Remember the tag #BringBackOurGirls? Do you remember hearing and seeing in the news the story of the 270 Nigerian school girls who were kidnapped by Boko Haram several years ago? As news stories do, this event eventually was replaced by other stories, which is so sad because 112 of these girls are still missing. On April 14, 2014, terrorists from the Islamic group Boko Haram invaded the small town of Chibok in northeastern Nigeria. There, they found 276 girls in the dorms at the Government Girls Secondary School and forced them to leave the school and come with them. Boko Haram spoke out against Western education, education for girls, and democracy, and the Chibok school wasn’t the first they’d targeted, but the first to be met with international outrage. During a multi-day trek, the armed militants led the girls, by foot and in trucks, through the Sambisa Forest. Some of the girls escaped by jumping out of the vehicles and other snuck off when they were in the forest taking a bathroom break. The rest were taken to a camp and left under a tamarind tree which would be their home for months. Back in Chibok, families were beside themselves with grief, but didn’t have the money or political connections to pressure the government to search for their girls. Isha Sesay, a CNN anchor and native of Sierra Leone was one of the first journalists to cover the event, and even when other journalists and networks lost interest in the girls, her attention never waned.
Sesay’s account centres on four of the kidnapped girls. We get to know them, their hopes and dreams, as well as their families and their grief. Through private interviews with the girls we learn about the horrendous conditions these girls endured such as beating, hunger, forced marriages, forced conversion to Islam and mental anguish. The majority of the girls that were kidnapped were Christian. It amazed me to read about the strength of faith these young girls had. When asked why she did not convert to Islam, one of the girls responded that without Christ in her life, she may as well be dead. It was what sustained them for so long.
Sesay alternates between telling the story of the kidnapped girls, her own story, and providing information related to the politics of Nigeria. She shares the Nigerian government’s inaction, with President Jonathan and later administrations using the kidnapping as a political tool rather than trying to rescue the girls. At one point they said they had all been returned home, at another they said it was a hoax to undermine the government. I will say that I did not enjoy Sesay's personal story as much as the girls, but it is important to see that only a woman from Sierra Leone, despite her own personal issues and tragedies, continued to push to have this story in the forefront of the news. She felt is was important for her to pursue this as she says that this could have been her story, if it had not been for her privileged upbringing. The sad thing for me is that if these girls had come from wealthy or important families, they would have been found and brought home sooner. At this time, there are still 114 girls unaccounted for. Are they dead? Are they living willingly with the Boka Haram or are they still captives? Will the world ever know?
I listened to the audiobook of Beneath the Tamarind Tree and I did enjoy it, but with a few reservations. The book is narrated by the author, Isha Sesay. I know that this is nonfiction, but there were times I felt that I was being lectured. Had another narrator been selected to read this book, it might not have been as noticeable. I am definitely glad that I listened to this rather than read it though, as I think I might have put it aside and not finished this important story. The publisher, HarperAudio, generously provided me with a copy of this book upon request. The rating, ideas and opinions shared are my own.