© 2017 Peter van Agtmael/Magnum Photos Entrance to Camps V and VI at the prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba
  • Synopsis

    In today’s political climate, where threats of mass deportations and a Muslim registry are making the headlines, the issues of civil rights, identity, and belonging explored inside PATRIOT ACTS: NARRATIVES OF POST-9/11 INJUSTICE are perhaps more urgent than ever before.

     

    A groundbreaking collection of oral histories in the Voice of Witness (VOW) series, PATRIOT ACTS tells the stories of men and women who were needlessly swept up in the War on Terror. In their own words, narrators recount personal experiences of the post-9/11 backlash that have deeply altered their lives and communities. The eighth book in the Voice of Witness series, PATRIOT ACTS illuminates these experiences in a compelling collection of eighteen oral histories from men and women who have found themselves subject to a wide range of human and civil rights abuses—from rendition and torture, to workplace discrimination, bullying, FBI surveillance, and harassment.

     

    The book’s narrators include:

     

    ADAMA, a sixteen-year-old Muslim American who was abruptly seized from her home by the FBI on suspicion of being a suicide bomber. Even after her release from detention, she was forced to wear a tracking bracelet for the next three years.

     

    TALAT, the mother of 9/11 first responder Salman Hamdani, who went missing after the attacks. As Talat and her husband searched desperately for their son, they were hounded by the media, who portrayed Salman as a possible terrorist in hiding.

     

    RANA, a Sikh man whose brother Balbir was gunned down outside the gas station where he worked. Balbir’s death was the first reported hate murder after 9/11.

     

    Photo © 2017 Peter van Agtmael/Magnum Photos

    Entrance to Camps V and VI at the prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba

  • Voice of Witness

    Voice of Witness (VOW) is a non-profit that promotes human rights and dignity by amplifying the voices of people impacted by injustice. Through an oral history book series and education program, VOW fosters a more nuanced, empathy-based understanding of human rights crises.

     

    VOW’s work is driven by a strong belief in the transformative power of the story, for both teller and listener.

     

    For over ten years, VOW has illuminated human rights crises in the U.S. and globally. Its oral history book series has amplified hundreds of seldom-heard voices, including those of wrongfully convicted Americans, undocumented immigrants, and people in Burma, Zimbabwe, and Colombia.

     

    VOW’s education program serves over 20,000 people annually. Its oral history pedagogy has been used to train a broad range of advocates for human rights and dignity, including educators, writers, journalists, attorneys, and medical doctors.

     

    Curriculum materials, excerpts, as well as more about VOW and PATRIOT ACTS can be found here at http://voiceofwitness.org/books/after-911/

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© 2017  Alia Malek

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