Soraya M.âs husband, Ghorban-Ali, couldnât afford to marry another woman. Rather than returning Sorayaâs dowry, as custom required before taking a second wife, he plotted with four friends and a counterfeit mullah to dispose of her. Together, they accused Soraya of adultery. Her only crime was cooking for a friendâs widowed husband. Exhausted by a lifetime of abuse and hardship, Soraya said nothing, and the makeshift tribunal took her silence as a confession of guilt. They sentenced her to death by stoning: a punishment prohibited by Islam but widely practiced.
Day by dayâsometimes minute by minuteâSahebjam deftly recounts these horrendous events, tracing Sorayaâs life with searing immediacy, from her arranged marriage and the births of her children to her husbandâs increasing cruelty and her horrifying execution, where, by tradition, her father, husband, and sons hurled the first stones. A stark look at the intersection between culture and justice, this is one womanâs story, but it stands for the stories of thousands of women who sufferedâand continue to sufferâthe same fate. It is a story that must be told.