Een roman over het leven van een Indiase arbeidsmigrante als dienstbode in het huis van een rijke Koeweitse dame
Dit is een kopie van een artikel op mijn boekenblog wat ik denk dat ook interessant is voor u gezien het migratie thema.
As you might know I sometimes review novels for the Netgalley site. I did one earlier this week and trying to figure out what was the writer's background discovered another novel she wrote. The one I had to review was certainly not a favourite but this one I bought really was.
I am an immigration lawyer by trade and have read reports about the labour migration from India, Pakistan and other Asian countries to the Gulf. Sometimes you read reports about the vulnerable situation female house personnel is in..
According to Amazon Pamela Q. Fernandes was born and raised in Kuwait. She's seen first hand
the country's laws and landscape shift after fleeing the First Gulf War
with her family and returning to the country in 1996.
This novel "Painting Kuwait Violet" is set a few years after the First Gulf War in Kuwait. The novel is about Indian Violet who gets herself a job as a maid in Kuwait. In that household several maids have fled and one has been killed. The question is who is the murderer. She is warned by others not to mention if she sees a weird thing and even those first days she discovers one of the woman who was in the plane has supposedly killed herself shortly after her arrival.
Does that mean the novel is very anti-Kuwaiti? Not at all. Violet makes friends with a daughter and there is someone who tries to protect here all those years even when she never realises that up till the end.
While I missed the colour locale, the local background in another of miss Fernandes stories, this novel is like an anthropologicalstudy of Kuwaiti life around the turn of the millennium. The whole thing of modern day slavery and the lives of rich Kuwaiti. But also the difference in standing of Bedouin Kuwaiti and the others and the lack of prospects for women.
Here in Europe we are used to residence permits as a status given by the government to an individual but several of my visa clients told me about the fact that in the Gulf and Saudi a residence permit is part of your employment contract and thus you are very dependant on your boss.
The book was a very interesting read and the thriller was entertaining although I came to the same conclusion as Madam. Very well done and the fact it is written by a local is obvious.
AMAZON blurb:
Interessant artikel? Deel het eens met uw netwerk en help mee met het verspreiden van de bekendheid van dit blog. Er staan wellicht nog meer artikelen op dit weblog die u zullen boeien. Kijk gerust eens rond. Zelf graag wat willen plaatsen? Mail dan webmaster@vreemdelingenrecht.com In verband met geldwolven die denken geld te kunnen claimen op krantenartikelen die op een blog als deze worden geplaatst maar na meestal een dag voor de krantenlezers aan leeswaardigheid hebben ingeboet terwijl wij vreemdelingenrecht specialisten ze soms wel nog jaren gebruiken om er een kopie van te maken voor een zaak ga ik over tot het plaatsen van alleen het eerste stukje. Ja ik weet het: de kans dat u doorklikt is geringer dan wanneer het hele artikel hier staat en een kopie van het orgineel maken handig kan zijn voor uw zaak. Wilt u zelf wat overnemen van dit weblog. Dat mag. Zet er alleen even een link bij naar het desbetreffende artikel zodat mensen niet alleen dat wat u knipt en plakt kunnen lezen maar dat ook kunnen doen in de context. Subscribe to Vreemdelingenrecht.com blog by Email
As you might know I sometimes review novels for the Netgalley site. I did one earlier this week and trying to figure out what was the writer's background discovered another novel she wrote. The one I had to review was certainly not a favourite but this one I bought really was.
I am an immigration lawyer by trade and have read reports about the labour migration from India, Pakistan and other Asian countries to the Gulf. Sometimes you read reports about the vulnerable situation female house personnel is in..
According to Amazon Pamela Q. Fernandes was born and raised in Kuwait. She's seen first hand
the country's laws and landscape shift after fleeing the First Gulf War
with her family and returning to the country in 1996.
This novel "Painting Kuwait Violet" is set a few years after the First Gulf War in Kuwait. The novel is about Indian Violet who gets herself a job as a maid in Kuwait. In that household several maids have fled and one has been killed. The question is who is the murderer. She is warned by others not to mention if she sees a weird thing and even those first days she discovers one of the woman who was in the plane has supposedly killed herself shortly after her arrival.
Does that mean the novel is very anti-Kuwaiti? Not at all. Violet makes friends with a daughter and there is someone who tries to protect here all those years even when she never realises that up till the end.
While I missed the colour locale, the local background in another of miss Fernandes stories, this novel is like an anthropologicalstudy of Kuwaiti life around the turn of the millennium. The whole thing of modern day slavery and the lives of rich Kuwaiti. But also the difference in standing of Bedouin Kuwaiti and the others and the lack of prospects for women.
Here in Europe we are used to residence permits as a status given by the government to an individual but several of my visa clients told me about the fact that in the Gulf and Saudi a residence permit is part of your employment contract and thus you are very dependant on your boss.
The book was a very interesting read and the thriller was entertaining although I came to the same conclusion as Madam. Very well done and the fact it is written by a local is obvious.
AMAZON blurb:
In 1996, a young graduate, Violet Baretto leaves Goa to work in oil-rich
Kuwait as a maid for a wealthy Kuwaiti woman. To her horror, she finds
herself accused of theft, her colleagues assaulted, thrown from moving
cars or performing 'favors.'
Sabah Dashti, the Kuwaiti matriarch
can't tell Violet the truth; nine of Sabah's previous maids have
absconded, five of them were found pregnant or that the police think
she's running a prostitution ring. Sabah has no idea who's responsible.
Kuwait
is still patriarchal and women are second-class citizens. Despite their
differences, both Sabah and Violet are hungry for success as it will
give them a chance to live life on their own terms. Together they build a
thriving business. But a woman-hating, killer has set eyes on them and
will not let them succeed at any cost.
Poignant, chilling and
honest, Painting Kuwait Violet underlines the reality of women on either
side of the country's class divide.
Interessant artikel? Deel het eens met uw netwerk en help mee met het verspreiden van de bekendheid van dit blog. Er staan wellicht nog meer artikelen op dit weblog die u zullen boeien. Kijk gerust eens rond. Zelf graag wat willen plaatsen? Mail dan webmaster@vreemdelingenrecht.com In verband met geldwolven die denken geld te kunnen claimen op krantenartikelen die op een blog als deze worden geplaatst maar na meestal een dag voor de krantenlezers aan leeswaardigheid hebben ingeboet terwijl wij vreemdelingenrecht specialisten ze soms wel nog jaren gebruiken om er een kopie van te maken voor een zaak ga ik over tot het plaatsen van alleen het eerste stukje. Ja ik weet het: de kans dat u doorklikt is geringer dan wanneer het hele artikel hier staat en een kopie van het orgineel maken handig kan zijn voor uw zaak. Wilt u zelf wat overnemen van dit weblog. Dat mag. Zet er alleen even een link bij naar het desbetreffende artikel zodat mensen niet alleen dat wat u knipt en plakt kunnen lezen maar dat ook kunnen doen in de context. Subscribe to Vreemdelingenrecht.com blog by Email
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