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Park attributed the discrepancies to her imperfect memory and language skills, [3] [13] and her autobiography's coauthor, Maryanne Vollers, said Park was the victim of a North Korean smear campaign. [15] Park runs the YouTube channel "Voice of North Korea by Yeonmi Park", [16] which as of July 2023 has over one million subscribers. [3]
Yeonmi Park, who fled from poverty and famine in North Korea in 2007 and criticized "woke" culture in a visit to the University of Iowa on Tuesday night.
Yeonmi Park – best-selling author and prominent activist among American conservatives, described as being "one of the most famous North Korean defectors in the world". [21] Journalistic investigations by The Diplomat and The Washington Post concerning Park's stories of life in North Korea charged that she had embellished and even fabricated ...
[236] [237] Shari'a is the basis for personal status laws such as rights of women in matters of marriage, divorce and child custody which was described as discriminatory against women from a human rights perspective in a 2011 UNICEF report. [238] Allowing girls under 18 to marry by religious courts is another criticism of Islam. [239]
Harris Sam, Maajid Nawaz, Islam and the Future of Tolerance (2015) Hitchens, Christopher (2007). God Is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything, New York: Twelve Books, ISBN 9780446579803. (Chapter nine assesses the religion of Islam) Manji, Irshad. (2004), The Trouble with Islam, Vintage Canada, ISBN 0-679-31361-3; Pipes, Daniel (1983).
Nothing to Envy: Ordinary Lives in North Korea is a 2009 nonfiction book by Los Angeles Times journalist Barbara Demick, based on interviews with North Korean refugees from the city of Chongjin who had escaped North Korea.
This category is for articles related to Criticism of Islam as a method of disciplined, rational, skeptical, unbiased analysis, evaluation, or systematic study that focuses on reflective assessment and critique of a written or oral discourse in Islamic religion.
The (OIC), the world's second largest intergovernmental organization, comprising fifty-seven Islamic states, has actively lobbied for a global ban on what it perceives as anti-Islamic blasphemy, [1] [5] especially after the publication of Innocence of Muslims — a "low-quality film" depicting Muhammad as a madman, philanderer, and pedophile, [1] — triggered protests and demonstrations in ...