Her voice captures a lost innocence, but also echoes her determination to live in freedom and hope.Įarlier this year, Latifa and her parents escaped Afghanistan with the help of a French-based Afghan resistance group. My Forbidden Face by Latifa, August 29, 2002, Virago Press Ltd edition, Paperback My Forbidden Face (Augedition) Open Library It looks like you're offline. With painful honesty and clarity Latifa describes the way she watched her world falling apart, in the name of a fanatical interpretation of a faith that she could not comprehend. My Forbidden Face provides a poignant and highly personal account of life under the Taliban regime. The simplest and most basic freedoms - walking down the street, looking out a window - were no longer hers. From that moment, Latifa, just 16 years old became a prisoner in her own home. Then in September 1996, Taliban soldiers seized power in Kabul. Her father was in the import/export business and her mother was a doctor. She dreamed of one day of becoming a journalist, she was interested in fashion, movies and friends. Latifa was born into an educated middle-class Afghan family in Kabul in 1980.
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