


Unbroken: One Uyghur's Fight for Freedom
“Rushan’s powerful memoir takes an unwavering stand against the CCP's brutality, not only exposing systematic oppression but empowering countless others to speak truth to power. Unbroken is an urgent call to action for policymakers, advocates, and all those committed to defending human dignity.” – Rep. John Moolenaar, Chairman of the House Select Committee on China
Pre-Publication Offer; On Sales June 10, 2025
What happens when a mother, a freedom fighter, and a former U.S. Department of Defence contractor dares to speak out against one of the world’s most powerful regimes? In Unbroken, Rushan Abbas―an Uyghur-American activist and a leader of Campaign for Uyghurs, an organization twice nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize 2022-2025).―delivers a gripping memoir of personal loss, global advocacy, and moral defiance.
When her sister, Dr. Gulshan Abbas, was abducted by the Chinese regime in retaliation for Rushan’s human rights work, it set off an international campaign to expose China’s genocide against the Uyghur people. Abbas understood the cost of silence from her early work inside Guantánamo Bay as a translator to briefing U.S. military and intelligence officials.
She leveraged her voice when speaking to Congress, the European Parliament, and at the United Nations, where her advocacy helped shape global policy and compel nations to recognize the CCP’s atrocities. Her fight led to the groundbreaking UN Human Rights Office report delivered by Michelle Bachelet in 2022, which formally declared China’s treatment of Uyghurs may constitute crimes against humanity. Blending firsthand testimony with investigative insight, Unbroken exposes a state campaign of mass surveillance, forced sterilization, family separation, and cultural erasure.
But it also celebrates the resilience of women, diaspora communities, and grassroots movements across continents. Unbroken is a powerful blueprint for resistance―a profoundly human story of how one woman challenged a superpower and built a global coalition for justice.
For readers of I Am Malala, Know My Name, and The Sun Does Shine, this memoir affirms that the fight for Uyghur freedom is not only a national cause―it is a defining struggle for the soul of humanity.
“Rushan’s powerful memoir takes an unwavering stand against the CCP's brutality, not only exposing systematic oppression but empowering countless others to speak truth to power. Unbroken is an urgent call to action for policymakers, advocates, and all those committed to defending human dignity.” – Rep. John Moolenaar, Chairman of the House Select Committee on China
Pre-Publication Offer; On Sales June 10, 2025
What happens when a mother, a freedom fighter, and a former U.S. Department of Defence contractor dares to speak out against one of the world’s most powerful regimes? In Unbroken, Rushan Abbas―an Uyghur-American activist and a leader of Campaign for Uyghurs, an organization twice nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize 2022-2025).―delivers a gripping memoir of personal loss, global advocacy, and moral defiance.
When her sister, Dr. Gulshan Abbas, was abducted by the Chinese regime in retaliation for Rushan’s human rights work, it set off an international campaign to expose China’s genocide against the Uyghur people. Abbas understood the cost of silence from her early work inside Guantánamo Bay as a translator to briefing U.S. military and intelligence officials.
She leveraged her voice when speaking to Congress, the European Parliament, and at the United Nations, where her advocacy helped shape global policy and compel nations to recognize the CCP’s atrocities. Her fight led to the groundbreaking UN Human Rights Office report delivered by Michelle Bachelet in 2022, which formally declared China’s treatment of Uyghurs may constitute crimes against humanity. Blending firsthand testimony with investigative insight, Unbroken exposes a state campaign of mass surveillance, forced sterilization, family separation, and cultural erasure.
But it also celebrates the resilience of women, diaspora communities, and grassroots movements across continents. Unbroken is a powerful blueprint for resistance―a profoundly human story of how one woman challenged a superpower and built a global coalition for justice.
For readers of I Am Malala, Know My Name, and The Sun Does Shine, this memoir affirms that the fight for Uyghur freedom is not only a national cause―it is a defining struggle for the soul of humanity.
“Rushan’s powerful memoir takes an unwavering stand against the CCP's brutality, not only exposing systematic oppression but empowering countless others to speak truth to power. Unbroken is an urgent call to action for policymakers, advocates, and all those committed to defending human dignity.” – Rep. John Moolenaar, Chairman of the House Select Committee on China
Pre-Publication Offer; On Sales June 10, 2025
What happens when a mother, a freedom fighter, and a former U.S. Department of Defence contractor dares to speak out against one of the world’s most powerful regimes? In Unbroken, Rushan Abbas―an Uyghur-American activist and a leader of Campaign for Uyghurs, an organization twice nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize 2022-2025).―delivers a gripping memoir of personal loss, global advocacy, and moral defiance.
When her sister, Dr. Gulshan Abbas, was abducted by the Chinese regime in retaliation for Rushan’s human rights work, it set off an international campaign to expose China’s genocide against the Uyghur people. Abbas understood the cost of silence from her early work inside Guantánamo Bay as a translator to briefing U.S. military and intelligence officials.
She leveraged her voice when speaking to Congress, the European Parliament, and at the United Nations, where her advocacy helped shape global policy and compel nations to recognize the CCP’s atrocities. Her fight led to the groundbreaking UN Human Rights Office report delivered by Michelle Bachelet in 2022, which formally declared China’s treatment of Uyghurs may constitute crimes against humanity. Blending firsthand testimony with investigative insight, Unbroken exposes a state campaign of mass surveillance, forced sterilization, family separation, and cultural erasure.
But it also celebrates the resilience of women, diaspora communities, and grassroots movements across continents. Unbroken is a powerful blueprint for resistance―a profoundly human story of how one woman challenged a superpower and built a global coalition for justice.
For readers of I Am Malala, Know My Name, and The Sun Does Shine, this memoir affirms that the fight for Uyghur freedom is not only a national cause―it is a defining struggle for the soul of humanity.