Nooria (older sister)
Maryam (younger sister)
The name of her friend was Shauzia
Not sure Hun, work it out xx
Shauzia
hani pajub
Parvana's favourite school subject was History.
She is Eleven Years old.
shauzia is an old classmate of parvana's before the taliban stopped education for girls.
No, Parvana's Journey by Deborah Ellis is the 2nd book in the trilogy. The third book is called Mud City. Parvana's Journey is about her search for her missing family and Mud City is about her friend, Shauzia.
Hossain was Parvana's big brother. He went to war and died from a land mine. Since then Parvana's mother has kept all of his clothes and cries for him whenever she remembers him.
Malali isn't a word, it is a person who led troops in the enemy territory which helped them win the war. That is why Parvana's dad calls her Malali, because of her strength and courage.
Hossain
Parvana was born in 1847 in the story
Parvana's mother's name in the book "The Breadwinner" is Fatana.
The sequels in the "Breadwinner" series are "Parvana's Journey," "Mud City," and "My Name is Parvana." They continue the story of Parvana's struggles and adventures in war-torn Afghanistan.
parvana needs to make bread (money) for her family
Yes, in the book "The Breadwinner" by Deborah Ellis, Parvana's father is killed by a landmine while trying to earn money for his family.
She is Eleven Years old.
Parvana is a young girl with long dark hair, brown eyes, and a determined expression. In the story "The Breadwinner," she wears a traditional Afghan dress with a headscarf to disguise herself as a boy in order to move around freely in Taliban-controlled Afghanistan.
shauzia is an old classmate of parvana's before the taliban stopped education for girls.
Kids In my class like Lego Ninjago
She is Parvana's P.E. teacher. Parvana found her on the marketplace while running away from the taliban. She is also a group of an asociation of woman vs. the taliban.
"The Breadwinner" by Deborah Ellis is dedicated to the women and girls of Afghanistan. The dedication acknowledges their strength, resilience, and struggles in the face of conflict and oppression.