Lékařkou v pekle na Zemi.
V době nepokojů a útlaku černošského obyvatelstva Araby a státní policií v Súdánu,se lékařka Halima snaží zůstat mimo konflikt a věnuje se raněným. Po přepadení školy, při němž je brutálně znásilněna většina dětí, se Halima už neudrží a podá zprávu zástupcům Spojených národů. Přijdou si pro ni ozbrojení muži a Halima se bojí nejhoršího. Skutečnost je ještě strašnější, než si představovala...
Halima Bashir was born in Sudan. She left to study medicine, & returned as her tribe's first qualified doctor. Janjaweed Arab militias began savagely assaulting her people. She treated the traumatised victims. After speaking to a Sudanese newspaper & to the UN charities, the secret police came for her, interrogating & torturing her.
Halima Bashir’s story is a remarkable testament to resilience and courage amid the turmoil of war in Darfur. As the first memoir by a woman from this conflict, it chronicles her journey as a member of the Zaghawa tribe in Sudan. Doted on by her father, a cattle herder, and guided by her strong grandmother, Halima received a good education, excelling beyond her peers. Her father’s support enabled her to pursue medicine, and by twenty-four, she became her village’s first doctor. However, her achievements could not shield her from the violence that engulfed her homeland. The Janjaweed Arab militias, often backed by the Sudanese military, began brutal assaults on the Zaghawa people. In 2004, they attacked her village, resulting in the horrific rape of schoolgirls and teachers. As a doctor treating these traumatized victims, Halima found her voice and could no longer remain silent. Her decision to speak out led to dire consequences, but it also illuminated the plight of countless innocent lives lost in what is becoming one of the most devastating genocides of the twenty-first century. This powerful account serves as a global call to action, urging the world to recognize and respond to the ongoing atrocities.