... Alexandra Cavelius. Sauytbay was a Kazakh living in East Turkestan, a Kazakh-majority territory that was merged into Xinjiang by the Chinese Communist government.
The book details how this impacted the Kazakhs in general and her and her family in particular. She was a teacher and then administrator of several kindergartens and witne…
... Alexandra Cavelius. Sauytbay was a Kazakh living in East Turkestan, a Kazakh-majority territory that was merged into Xinjiang by the Chinese Communist government.
The book details how this impacted the Kazakhs in general and her and her family in particular. She was a teacher and then administrator of several kindergartens and witnessed what was happening. She was arrested and put in a concentration camp, where she was assigned teaching duties and say much more of the brutality.
They escaped into Kazakhstan, where she was arrested at the request of the Chinese government. The book's title refers to her trial in 2018, where the judge in the end found her not guilty. The family moved to Sweden in 2019, where she wrote this book.
I urge anyone who doubts the evils of the Communist Chinese government to read this book.
... Alexandra Cavelius. Sauytbay was a Kazakh living in East Turkestan, a Kazakh-majority territory that was merged into Xinjiang by the Chinese Communist government.
The book details how this impacted the Kazakhs in general and her and her family in particular. She was a teacher and then administrator of several kindergartens and witnessed what was happening. She was arrested and put in a concentration camp, where she was assigned teaching duties and say much more of the brutality.
They escaped into Kazakhstan, where she was arrested at the request of the Chinese government. The book's title refers to her trial in 2018, where the judge in the end found her not guilty. The family moved to Sweden in 2019, where she wrote this book.
I urge anyone who doubts the evils of the Communist Chinese government to read this book.