Showing posts with label Swap. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Swap. Show all posts

Thursday, 28 August 2014

Picture of the Day: 28.08.14 - Eid Gift Swap

Last Eid I participated in an Eid gift swap organised by one of my favourite bloggers - Sister Farhana of Sketched Soul.  I was paired off with a very sweet sister from Singapore.  I sent off my gift but found on Eid that the sister had had to travel to deal with a death in the family and lots of other issues.

She sent her gift out despite this and I received it when I came home from hospital today.  It was the sweetest gesture and her timing was so peerfect.  I loved every single thing she sent me:  a perfect sized make-up bag, yankee candles, a keyring with my initial, some reading (we are both avid bibliophiles), a sparkly pin which matches my outfit for my sisters henna next week and some pretty rosette clips.  








I have seen the pen below in a shop here and have been hankering after it for my filofax but decided it was too indulgent to spend the money, so you can imagine I loved this one.  Also, is it normal to like a paperweight this much - I just love the shape with its smoothed corners and the flower inside.





















May Allah (SWT) remove all of her problems and heartaches and replace them with blessings and happiness insh'Allah for making another sister smile and for taking the time to think about what I would love.

Friday, 4 December 2009

Crafty Gifts

Eid swaps are starting to become somewhat of a tradition for me and iMuslimah. My neighbour came round with my parcel yesterday and totally made my day.

The box has cake-icing nozzles and is amazing. I have never seen so many different ones, the set has really inspired me. The craft materials are lovely:


and iMuslimah collected these shells for me herself. I might use them in a set of nature themed cards or to decorate a trinket box.

My favourite though was this very pretty card which is on display in my living room right now.


The craft paper and lettering have come in useful already. I couldn't resist and made this card for a friend.

Thursday, 30 April 2009

Swap Gifts

I came home from the hospital yesterday morning to recieve a lovely surprise. As part of a swap we have been engaging in, Umm Nassim has sent me these lovely gifts. The abaya is just right for summer and I love the Moroccan style. I have seen someone wearing something very similar during hajj and looked everywhere for a similar one. I'm thinking white/cream trousers and a cream scarf fora summer day out (maybe I should ask Ange over at Hegab Rehab for ideas?)



She was also kind enough to send me some "light" reading as she puts it. I haven't started reading this yet, but have already started flipping through to where there are recipes interspersed in the story (just the inspiration I neede to become the gourmet cook I keep deluding myself I will be, especially as I haven't stepped into the kitchen in weeks).


Thanks Sister Farhana for arranging the swap and Umm Nassim for the treats. You can head over to Farhana's blog Sketched Soul to see what the other swap partners have been sending and receiving and read their book reviews, and while you are there please do take a look at some of the sadaqah projects and see if you can assist insh'Allah.

Wednesday, 8 April 2009

Book Review: Yasmin Crowther -The Saffron Kitchen

This was the second of the two books sent to me by Sister Umm Nassim as part of a book swap (review of the first, Persian Girls by Nahid Rachlin, here).

Like Persian Girls, this book is also set partly in Iran and takes us through the last days of the Shah’s rule and the revolution of 1979 up to the present day.

Sara is the daughter of Maryam and Edward, an Irani woman and an Englishman. The book opens with her suffering a miscarriage as she tries to prevent her young cousin, Saeed, from committing suicide (dramatic enough). The cause of the suicide attempt is the bullying Saeed has been subjected to and physical abuse from Maryam who is his guardian.

Tormented by guilt at the events that have unfolded, Maryam flees from her privileged life in London back to Iran and her childhood home. As the novel develops, Sara moves forward towards recovering from the miscarriage whilst Maryam looks back over her life. We are taken back over her idyllic childhood in the village of Mashad and the surrounding countryside, her rebelliousness as a teenager and her refusal to marry along with her feelings for a servant which bring tragedy for both of them. This part of the story is set during the last days of Shah Reza’s reign, however unlike in Persian Girls where the country’s political events loom large in each person’s life, in this book they are at best a distant backdrop barely affecting characters for most of the book. This is reflected in what one of the characters says at the end about how rural areas were least affected by the upheaval in the country. In contrast, the theme of the powerlessness of women in Iran looms large. We see how powerful social convention and tradition are coupled with poverty and how this constrains both men and women.

The book paints an interesting picture of the north-east of Iran: neither as modern as the capital Tehran, but not entirely backward. Perhaps traditional is the best word. Mention of English poetry, cigars and Parisian fabrics is interspersed with descriptions of the food, bazaars and houses of Mashad. Images of beautiful green-eyed Persians, pomegranates, figs, dusty lanes and enclosed courtyards create an enchanting backdrop to what is essentially a painful journey for a young woman.

The only thing that put me off a little is the level of navel-gazing the characters engage in. This is partly understandable due to trauma’s that many of them have suffered, but (the women especially) seem to have some kind of underlying self-destructive impulse which encourages them to push away those they love. Perhaps this is the author’s way of showing how pervasive our past can be in our present, especially when it is an unhappy past.


All that leaves me to do know is find a gift that refelects the two books in the swap and is preferably crafty, no problem....

Book Review: Nahid Rachlin – Persian Girls

I have finished the first of the two books sent to me by Sister Umm Nassim as part of a book swap (review of the second one here) and I quite enjoyed it.

Persian Girls is an autobiographical book written by the author as she looks back over her life as a child in Iran and later as an adult in America. She describes her childhood in Tehran with her widowed childless aunt and her later upbringing in her parent’s home in Ahvaz. Although this part of the book is set during the rule of the last Shah, we see that this is still a very conservative world, where despite superficial attempts at modernisation, women still have little control over their own lives.

Rachlin outlines in clean, clear prose her struggle to reconcile herself with the traditional culture of Iran and her eventual move to America in search of freedom. The second part of the book details her attempt to settle in America and gives us insight into the issues of confused identity that every immigrant faces. We also follow Rachlin as she returns to Iran after the mysterious death of her beloved sister Pari and indeed, this book is partly a eulogy to Pari.

Shia Islam and Iran are two subjects that hold a lot of mystery, and perhaps much misunderstanding, for me. This book is rich in the details of life of that country – the rituals, the traditions and the way people think.

What was also nice to see, was that despite descriptions of the hardships that women faced, religion is not made the scapegoat. Rachlin’s aunt makes clear that Islam affords women rights, but that the patriarchal culture of that time and place takes away those rights completely.

This book does for Iran what Khaled Hosseini’s The Kite Runner and A Thousand Splendid Suns do for Afghanistan, give us a history of what that country has endured over the last 50 years through the eyes of those who have experienced the unheaval.

Thursday, 2 April 2009

Book Swap

I was delighted to receive the books from Umm Nassim yesterday for the book swap. She was kind enough to send me two: The Saffron Kitchen by Yasmin Crowther and Persian Girls by Nahid Rachlin so I will get reading straight away and post reveiews insh'Allah (I thought the card she sent was also very cute, so included it in the picture, it's given me an idea for a card - but with bling of course).

Sunday, 22 March 2009

My First Swap

I have asked to join in with the swap Sister Farhana is arranging over at Sketched Soul. I have to send my favourite book to my swap partner, and on receiving the same from her, read it and send her a present which reflects the book she is sending me.

Firstly, trying to pick one favourite book is going to kill me. Secondly I just found out my swap partner is the wonderful Umm Nassim of Islamic Unit Studies which I am very happy about.

Now where on earth do I begin???