142:. The German diplomatic mission helped her to get a room in a hotel while she waited for money from Sweden to leave the country. Her divorce was viewed as a scandal in Kabul, and she was harassed, also by the officials she visited for help. The officials denied her divorce on the grounds that she was a Muslim despite the fact that she had never converted, claimed she needed an Afghan passport to leave the country, and offered her money to return to her former husband. When she finally arrived at the border, she was again stopped with an offer of money if she returned to marriage. She declined with the words: "No, I do not need any money! I need nothing from Afghanistan! Only my freedom!"
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Her husband was not given any governmental employment, because she had not converted. He therefore gave her permission to visit the government, the royal court, and women in different positions to try to get him a job. In her book, she describes the people, customs and events of contemporary
60:. There she met and married Asim Khan, an Afghan who was the son of a former government minister, who was studying technique at the expense of the Afghan government. The Afghan embassy acknowledged the marriage after Nilsson signed a statement that she would accept
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The newly-married couple travelled to
Afghanistan in 1926. During the journey, Khan changed, according to Nilsson, from a modern person to a man more and more aware of Afghan customs the closer they came to his homeland. En route he abused her twice. In
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in Afghan society, and prevented him from gaining any political post. He murdered three officials at the
British embassy and in 1933 was executed. He was motivated by the desire to create conflict between the pro-British king
123:, whose name she spells as Ollja Hassrat. With their encouragement, she talked a lot about European customs. She befriended the king's mother, who she describes as influential and dominant, demonstrated dance and
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during her marriage to an Afghan diplomat, Asim Khan, in the 1920s. A novel by Thomas Löfström is based upon her story. Her autobiography gives a valuable insight in the life of a
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for her and acted as her photographer. She failed to acquire a position for Khan, who threatened to kill or to sell her. According to
Nilsson a German woman, the widow of an
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In 1927, Nilsson managed to be granted a divorce with the support of the German diplomatic mission. The divorce was described as unique, as it was not the custom for a
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86:) and was not allowed to leave the house except with her husband's permission, nor look out of the windows, or to talk when she visited a shop (
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After her divorce, Aurora
Nilsson returned to Sweden, where she published a book about her experiences in 1928. In 1930, Nilsson married
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28:(1 January 1894 – 1972), was a Swedish writer who became known for her autobiographical depiction,
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man named
Abdullah Khan, had fled to the city with her children from her late husband's successor, was
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and Great
Britain, thereby bringing about the fall of Nadir and the reinstatement of the deposed king
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and obtained her freedom by being bought by the German diplomatic mission for 7,000 marks.
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in 1920s
Afghanistan. Her divorce (1927) was at the time unique in Afghanistan.
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Rora Asim Khan (Aurora
Nilsson): Anders Forsberg and Peter Hjukström:
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Aurora
Nilsson was the model for the character in the Swedish novel
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221:(1986), which was awarded the prize "Novel of the Year" by
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Afghanistan. With the help of Khan's aunt, who was a
161:The divorce reportedly caused her ex-husband to
32:("Escape from Harem"), about her experiences in
52:. In 1925, she was studying art in Berlin; the
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252:European influence in Afghanistan
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56:was a vibrant period in the
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275:possibly referring to the
354:20th-century memoirists
177:Aurora Nilsson died in
44:Early life and marriage
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193:(English: Flight from
140:woman to divorce a man
133:sold at public auction
48:Nilsson was born in
168:Mohammed Nadir Shah
58:history of the city
307:Flykten frÄn harem
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223:Bra Böcker
179:SödertÀlje
152:ice-hockey
125:gymnastics
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232:in 1986.
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146:Aftermath
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154:player
106:Paghman
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129:Afridi
89:purdah
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195:Harem
83:hijab
74:Kabul
38:harem
311:ISBN
185:Work
108:and
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