StopWar.ca

Vancouver's Labour/Community coalition of organizations united for Justice and Peace

Follow StopWar.ca's blog to keep up to date on news about the occupation of Afghanistan HERE

Next StopWar.ca general meeting:
Wednesday, November 4, 5:30pm at the Maritime Labour Centre (111 Victoria Dr.).

Malalai Joya in Vancouver

Saturday, November 14
7p.m., St. Andrew's - Wesley Church
1022 Nelson St, at the corner of Burrard

Suggested Donation: $5-10
All proceeds will go towards Joya's humanitarian projects in Afghanistan.

Please join us for this special event: the Canadian launch of Malalai Joya's book, A Woman Among Warlords: The Extraordinary Story of an Afghan Who Dared to Speak Out, which Kirkus Reviews calls, "A chilling, vital memoir that reveals hidden truths about Afghanistan and directly addresses the misguided policies of the United States."

Co-written with StopWar activist and writer Derrick O'Keefe, A Woman Among Warlords is an important and timely book. Malalai Joya's personal story is inspiring, and her political message is an uncompromising appeal for an end to NATO's occupation of Afghanistan and the impunity of the warlords in the Karzai regime. Don't miss this rare chance to hear Malalai Joya in person.

Organized by StopWar.ca.

Sponsors
Simon & Schuster Canada
the Canadian Peace Alliance,
Voice of Women—Canada
rabble.ca
Iranian Centre for Peace
Freedom and Social Justice.

Malalai Joya, the young woman who the BBC has hailed as the ‘bravest in Afghanistan,’ has published her memoirs, A Woman Among Warlords: The Extraordinary Story of an Afghan Woman Who Dared to Speak Out. You can purchase the book at your local independent bookstore, or online now at Amazon
or at Simon and Shuster.

Joya, now 31, was the youngest ever woman elected to the Afghan Parliament in 2005 and is an outspoken critic of the Karzai government and NATO occupation. She will be touring North America between Oct. 23 and Nov. 27 to speak about her new memoir, co-written with Canadian activist and writer Derrick O’Keefe.
With U.S. President Obama considering escalating the war in Afghanistan with over 40,000 more troops -- and the Canadian government signaling that this country’s forces will in fact not be coming home at the end of 2011 -- Joya’s speaking tour and book release is timely.

“Afghan women like me, voting and running for office, have been held up as proof that the United States has brought democracy and women’s rights to Afghanistan,” Joya writes. “But it is all a lie.”

Her book tells the story of her life in the context of three decades of war. Joya details her reasons for opposing NATO's war and suggests concrete steps for building an independent and genuinely democratic Afghanistan.

Malalai Joya, often compared to Burma’s Aung San Suu Kyi, has emerged as a symbol of Afghans’ desire for freedom from corruption, warlordism and foreign occupation. Her father, who lost a leg fighting the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan, named her after a 19th century hero in the fight against the British Empire, Malalai of Maiwand.

Today, Joya brings to a North American audience the lessons of Afghanistan’s long history of occupation and resistance. And she hopes her book will “correct the tremendous amount of misinformation being spread about Afghanistan.”

“Afghans are sometimes represented in the media as a backward people, nothing more than terrorists, criminals and henchmen. This false image is extremely dangerous for the future of both my country and the West. The truth is that Afghans are brave and freedom loving people with a rich culture and a proud history. We are capable of defending our independence, governing ourselves and determining our own future.”

For book tour details in the United States (Oct. 23 - Nov. 12), click HERE

For a complete listing of events with Malalai Joya across Canada (Nov. 13 - 27), click HERE.