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Stranger No More

A Muslim Refugee's Story of Harrowing Escape, Miraculous Rescue, and the Quiet Call of Jesus

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

There will be pain ahead, and trouble and problems that I won't be able to fix on my own.

But in them all, I know God will be there, calling me to look to him. Inviting me to take the next step toward his open arms.

And I will say yes.

And yes.

And yes.

Annahita Parsan was born into a Muslim family in Iran and grew up with the simple hope of one day finding a good husband, having children, and doing some good in the world. Married and a mother before she turned eighteen, Annahita found herself unexpectedly widowed and trapped for years in an abusive second marriage that she later fled—discovering instead a God who might love her.

Stranger No More is the remarkable true story of Annahita's path from oppression to the life-changing hope of Jesus. Fleeing Iran across the mountains into Turkey, she spent months in the terrifying Agri prison before a miraculous release and flight to Europe, where she and her two children knelt in a church and prayed, "God, from this day on we are Christians."

Filled with unthinkable circumstances, miraculous rescues, and the quietly constant voice of Jesus, Stranger No More leads readers deep into the heart of God and draws them toward the same call that Annahita heeds today: using her past to save others from theirs. As the leader of two congregations in Sweden, Annahita has baptized hundreds of former Muslims since her own conversion, has seen firsthand the powerful ways God is at work among those who have left Islam behind, and is reminded every day that saying yes to God is always worth the risk.

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    • Library Journal

      Starred review from December 1, 2017

      Born in Iran, Parsan came of age during the horrors of the revolution under Ayatollah Khomeini--but the terrors at home were far worse. After marrying at 17, Parsan's first husband died in a car accident before their first anniversary. Her violent second husband supported the Shah; for this, they braved fleeing to Turkey with an infant, only to suffer months of imprisonment and deprivation before being released. Eventually, the family immigrated to Denmark, where Iranian Christians gently led Parsan to Christian awareness while also engineering her escape from her husband. This experience ultimately brought her to witness to other Middle Eastern Christians in her adopted homeland of Sweden, where she settled after leaving her husband. Borlase (coauthor, Finding Gobi) specializes in memoirs of interest to Christians, and this work falls within that genre. Now an ordained minister in the Church of Sweden, Parsan offers a story that is as much a daring escapade as it is a testament to her beliefs. VERDICT A stirring account of one's faith in the face of life's brutalities.--SC

      Copyright 2017 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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