kelaina: (burn_icon)
There is a book I'm reading. Burned Alive: A Victim of the Law of Men, is written as it was told to a ghostwriter by a woman who was burned in her Palestinian village.

She was burned because she was unmarried and pregnant. They burned her for that most terrible of crimes: love.

I've read nearly all this book. It's short, maybe 215 pages at most. But the story is terrible, and horrible. The pain and the anguish are so great that you cannot even rage against this woman's family. Everything was done in accordance to custom.

The woman's name is Souad. She has no last name, for protective purposes. Although she now lives in Europe, and is considered legally dead in her home village, her case is what is called an honor killing: if her family discovered she was alive, they would do everything in their power to kill her.

Those involved in rescues like Souad's have seen it happen.

I cried for most of the book. I cried as I sat in a university cafe, with students coming and going, listening to Ipods, talking on cell phones, reading textbooks. And the sorrow threatened to overwhelm me.

What can we, as Americans, as women, as people, do about honor killings like Souad's? Once your eyes are opened, it is impossible to close them again. And yet, there is a frustrating feeling of helplessness. We cannot go and rescue every young woman who dares to fall in love. There are organizations to join, like the one mentioned in Burned Alive, Le Hommes de Terres (People of Earth), but can one person really make a difference?

I say yes. When I read Souad's story, I wanted to take her in my arms and cry. I wanted to understand her great and terrible fear of fire, her shame in her scars, her terror that her husband might leave her, because he is Arabic, because she is scarred, and in her own words, "a pile of garbage".

And it frustrated me, because I knew people who could help her. And I didn't know if it was out of place to go to them and ask for help. This woman, whom I am only connected to by reading her story, I desperately want to help. I want her to stop being ashamed of her scars, but at the same time, I understand why she is. I wish her husband could prove to her that he won't leave her, but he's already doing that, by being there every day.

It breaks my heart to see this woman, who represents the women of her culture, in pain, in sorrow. She believed for a long time that her gender made her worthless.

And it is for her, and for all the women and girls who continue to believe that, that we can't stop fighting.
kelaina: (twilight_icon)
Doctor's appointment today at two, but the surgery won't be scheduled until they take X-rays. Damn my teeth.

Have been biking, but am getting a constant soreness in my left thigh muscle--the rectus femorus...the femoral muscle, I think? I think I just need to stretch out more before I bike.

I have a book review due in nine days, and I've just begun the book. Fortunately, it's a damn easy read.

Tom and I went to see The House Bunny last night, and while I'm not sure I'd recommend it...it was funny, and cute, and totally mindless...which was just what we needed.

Oh, and a book I ordered for class (and paid expediated shipping for) was supposed to arrive by Sept. 1, and STILL is not here. I am not impressed, and the seller is getting a neutral at best. That fucking book should've been here a lot sooner. They didn't even ship it until the TWENTY EIGHTH, when they were supposed to ship it by the twenty second.

In other news, Stephanie Meyers is acting like a drama queen what with the leaked draft of her new novel, Midnight Sun. And as [livejournal.com profile] minisinoo, who's a professional writer, points out, a draft isn't anywhere in the category of a finished book.

It's a draft, Meyers, now get over it and stop acting like one of those fanfic writers on ff.n who threaten to never write another chapter until they get reviews.

All right, I'm off to take a shower and watch a little TV before I come back to the library and read more for this review.

ETA: For the love of Isis, Meyers has apparently thrown a hissy fit and made the entire draft public.

ETA 2: [livejournal.com profile] cleolinda's fabulous recaps are here and here.

ETA 3 (Sorry y'all): Apparently Meyers' taste in music is not nearly as bad as her so-called writing abilities.
kelaina: (Default)
Saw Narnia. It was not nearly so much teh sex as the first one was. Mainly because they thought throwing in added scenes would be cool. Also? Caspian was not blonde. Also? He was twenty in the film. He was FIFTEEN in the book.

Also, Peter acted like a whiny douche. And there was much less hotness, and NO slash. My heart nearly broke.

Adamson, epic fail.

Go see it anyway.

In other news, California officially made same sex-marriage legal. Again.

And in OTHER news (thanks, [livejournal.com profile] driftingfocus), Massachusetts is now requiring time and a half for employees who work on Sunday.

That's the only thing I'll be grateful to the Puritans for. They STILL screwed up the idea of sex for, oh, the past two hundred years.

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