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Escape from Slavery: The True Story of My Ten Years in Captivity and My Journey to Freedom in America

Escape from Slavery: The True Story of My Ten Years in Captivity and My Journey to Freedom in America

List Price: $24.95
Your Price: $16.47
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An important story about modern slavery
Review: So it's the 20th century, slavery was abolished more then a century ago right? Wrong as is made plainly clear in this extraordinary story of struggle and survival. This is the story of the Sudan where for the last 1500 years Arab slave traders have been enslaving Christian and animist Africans. In modern times no effort has been made by anyone including the west or the U.N to outlaw slavery and slave trading in the Sudan. Other African countries are no longer plagued by European and Arab slavers but the Sudan is still beset by this evil.

The author was born in the Sudan where slave traders raided his village, murdered the men and enslaved the women and children. The Women were used to sexual recreation for rich Arabs while the boys were used for simple housework. The author explains the terrifying events he experienced and his struggle to try and escape his sadistic masters. The author finally managed to escape and immigrate to the United States where he has worked to expose the world to the trauma of ongoing slavery in Africa. He exposes with brilliant language, reminiscent of Fredrick Douglas, the horrors of slavery.

This is an important book. Few know anything about Africa and even less is known about the continuing aspects of Arab slave trading which are brought to light in this important and seminal work. A wonderful piece of literature about an obscure subject, an easily readable account, a necessary addition to any library.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Up from slavery
Review: The cruelty that Francis Bok experienced at age seven--and which he recounts here--defies civilized human conception. One day in 1986, his mother Marial sent him to Nyamlell's market from their Southern Sudan Dinka village of Gourion to sell eggs and peanuts. His father Pial Bol Buk had recently called Francis "Muycharko"--"like twelve men." He would be successful and achieve something important.

Eventually, as this book bears out, his father's hope proved prophetic. But in 1986 Francis could count to no more than ten and still played alweth and Madallah--Dinka hide-and-seek and cricket. His mother sent older friends to supervise his first independent market trip.

The Catholic boy nicknamed Piol, for rain, that day lost his childhood and world to the murahaliin. After torching the nearby villages and slaying their inhabitants, 20 light-skinned Juur horsemen charged into Nyamlell. They severed the heads of all Dinka men with single sword strokes, left them rolling in the blood-soaked market dust and stole Piol's older friends Abuk, Kwol and Nyabol. A rifleman permanently silenced a crying girl with a bullet to her head. A swordsman sliced off her sister's leg at the thigh. Francis tried to flee. Terror squelched his cries. He was halted at gunpoint, grabbed and slung astride a small saddle, crafted specifically (as he later recognized) to carry abducted children, and ridden far north.

Bok recounts the role he played in pushing President Bush to toughen and sign the Sudan Peace Act on October 18, 2002. As he points out, this made Americans increasingly aware of Sudanese Islamic government support for mass enslavement and genocide of Southern Sudanese Christians and animists.

But as he also notes, while there may be some kind Muslims, the ongoing genocide against 2 million Southern Sudanese Dinka is merely a modern manifestation of Islamic tradition in Sudan and elsewhere throughout North Africa.

Francis Bok recognized in his treatment an institutionalized cruelty. He was beaten, forced to tend and sleep with animals, fed rotting meat, and cursed as a jedut--maggot--even after his master pressed a Muslim name and prayers on him. Abdul Rahman ironically means "servant of the compassionate one." But there was not one second of compassion during Bok's 10 years of captivity, although he was one of the lucky ones. He many times tried to escape, and failed. His penalties were mere beatings. Other Dinka escapees routinely lost their limbs when recaptured. Giemma Abdullah threatened the same; Bok didn't believe him, until he saw other Dinkas, limbless. Finally, at 17, Francis Bok took the cows one morning, and from the road near their grazing area ran all the way to Mutari. After further privations and imprisonments, Bok finally hid in a truck en route to ed-Da'ein, fled to Khartoum, to Cairo, and as a refugee, in 1999, to the U.S. He landed in the U.S. poor, illiterate, and 20.

But Bok admits that he was like all its victims unaware of the jihad institution's name or history. During 10 long years of enslavement by Giemma Abdullah in Kerio, Bok learned that the Arabic word abeed carried three meanings-"slave," "black" and "filth." Half his lifetime among Muslims taught him that they considered themselves better than Southern Sudanese infidels. But this hardly educated him on the institution to which his 20th century captors and masters subjected him.

The privations Bok suffered and the constant jihad in Sudan are typical of those suffered by non-Muslims, as pre-eminent Islamic scholar Bat Ye'or notes in The Decline of Eastern Christianity. Rudolf C. Slatin's In Fire and the Sword in the Sudan (1896), recounts 10 years of captivity by Khalifa Abdullah, searching for slaves and booty in Christian and animist regions. One finds similar accounts by Greek historian Speros Vryonis Jr. and in Nobel laureate Ivo Andric's 1924 Ph.D. thesis, Development of Spiritual Life in Bosnia under the Influence of Turkish Rule and in the October 20, 2003 issue of the Vatican-vetted La Civiltà Cattolica.

Francis Bok's book recounts his journey to freedom, education and the fulfillment of his father's dreams. This account resounds with the voice of twelve men, speaking as it does for the enslaved Dinka masses, still suffering razzias in Southern Sudan--and for non-Muslim dhimmis across time.

