
Die Fremde Braut: Bericht aus dem Inneren des türkischen Lebens in Deutschland
A non-fiction book about forced marriages, the position of Muslim women, and the conflict between tradition and freedom. Necla Kelek combines social criticism, personal experiences, and women's testimonies.
Die fremde Braut by Necla Kelek is a non-fiction and socially critical book in which the author deals with the position of women in traditional Muslim families, with a special emphasis on forced marriages, patriarchal patterns and the issue of integration. Drawing on her own experience and numerous examples from the migrant environment in Germany, Kelek opens a sensitive but important discussion about the relationship between family honor, religious tradition and a woman's right to independent life choices.
The book is particularly notable because it does not remain on a theoretical level, but brings concrete testimonies and social insights into the everyday lives of girls and women who find themselves between two worlds - family expectations and modern European society. The author writes directly, polemically and engagedly, which is why the book has provoked strong public debates in Germany.
Die fremde Braut is an important title for readers interested in women's rights, migration, integration, religion and contemporary social controversies. It is a thought-provoking book that confronts the reader with difficult questions of identity, freedom, and social boundaries, while at the same time offering insight into one of the most sensitive topics of contemporary European reality.
One copy is available




