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A letter from fakhri daughter of the sea to the whole world
Coles
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A letter from fakhri daughter of the sea to the whole world in Ottawa, ON
By None
Current price: $8.09
Original price: $8.99


By None
A letter from fakhri daughter of the sea to the whole world in Ottawa, ON
Current price: $8.09
Original price: $8.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: Kobo eBook
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FAKHRI: THE ALCHEMY OF TEARS
FAKHRI: THE WOMAN WHO MOVED MOUNTAINS
A Manifesto of Blood, Salt, and Light
Listen. Do not listen with the cartilage of your ears, for the world has already deafened them with lies; listen with the marrow of your bones. What you are holding is not a memoir; it is an autopsy of a soul that was murdered a thousand times yet refused to stay dead. "Fakhri" is no longer merely a name found on a birth certificate; it is a verb, an action conjugated in the past tense of endurance and the future tense of defiance. If you are looking for a gentle story of love and flowers, put this down. This is a chronicle of how to witness Hell and, with bleeding hands, build Heaven from the ashes. It is the story of a woman who stood in the center of a fire lit by betrayal and decided not to burn, but to become gold.
It begins at 3:00 AM, the hour of the wolf, in a room where the silence is heavy enough to crush a man. My "Dead Fingers," nerves severed by the freezing winds of injustice, dance across the keyboard, numb to the touch but burning with a message that cannot wait. You ask of my pain? It is a geography of scars. It started with a childhood fall that cracked my ear, followed by the Iran-Iraq War that shattered the hearing with the shockwaves of bombs. But the third strike-the strike of Malice-was the most brutal. When Injustice slapped me, trying to deafen me to the truth, a divine irony occurred. As my physical hearing faded into a high-pitched scream, my Bashirat-my spiritual hearing-tore open. I became a walking radar for the soul. I could hear the grinding gears of a lie before it was spoken; I could smell the stench of betrayal on a "friend" like the scent of rotting lilies long before the knife hit my back.
This terrified them. They tried to bury me in a dungeon of isolation for two years-730 days in a room where the ceiling was darker than a moonless night and the floor colder than a fresh gravestone. I was left to rot, to die a gradual death of spirit. But I did not spy, I did not scream, and I did not retaliate. I did the one thing that burns a tyrant more than fire: I forgave.
But the test of the alchemist was not over. Medieval mystics sought to turn metal into gold, but I was forced to become the Alchemist of the Soul. They injected the heavy, poisonous lead of slander, poverty, and loneliness into my veins, expecting me to sink. Instead, I turned to the Giants. I summoned the patience of Prophet Ayyub (Job) and the axe of Prophet Ibrahim (Abraham)-not to break stone idols, but to smash the idol of my own Ego. From the debris, I forged pure gold.
Yet, just as I stood, the sky turned black. The plague of Corona descended, stealing my brother, the cypress tree of our family. He died alone. I was banned by the cruelty of distance from holding my mother as she wailed over his fresh grave, a cathedral of grief bombed into rubble. I had to project my soul one thousand kilometers to wipe her tears with phantom hands.
And then, the ultimate blow: my innocent daughter. They dragged us into the "Blood Ward," the Hematology department-the nightmare of every mother. Her illness was not of nature; it was a man-made catastrophe, a biological mirror of the drying Lake Urmia. Just as they drained the lake, they drained the vitality from my child, forcing her to pay the price for the sins of a corrupt generation.
FAKHRI: THE ALCHEMY OF TEARS
FAKHRI: THE WOMAN WHO MOVED MOUNTAINS
A Manifesto of Blood, Salt, and Light
Listen. Do not listen with the cartilage of your ears, for the world has already deafened them with lies; listen with the marrow of your bones. What you are holding is not a memoir; it is an autopsy of a soul that was murdered a thousand times yet refused to stay dead. "Fakhri" is no longer merely a name found on a birth certificate; it is a verb, an action conjugated in the past tense of endurance and the future tense of defiance. If you are looking for a gentle story of love and flowers, put this down. This is a chronicle of how to witness Hell and, with bleeding hands, build Heaven from the ashes. It is the story of a woman who stood in the center of a fire lit by betrayal and decided not to burn, but to become gold.
It begins at 3:00 AM, the hour of the wolf, in a room where the silence is heavy enough to crush a man. My "Dead Fingers," nerves severed by the freezing winds of injustice, dance across the keyboard, numb to the touch but burning with a message that cannot wait. You ask of my pain? It is a geography of scars. It started with a childhood fall that cracked my ear, followed by the Iran-Iraq War that shattered the hearing with the shockwaves of bombs. But the third strike-the strike of Malice-was the most brutal. When Injustice slapped me, trying to deafen me to the truth, a divine irony occurred. As my physical hearing faded into a high-pitched scream, my Bashirat-my spiritual hearing-tore open. I became a walking radar for the soul. I could hear the grinding gears of a lie before it was spoken; I could smell the stench of betrayal on a "friend" like the scent of rotting lilies long before the knife hit my back.
This terrified them. They tried to bury me in a dungeon of isolation for two years-730 days in a room where the ceiling was darker than a moonless night and the floor colder than a fresh gravestone. I was left to rot, to die a gradual death of spirit. But I did not spy, I did not scream, and I did not retaliate. I did the one thing that burns a tyrant more than fire: I forgave.
But the test of the alchemist was not over. Medieval mystics sought to turn metal into gold, but I was forced to become the Alchemist of the Soul. They injected the heavy, poisonous lead of slander, poverty, and loneliness into my veins, expecting me to sink. Instead, I turned to the Giants. I summoned the patience of Prophet Ayyub (Job) and the axe of Prophet Ibrahim (Abraham)-not to break stone idols, but to smash the idol of my own Ego. From the debris, I forged pure gold.
Yet, just as I stood, the sky turned black. The plague of Corona descended, stealing my brother, the cypress tree of our family. He died alone. I was banned by the cruelty of distance from holding my mother as she wailed over his fresh grave, a cathedral of grief bombed into rubble. I had to project my soul one thousand kilometers to wipe her tears with phantom hands.
And then, the ultimate blow: my innocent daughter. They dragged us into the "Blood Ward," the Hematology department-the nightmare of every mother. Her illness was not of nature; it was a man-made catastrophe, a biological mirror of the drying Lake Urmia. Just as they drained the lake, they drained the vitality from my child, forcing her to pay the price for the sins of a corrupt generation.

















