Most folks look back on their high school days with fond
memories: the hijinks that they sailed through unscathed (for the most part), and
the feeling of that first puppy love.
They remember that tough teacher who, at the time, was evil, but with
the rose-colored glasses of time and distance, they ended up loving the most
because, while she was stern, she was effective. They remember the championship season, when the team went
all the way. The parties, the sleepovers,
the deep conversations.
TCKs remember the same things, but our experiences have a
little of the exotic injected into them.
We went to places like Hong Kong and Taipei to play sports, rather than the next
town down the road. Field trips involved
airplane trips into the deep interior of the tropic wilderness. We lived under Martial Law. Some of us lived in the midst of a revolution.
Tehran, Iran, during the late 1970s, is a time that we all
remember through the newspaper stories of the dethroning of the Shah and the
rise to power of the Ayatollah Khomeini.
I can still see the grainy pictures from the television coverage of
massive crowds of protesters, Uncle Sam burning in effigy, and the angry
anti-American slogans painted on walls and sheets. I still get a cold chill in my heart when I think of the
American hostages held captive (for 444 days!) at the Embassy in Tehran. I recently went to see Ben Affleck’s
movie “Argo” (and which I talked
about a little while ago) and it was too real, too raw, too close to home.
The summer before I went to college in Texas, I lived in
London with a British family, babysitting their children and taking a class at
a nearby college. My class only
had three students enrolled. One
of the students, according to our professor, was a prince from the royal family
of Bahrain. She told me, one day
when he was absent, that assassins sometimes will act when their target is in
school, blowing up the entire classroom.
Comforting. He used to blow
by me in his souped-up Camaro Iroc-Z, while I stood, in the rain, at the bus
stop. When I was in college in Texas,
I actually went on a date with a man who was a nephew of the Shah’s wife,
Empress Farah Diba Pahlavi. He was
tall, dark and handsome, and drove a really nice car. One time I landed in
Dubai on the way home from Asia.
Such is my total experience with the Middle East.
Joey and his friends skirt the law with their drug use; most
of us would be horrified to walk that thin line, especially in Iran, the land
of beheadings and stonings.
(Teenagers in the Philippines did the same thing; maybe, like us, they thought
they were immune from being caught.) Roberts gets inside the mind of an Iranian patriot, one who
despises the Shah and whose mission is to do his small part in overthrowing the
regime. A supporter of the shah,
an elderly Iranian professor, sees the country he loves falling into the hands
of the religious fanatics, and knows that he and his beloved wife have to
escape. Their perilous journey
through the snowy mountains reminds me a little of the book “Not Without My Daughter” by Betty Mahmoody.
This story could only have been told by someone who lived it. “Sons of the Great Satan” is a gripping narrative of the last days of Iran under the Shah, through the eyes of a Third Culture Kid. Roberts found himself yanked out of the high school that he loved, as the Shah’s regime fell around him. Most of us TCKs can relate, many of us having been yanked out of our schools, but rarely under circumstances quite as dire. There was no time to say good-bye to friends, and there was fear about his Iranian friend left behind. Anthony and his buddies were cast to into the wind, landing scattered about the world, like most of us TCKs at the end of high school. Roberts’ book is a testimony to all of our journeys and an example of our witness of global events of extraordinary significance.
This story could only have been told by someone who lived it. “Sons of the Great Satan” is a gripping narrative of the last days of Iran under the Shah, through the eyes of a Third Culture Kid. Roberts found himself yanked out of the high school that he loved, as the Shah’s regime fell around him. Most of us TCKs can relate, many of us having been yanked out of our schools, but rarely under circumstances quite as dire. There was no time to say good-bye to friends, and there was fear about his Iranian friend left behind. Anthony and his buddies were cast to into the wind, landing scattered about the world, like most of us TCKs at the end of high school. Roberts’ book is a testimony to all of our journeys and an example of our witness of global events of extraordinary significance.
Anthony Roberts |
3 comments:
Merci for taking the time to read and review my novel, Liz. I'm glad you enjoyed it. It's interesting how universal the TCK experience is regardless of where you lived.
Where's the "like a lot" button?
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