I have just finished one of the most powerful, thought-provoking books I have ever read.
If somebody really wanted to know the reality of life inside the Watchtower they must talk to a rational ex-JW. Only people like us can see through the offical statememets and stereotypes and understand the thinking, pressures, hopes and fears of life in the cult.
Ayaan Hirsi Ali shares her personal experience of growing up in a Muslim community. Ayaan was born in Somalia with it's culture of clan loyalty and honour. Her courage in taking control of her life is deeply moving. How she goes from pious Muslim to atheist and Dutch polititian is an amazing story. Her courage to walk away from her family and entire clan, at risk to her life, is an inspiration. It is full of moments that will resonate with you if you grew up as a JW.
It is not a theological attack on Islam but an honest account of the effects of the Muslim faith on ordinary lives - especially on women. Do not dismiss this book because Ayaan's was an experience of a strictly conservative family. Nobody understands the thinking of the whole spectrum of Muslim faith better than she does. Hers is not a simplistic critique of Islam, it is expert and insightful.
Ayaan has lived with the threat of death since 2004 when her friend Theo van Gogh was brutally murdered by Mohammed Bouyeri. Hirsi Ali and van Gough had collaborated on a 10 minute film called "Submission" highlighting the plight of Muslim women.
Ayaan's greatest critics have not only been offended Muslims by the million, but liberal western academics and commentators who naively hold to cultural relativism.
I cannot recommend this book strongly enough. I am now reading the second part of her autobiography "Nomad - A Personal Journey Through the Clash of Civilisations"