Skip to content or view screen version

Children's book on Taleban published

looter blissett | 03.11.2001 21:21

Thursday, 1 November, 2001, 10:08 GMT

Children's book on Taleban published

The novel portrays survival in a war-torn Kabul
A children's book about life under Afghanistan's
Taleban regime has been published.
PROPAGANDA OR JUST BUSINESS AS USUAL THE BOOK WAS BOUGHT FORWARD BECAUSE THE COMPANY WAS INUNDATED BY INQUIRIES FROM..

 http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/entertainment/arts/newsid_1631000/1631746.stm
Thursday, 1 November, 2001, 10:08 GMT

Children's book on Taleban published

The novel portrays survival in a war-torn Kabul
A children's book about life under Afghanistan's
Taleban regime has been published.

The novel, by Canadian author Deborah Ellis, tells the
story of Parvana, an 11-year-old Afghan girl, and her
struggles to avoid beatings, bombings and starvation.

Oxford University Press, the
book's publishers, said that
the book was written before
the current conflict began
and was intended for
publication later this year or
early in 2002.

But the company said it had
been so inundated with
enquiries from parents,
teachers and librarians that it had decided to bring
publication forward.

Struggle

"The Breadwinner is a powerful depiction of life under
the Taliban regime, told honestly and directly, in a way
children will really understand," the publishers said.

The novel is aimed at nine to 12 year olds and depicts
Parvana's struggle to gather food for her starving
family.

The heroine of the book
has to masquerade as a
boy to be able to leave the
home - because the
Taleban say that women
must stay at home unless
accompanied by a male
relative.

The Afghanistan portrayed
in the book is already
devastated by war.

"Bombs had been part of
Parvana's whole life.

Refugee camps

"Every day, every night,
rockets would fall out of the sky, and someone's house
would explode," reads a passage in the book.

Ms Ellis, who is a counsellor in Toronto, has paid many
visits to refugee camps in Pakistan during Afghanistan's
20 years of conflict.

In a statement, she said: "We owe it to our children to
be honest about the world and to provide them with
material written specially for them.

The Oxford University Press expects heavy demand for
the novel.

"Our reps at bookstores told us there has been
enormous demand for books like this to help parents
explain to their children what they were seeing on
television," said marketing manager Catherine Stokes.

looter blissett
- Homepage: http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/entertainment/arts/newsid_1631000/1631746.stm

Comments

Hide the following 3 comments

Objectivity

04.11.2001 02:23

The author says we owe it to our children to tell them the 'truth'. Since when has a novel been objective truth? I've no qualms in the author saying what she wishes - no doubt life under the Taliban is atrocious - and I doubt it's pro-war rhetoric, unless she has written the book exceedingly fast. It might even be a good book, I don't know I haven't read it. However, it is a novel, it is fiction and it must be regarded as such. The one thing children must be taught is the freedom to think for themselves. They should empathise with other aspects of the war in Afghanistan, not merely regarding the Taliban as the ultimate and sole evil in the world which crushes childhood innocence.

Sahib
mail e-mail: sahib@tehelkamail.com


Blairs "absolute proof"

04.11.2001 09:08

i wonder who 'all' the parents were that were clamouring for the early realease of this book. Mr & Mrs Tory Blair ???
wouldn't be surprised to see the right nasty reverand blair brandishing a copy and going into one about the absolute proof.. and now it's Harry potter vs the Taliban (tubbies)

and so reality goes on down the telly pan ,,,

sudge


Babies and Bathwater

04.11.2001 20:09

Deb Ellis is a distinguished writer. Check out her other titles and look at the her work in the community.

The book was written before the recent bombings.

Don Tchuktl