The
Truth About Peacock Blue by Rosanne Hawke
(Allen & Unwin 2015)
PB RRP $15.99
ISBN: 9781743319949
PB RRP $15.99
ISBN: 9781743319949
Reviewed by Jade Harmer
Aster is a fourteen year old girl from a
small village in Pakistan. Following the tragic loss of her brother and best
friend, Ijaz, her family decides that rather than follow tradition and arrange
her early marriage, Aster will be given the opportunity to attend the
Government High School so that she may become a teacher and help support her
family.
Despite suggestion that Aster will be
free to follow her Christian faith, anti-Christian sentiment at the Muslim
school is rife. She is bullied and demeaned by peers and treated with contempt by
Arabic and Islamic teacher, Mrs Abdul.
Buoyed by the love of family and friends
and the strength of her faith, Aster persists with her studies, but when Mrs
Abdul accuses her of blasphemy, life as she knows it ceases to exist.
Blasphemy laws in Pakistan dictate that
anyone accused of insulting Islam faces a potential death sentence, and
although her teacher can offer no proof of the crime, Aster has no recourse to
fight the injustice of laws that critics argue are used to persecute minorities
and settle vendettas.
From a Western perspective, Aster’s
immediate imprisonment and seemingly lawless treatment is difficult to
comprehend, as is the imminent threat to her family and village.
Rosanne Hawke, an aid worker in Pakistan
for many years, has woven a powerful, captivating story inspired by Pakistani
women and children such as Asia Bibi, a Catholic mother of five who, after
nearly five years on death row, awaits the outcome of an appeal on a disputed
blasphemy charge.
Hawke builds a heart-wrenching account
of Aster’s fight to maintain her dignity, values and beliefs in unbearable
circumstances, and uses social media to offer a global perspective of her
plight, drawing attention to the freedoms that we as Australians enjoy in our
safe, democratic society.
She also provides a timely account of
why people might be forced to abandon their lives – their families, friends and
all that they cherish – in the hopes of sharing the freedoms we take for
granted.
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