order to get her ideas across and to help people.
I definitely recommend this book for its first person perspective.
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