Leaving Her Ultra-Orthodox Past Meant More Than Losing Her Family. It Meant Redefining Her Womanhood [View all]
I respectfully submit this story to the Feminists.
It struck me as a wonderful story of growth and change.
Thank You, Stuart G
________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Sasha Bronner
Senior Editor, Los Angeles
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/escaping-her-ultra-orthodox-past-meant-redefining-what-it-means-to-be-a-woman_55b01a38e4b08f57d5d3a26b?
________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Leah Vincent separated from her deeply religious family as a 16-year-old over the course of two phone calls. She had been sent to New York City to work as a secretary and to fend for herself. Her family had cast her out.
Vincents harrowing 2014 memoir, Cut Me Loose: Sin and Salvation After My Ultra-Orthodox Girlhood, chronicles her path from religious devotion to poverty, sexual trauma and self-harm -- and shows her miraculously resurfacing with a new identity (and a degree from Harvard and a career as a writer).
Today, Vincent, 33, lives in Brooklyn, New York with her three-year-old daughter and is writing her second book, a work of fiction that expands on Cut Me Loose and explores specifically how women develop their sense of identity.
My biggest journey has been figuring out what it means to be a woman, Vincent told The Huffington Post in a phone interview. Initially, that meant being completely submissive and subservient.
rest of story is at link...