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Where the Paved Road Ends: One Woman's Extraordinary Experiences in Yemen
Hardback

Where the Paved Road Ends: One Woman’s Extraordinary Experiences in Yemen

$69.99
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This title provides an intimate glimpse into Yemeni customs and culture through the lens of an American English teacher in Marib, a place so dangerous even Yemenis are reluctant to travel there. It reveals the intricacies involved in manoeuvring as a woman - and a foreigner at that - in Marib, where transactions, including shopping for women’s clothing and food, are conducted by men. It tells the story of the unlikely friendship that develops between the author and her military bodyguard, Mohammed. In 2004, Carolyn Han left her comfortable life and position as a lecturer in English at Hawaii Community College and went to live in one of the most remote and mysterious places in the Middle East - Yemen, known in the West primarily for providing a haven for terrorists affiliated with al Qaeda. The previous year, she had sold her gold jewellery to travel with Bedouin by camel from Marib to Shabwa, and the life-changing experience opened the path for her to become the first American English instructor in Yemen’s wild tribal area, Marib. Guided by fateful encounters and unfazed by warnings of danger, Han allowed her life to unfold as it might, with a sense of acceptance informed by the idea that whatever happens is meant to happen. Learning and understanding would follow. In this book, Han paints a vivid portrait of Yemeni customs, including their enjoyment of the stimulant qat and their proclivity for carrying AK-47s wherever they go, and she conveys what it was like to be a woman alone surrounded by a culture not her own. As the old saying goes, Han, the ostensible teacher, became the student, and through these pages she allows readers a rare glimpse into a Bedouin culture that most will never encounter.

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MORE INFO
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Potomac Books Inc
Country
United States
Date
1 September 2012
Pages
256
ISBN
9781597977258

This title provides an intimate glimpse into Yemeni customs and culture through the lens of an American English teacher in Marib, a place so dangerous even Yemenis are reluctant to travel there. It reveals the intricacies involved in manoeuvring as a woman - and a foreigner at that - in Marib, where transactions, including shopping for women’s clothing and food, are conducted by men. It tells the story of the unlikely friendship that develops between the author and her military bodyguard, Mohammed. In 2004, Carolyn Han left her comfortable life and position as a lecturer in English at Hawaii Community College and went to live in one of the most remote and mysterious places in the Middle East - Yemen, known in the West primarily for providing a haven for terrorists affiliated with al Qaeda. The previous year, she had sold her gold jewellery to travel with Bedouin by camel from Marib to Shabwa, and the life-changing experience opened the path for her to become the first American English instructor in Yemen’s wild tribal area, Marib. Guided by fateful encounters and unfazed by warnings of danger, Han allowed her life to unfold as it might, with a sense of acceptance informed by the idea that whatever happens is meant to happen. Learning and understanding would follow. In this book, Han paints a vivid portrait of Yemeni customs, including their enjoyment of the stimulant qat and their proclivity for carrying AK-47s wherever they go, and she conveys what it was like to be a woman alone surrounded by a culture not her own. As the old saying goes, Han, the ostensible teacher, became the student, and through these pages she allows readers a rare glimpse into a Bedouin culture that most will never encounter.

Read More
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Potomac Books Inc
Country
United States
Date
1 September 2012
Pages
256
ISBN
9781597977258