A Year Under Sharia Law
Memoir of an American Couple Living and Working in Saudi Arabia
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Narrated by:
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Tyler Krzeszewski
About this listen
Three years into a financial crisis that shows no sign of loosening its grip, a young couple make the unpopular decision to teach English in Saudi Arabia. The choice of Saudi Arabia is based primarily on the best salary offer and an all-expenses-paid round-trip flight. Secondarily, it is to satiate a desire to explore a country steeped in mystery and taboo.
Little do they know that the experience will come with a price and change their lives in a profound way, witnessing human rights violations that go unchecked even up to today and an ultra-conservative culture wrestling with tradition and modernity.
A Year Under Sharia Law is written as a travel memoir with vignettes of daily life and interactions with the community at large. It was also written to shine a spotlight on the plight of impoverished ladies who come to Saudi Arabia in the hopes of earning a salary to send money back to their family. They find work as nannies and house maids, primarily. These ladies are often stripped of their rights in a patriarchy that makes them prime targets for unspeakable abuses. Their passports are held by their Saudi employees, and they essentially become prisoners.
This memoir is not only dedicated to them and their plight, but also the tireless and dangerous work done by journalists who are critical of Saudi Arabia’s human rights record. Some have paid the ultimate price.
©2019 Alex Fletcher (P)2020 Alex FletcherWhat listeners say about A Year Under Sharia Law
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- Anonymous User
- 28-02-2021
Disappointing insight
I had hoped that this book would give a real insight into what it was like for people living and working in a country with such different laws and lives to the ones we are used to. Unfortunately it was a bit of a rant and whinge that they were being paid well for not a lot of work.
Most of their problems were self inflicted. Surely if you go to a country that has such strict laws surrounding the consumption of alcohol and modesty by women, you would think you would be able to abstain from drinking and partying in bikinis while you were in that country.
Also, the major “escape” from the party near the end was a bit hard to swallow.
Overall the story gave only a glimpse of life in this country where human rights is non existent and lives matter little to the regime. Instead we were told about over charging cab drivers, a wide variety of restaurants visited and the occasional acid reflux issue.
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