--Alyssa A. Lappen

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: KOLA BOOF highly recommends Francis Bok's New Book
Review: The following review is submitted by Sudan's top woman writer, author Kola Boof.

Once again, Francis Bok, a brave handsome heroic warrior man from the very gracious and proud Dinka Tribe has come forward with humility and elegance...to tell his truth. Not only does he tell HIS truth--but he also tells the truth of all of us who are both black and Sudanese. This is a remarkable book, one that should be important to ALL humanity, because in the larger sense, it is not just about being black or being Dinka in Sudan, it is not just about slavery...it is about human beings failing to honor and cherish the lives...of other human beings. This is one of the best books of the year!!!

As an Arab/Oromo woman born in Omdurman--and as a Northerner--I would like to testify and back up Mr. Bok's truth, because I personally witnessed much of what he writes about in his book.of course.I witnessed entirely different events at an entirely different time, because being the daughter of an Arab Egyptian, I was able to see the slave movement from its "infancy"--before it became visible and I was also an 8 year old child playing in the home of Dr. John Garang as my father, Garang (a Dinka) and other Arabs discussed at great length...what would years later become the SPLA.

...

PLEASE BUY IT RIGHT NOW! IT'S WORTH EVERY PENNY!

About Kola Boof:

Sudanese-American author Kola Boof...currently appears in the just released all new short story collection "Politically Inspired--Edited by Stephen Elliott" (MacAdam/Cage). All proceeds of the book "Politically Inspired" go to the Oxfam Humanitarian fund to help buy food and medicine for children in Iraq. In February 2004, Kola Boof's 1995 Arabic novel "Flesh and the Devil" will be released in ENGLISH in the U.S. translated by Said Musa. Kola Boof's books for the North African Book Exchange, however, were forced out of print when Muslim forces in Morrocco firebombed the author's publisher Russom Damba in Rabat. This includes her classic "Long Train to the Redeeming Sin", which is no longer in print. Miss Boof became a citizen of the United States in 1993.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Powerful and inspiring
Review: This book is the autobiography of a young man who has seen more in 21 years than most experience in a lifetime. Bok was taken into slavery at age 7, after a jihadist raid on his village in the Sudan that left his entire family dead. (With one exception, as he movingly reveals late in the book.) After ten years in captivity and living in an animal shed, he escaped and eventually came to the US. This book should be read by everyone, including younger readers, because it's a first-person account of something that most of us think was abolished in the 19th century, but in fact continues to this day. The author does public speaking and I hope our church will invite him to talk to our congregation. An amazing, moving story of imprisonment and triumph.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Moving
Review: This is an absolutely moving description of modern slavery. It could have easily been written to include grisly details of specific tortures that Bok and others suffered. But, this story's purpose is not to be shocking or voyeuristic. Instead, it is meant to inform the world about what most of us think ended hundreds of years ago. Sensationalism is not necessary. The indignities inherent in slavery, the sorrows of stolen lives, and the struggle for freedom are heartrending in themselves. And, there is always the understanding that as horrendous as his life of slavery was, millions of others continue to live even harsher lives enslaved.

It is a shame that the situation is not well-known. Obviously, people should work as vehemently against slavery today as they ever did before. Though the book ultimately urges activism, simply being knowledgeable of this issue is undoubtedly a tremendous step forward.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: ALERT (must be read immediately) 4.5 stars
Review: this is the story of what happened to one little boy,who was kidnapped from a loving family in the Sudan, and forced to become a slave at age seven. He remained a slave, untill he finally escpaed ten years later.
It did not happen hundreds of years ago. It happenned thirteen years ago.
Its written in a gentle voice, but one that conveys the tragedy well.
It NEEDS to be read, NOW.
Please, if you are a human being, and feel that slavery is wrong and kidnapping is wrong, then read this.
I have also been going through the website that Francis Bok is attached to and am learning a great deal
http://www.iabolish.com
Dear Francis Bok, if youre reading this> youre a good man and a tribute to the human spirit. A good son.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: a gently written eye-opener
Review: We have all heard tales of slavery through the past centuries. This is an account of slavery today. The young Francis Bok was captured and enslaved at age 7, and was not able to escape for ten years. This book tells of the survival of that child, and of his becoming a man.
While the horrifics of slavery and all it entails are important, and very much a part of this book, there is something else to me that stands out, that makes it important to read.
The childhood of the young Francis for the first seven years is the basis of his will, strength and ability to survive his captivity. The loving up-bringing from his family, extended family and friends gave him the strength to survive.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A personal awakening
Review: When I started this book, I'd heard of Sudan, but didn't know exactly where it was. I'd heard of the Dinka's, but knew little about them. I'm reminded daily on the radio of how awful we Americans are and how we should be punished for every having had slaves. This book told an awful truth about the existence of slavery alive today, all around the world, about children losing their limbs, about little girls being raped and stolen from their families. But this book also told a wonderful story about America and its open arms and the possibilities, the wonders, awaiting everyone who is blessed to live here. It told about how accepting, and welcoming Americans are, how the jobs are out there, of the precious value of our education system and so much mroe. Of course, there's a lot that needs fixing, but this book gives such wonderful hope to all who read it. And it blesses us with an introduction to an inspiring, strong, moral young man Mr. Buk.


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