Sakeena Yacoobi is the winner of the 2004 Women’s Rights Prize from the Peter Gruber Foundation. She joins us to discuss her work as President and founder of the Afghan Institute of Learning (AIL). The AIL provides more than 350,000 Afghan women and children with education, health care, and human rights training annually. Then, Turkish novelist Orhan Pamuk on his latest book, Snow. The book is set in a remote Turkish village against the backdrop of religious, political, and deeply personal tensions. And Cynthia Ozick discusses her new novel, Heir to the Glimmering World, set in the rough and tumble world of the Depression-era Bronx. Finally, Tara Bray Smith examines her troubled relationship with her mother, and her ties to Hawaii, in her memoir: West of Then: A Mother, A Daughter, and a Journey Past Paradise.
Afghan Institute of Learning
Sakeena Yacoobi on her work helping to bring education, health care, and human rights training to more than 350,000 Afghan women and children each year.
» More on the Afghan Institute of Learning
» More on the Afghan Institute of Learning
Political Literature
Turkish writer Orhan Pamuk on his new, politically-weighted novel Snow.
Music: Lalezar—Music of the Sultans, Sufis & Seraglio: "Segah pesrev" / "Isfahan pesrev"
Music: Lalezar—Music of the Sultans, Sufis & Seraglio: "Segah pesrev" / "Isfahan pesrev"
An Orphan's Tale
Cynthia Ozick shares her latest novel, Heir to the Glimmering World.
Music: Music: Soundtrack to Iris, music by James Horner: "Part 3" / "Part 4"
Music: Music: Soundtrack to Iris, music by James Horner: "Part 3" / "Part 4"
Family and Place
Tara Bray Smith on her turbulent childhood in Hawaii: West of Then.
Music: Soundtrack to Cider House Rules, music by Rachel Portman: "Rose Rose Is Pregnant"
Music: Soundtrack to Cider House Rules, music by Rachel Portman: "Rose Rose Is Pregnant"

Comments [1]
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