Unveiled

How Western Liberals Empower Radical Islam

Hardcover, 294 pages

Published Oct. 3, 2019 by Free Hearts Free Minds.

ISBN:
978-1-9992405-3-0
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4 stars (3 reviews)

Since September 11th, 2001, the Western world has been preoccupied with Islam and its role in terrorism. Yet public debate about the faith is polarized—one camp praises "the religion of peace" while the other claims all Muslims are terrorists. Canadian human rights activist Yasmine Mohammed believes both sides are dangerously wrong.

In Unveiled: How the West Empowers Radical Muslims, Yasmine speaks her truth as a woman born in the Western world yet raised in a fundamentalist Islamic home. Despite being a first-generation Canadian, she never felt at home in the West. And even though she attended Islamic schools and wore the hijab since age nine, Yasmine never fit in with her Muslim family either. With one foot in each world, Yasmine is far enough removed from both to see them objectively, yet close enough to see them honestly.

2 editions

Review of 'Unveiled' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

Yasmine has a unique perspective from growing up in radically different countries, ideologies, and households. Her story feels like many different lives in such a short timespan. Every grade in school, every passing year had new life-altering challenges. It's a well-written but difficult read.

9/10 is Yasmine’s story. The final tenth addresses the book’s subtitle, where she nails the disconnect between western societies and those seeking their help.

"I hope that people will start to assess one another and deal with one another based on ideas and not identities. I hope that when people meet a girl being beaten by her family, they won’t bow down to the ethnicity of her parents. I hope they will realize that all little girls bruise, regardless of ethnicity.”

"People in Muslim majority countries are just trying to progress their culture in the same way Western culture has. You have been able to abolish …

Review of 'Unveiled' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

The style and honesty are worth two stars. It's that the author takes horrible instances of abuse and claims it's all of Islamic thought behind it rather than the parent's abuse and sect behind it. It paints a biased look that, instead of focusing on the horrors of abuse and abuse of religion, pushes a stereotype weaponized by all sides.

To say "my Muslim parents abused me greatly and this is what I want people to understand" is entirely on the level. Claiming all families are like the authors and saying "because Islam"fuels lies and hate.

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5 stars