On this count of exposing the Muslim regression, the readers are treated with massive disappointment. This is what makes a critical reading of this memoir extremely necessary. This is a fittest case of, and most helpful account to, see through the cunning craft of the narrative making elites of India바카라s Muslims. The Muslim elites, the narrative-makers, trace their ancestry from Iran, Central Asia and Arab. Syeda claims her ancestry from Medina, Herat, Istanbul, etc. (Chapter Two, 바카라Mirror to the Past: My Ancestors바카라). These elites keep cataloguing the details of victimisation, sufferings, marginalisation of common Muslims very religiously. But they rarely help and enable us see through the opportunism of the Muslim elites played out at the expense of the common Muslims, the local converts. True and consistent to the character of the Muslim elites, Syeda too lists all the instances of the sufferings of common Muslims under the current Saffron dispensation, from Gujarat (2002) to Dadri (2015) and in the rest of north and western India since 2014. Does she write in detail against the Rajiv Gandhi바카라s abject and extremely disastrous capitulation before the Muslim orthodoxy in 1986? No. Does she write against Ali Miyan Nadvi (1914-1999), the then chief of the All India Muslim Personal Law Abroad (AIMPLB, founded in 1973, against certain progressive amendments in the laws pertaining to maintenance to divorced women and for adoption of children, by the Indira Gandhi led government in 1972)? No. And then she jumps very long to blame the 바카라apocalypse바카라 of 2014 which didn't let anything good happen for Muslim women. Does Syeda refer to the confessions made by Ali Miyan in his Urdu memoir, Karwan-e-Zindagi (1988)? No. On the contrary, rubbing salt into the wounds of the hapless Muslim women, Syeda writes essentially in appreciation of Ali Miyan, with utmost deference, and thereby she reinforces regressive patriarchy, even while pretending, throughout her memoir, to be a progressive Muslim woman, an Islamic feminist. While swiftly rising the ladder of her ambitious career in India since April 1984, admittedly through her writings, did she write columns against brazen display of Muslim regressivism in 1985-1986, actively encouraged by the Rajiv Gandhi-led regime? No.