The Girl From ForeignThe Girl From Foreign
a Search for Shipwrecked Ancestors, Forgotten Histories, and a Sense of Home
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Book, 2008
Current format, Book, 2008, , Available .Book, 2008
Current format, Book, 2008, , Available . Offered in 0 more formatsIn this beautifully crafted memoir, a young Muslim-Christian woman travels to an insular Jewish community in India to unlock her familyas secret history Sadia Shepard grew up in a happily complicated family just outside of Boston, Massachusetts, her father a white Protestant from Colorado and her mother a Muslim from Pakistan. It was always a joyful home, full of stories and storytellers, where the cultures and religions of both her parents were celebrated and cherished with equal enthusiasm throughout her childhood. But Sadiaas cultural legacy grew more complex when she discovered that there was one story she had never been told. Her beloved maternal grandmother was not the Muslim woman, Rahat Quraeshi, Sadia had always known her to be, but in fact was born Rachel Jacobs, a descendant of the Bene Israel, a tiny Jewish community whose members believe they are one of the Lost Tribes of Israel, shipwrecked in India two thousand years ago. What was complicated had become downright confusing; Sadia was now intimately linked to the faiths of Islam, Judaism, and Christianity and the customs of Pakistan, India, and the United States. At her grandmotheras deathbed, Sadia promised to begin the process of filling in the missing pieces of her familyas fractured mosaic, and with the help of a Fulbright scholarship, she set off for Bombay. Sadiaas search to connect with the Bene Israel community led her to discover more about Indiaas tumultuous history and the haunting legacy of Partition, and she was forced to examine what it means to lose oneas place, oneas homelands, and oneas history. Weaving together humorous tales from her crosscultural childhood with an evocative account of asmall Jewish community in transition, The Girl from Foreign is Sadiaas poetic and touching attempt to reconcile with her past and help determine her futureawhen offered the choice, will she be able to decide between the religious and cultural identities that have shaped her? It is the stunningly written and unforgettably evocative story of family secrets, forgotten roots, forbidden love, and, above all, eye-opening self-discovery. Sadia
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- New York : The Penguin Press, 2008.
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