The Ladies’ Secret Society by Manda Zand Ervin
New English Review Press is pleased to announce the publication of our thirty-second book,The Ladies’ Secret Society: History of the Courageous Women of Iran by Manda Zand Ervin.
Trying to make sense of current events in Iran? Think you know the history of the people of Iran? This book — The Ladies’ Secret Society — is the book you must read. And its author, Manda Zand Ervin, is the best guide you could find. Ms. Ervin’s perspective as a pre-revolution child of Iran and a successful young professional who fled the 1979 Iranian Revolution, at her father’s behest—to save her life—gives her credibility as the book’s narrator and serves as a powerful vehicle for telling the story of the courageous women of Iran’s long history and current events. You will fall in love with these brave women of Iran, and your heart will cry for a future in which their daughters can know freedom and joy.
—Asra Q. Nomani, former Wall Street Journal reporter, Georgetown University professor, and author of Standing Alone: An American Woman’s Struggle for the Soul of Islam
Manda Ervin’s new book is a cry of the heart on behalf of Iranian women who were among the first victims of the Islamic Revolution and are now in the forefront of the struggle to take their country back and resume its historic path to freedom and democracy. Manda was a star in the first generation of Iranian woman journalists, trail-blazers who defied centuries-old socio-cultural hang-ups to push gender equality to the top of national priorities in the 1960s and 1970s. As both historic testimony and a good read, Ms. Ervin’s book is certain to help with a greater understanding of what many, including some Iranians, regards as the Persian puzzle.
—Amir Taheri, author of The Persian Night: Iran under the Khomeinist Revolution
During the Iranian Islamic revolution, Manda witnessed the execution of many innocent people, including her high school principal who was murdered because she was a woman and the Secretary of Education. She bore witness as her homeland pushed backward to crude 7th century Arabian standards. And she witnessed the effect. Having been educated in the United States, in 1979, she was the managing director of department of statistics and international affairs at the Customs Administration in Iran. She came to United States as a political refugee in 1980, became a citizen three years later, and began her fight for human rights in Iran. She is the founder and president of the Alliance of Iranian Women, a group which has deep connections within the Iranian diaspora and within Iran. Ms. Ervin is frequently consulted by Members of Congress and has testified in Congressional briefings, the Helsinki Commission, and the United Nations. In February of 2008, Ervin was appointed as the United States’ Delegate to the United Nations’ Commission on the Status of Women. Ervin was the featured speaker at the G8 Summit on Violence against Women in 2009. She received the EMET Speaker of the Truth award in 2012. Ervin has been published by the Hudson Institute, American Thinker, Washington Times and many others. She frequently speaks on human rights and Middle East history.