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1992 Press
Release from Doubleday UK on the British edition of the book,
Princess:
A True Story of Life Behind the
Veil in Saudi Arabia
A shocking indictment of the treatment of all
women in Saudi Arabia
“In a land where
Kings still rule, I am a Princess.
You must know me only as Sultana, for I cannot reveal my
true name for fear that harm will come to me and my family for
what I am about to tell you.”
Inhumanity,
exploitation, injustice, degradation…
This is what Saudi women live with every day.
From earliest childhood to old age, Saudi women are second
class citizens. They
have no rights, no vote, no control over their own lives, no value
but as bearers of sons. Behind
their veils they are prisoners.
Their jailers are their fathers, their husbands, their
sons.
“Sultana” is a
member of the Saudi Royal Family, closely related to the King.
For the sake of her daughters, she has decided that it is
time for a woman in her position to speak out about the reality of
life in her country, whatever their rank.
“My passion for
the truth is simple, for I am one of those women who was ignored
by her father, scorned by her brother, and abused by her husband.
I am not alone in this.
There are many more, just like me, who have no opportunity
to tell their stories.”
Sultana was born
into a family of ten daughters and one son.
Here earliest memories are those of fear:
the family’s fear that death would claim the only son.
In childhood the
girls’ lives were cloistered and dull.
For many years their mother’s pleas for their education
were met with flat refusals from their father.
By contrast, Ali, the son, was given the best education
available.
The family had four
palaces. When Ali was
fourteen years old his father decided that he needed a car.
So he bought him not one, but four identical red
Porsches—one for each palace.
But if Sultana’s
childhood had been bleak, the lives of most Saudi women were even
bleaker. Sultana’s
life was ruled by men, but there was protection of sorts because
of her family name. The
majority of women had no voice at all in their destiny.
Sultana relates a
history of appalling oppressions against them, every day
occurrences that in any other culture would be seen a shocking
violations of human rights.
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FORCED
MARRIAGES: Sultana
tells of her own sister who, as a teenager, was married to a
middle-aged man who subjected her to such brutal sexual sadism
that she could see no escape other than to kill herself.
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CHILD MOTHERS:
She tells of girls who have their first babies at
thirteen years old, and of teenagers, no older than eighteen,
who were delivering their fourth or fifth child.
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SUMMARY
EXECUTIONS: She
tells of the truly horrific story of a thirteen year-old girl,
who, pregnant had been found guilty of fornication.
The usual punishment for such a “crime” is
flogging, but in this case the girl’s father insisted upon
execution. It
turned out that the girl had, in fact, been raped.
Her punishment for this was death by stoning.
Not since the
controversial screening of the LWT documentary “Death of a
Princess” has such devastating truth been revealed about the
lives of Saudi women. Were
the identity of Sultana to be revealed, she would face devastating
consequences. For
this reason, she has told her story anonymously.
Nonetheless, PRINCESS is a testimony to a woman of
indomitable spirit and great courage.
You have never read a story like the story of Sultana, and
you will never forget her or her Muslim sisters.
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