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Futoun Haddad

    Futoun Haddad's writing delves into the childhood trauma and sense of alienation stemming from her father's departure and the civil war in Lebanon. Her work explores the profound psychological impacts of conflict and family separation. Haddad transforms personal pain into potent literary themes, often focusing on the individual's struggle against instability and loss. Her prose offers a poignant examination of the fragility of human experience and the search for security.

    Cast Out: Holding on to God: A Memoir
    • 2020

      Cast Out: Holding on to God: A Memoir

      • 382 pages
      • 14 hours of reading

      Cast Out: Holding On To God, is an account of the struggle for self-realization and for reaching inner peace after a mother is ravaged by the agony of estrangement from her two children, ages 15 and 17, because of infidelity and subsequent divorce. It is a tale of childhood traumas resulting from unintended parental neglect, from phantom love and civil wars, culminating in a love affair and the alienation of children perpetrated by the other parent. It is a journey that started in war-torn Lebanon and carried on over to the U.S., bringing with it stories of loss, of abandonment, and of cultural transitions that could not be bridged within the fierce loyalty of the family she had left behind. Guided by her faith, and her unwavering love and resilience, she carried through thirteen years of suffering in order to reconnect with her children--a journey of hope and never-ending grief.

      Cast Out: Holding on to God: A Memoir