Librería Samer Atenea
Librería Aciertas (Toledo)
Kálamo Books
Librería Perelló (Valencia)
Librería Elías (Asturias)
Donde los libros
Librería Kolima (Madrid)
Librería Proteo (Málaga)
The Price of Freedom by Musa Hasan is a powerful non-fiction memoir that offers an unflinching, deeply personal account of the migrant crisis in North Africa. Through lived experience rather than distant observation, Hasan exposes the brutal realities faced by thousands of displaced individuals whose stories often remain unheard or deliberately ignored.The narrative traces Hasan’s journey from war-torn Sudan, where political instability, violence, and systemic oppression leave him with no option but to flee, into the hands of human smugglers operating across the Sahara Desert. What follows is a perilous passage through one of the world’s most unforgiving landscapes, where survival itself becomes uncertain. Hasan recounts extreme dehydration, starvation, and the haunting experience of witnessing fellow migrants die along the route-bodies left behind in the sand, nameless and unmourned.Upon reaching Libya, the promise of safety quickly collapses into a new form of horror. Hasan documents being captured, detained, and treated as a commodity within an underground economy of human trafficking. He describes being bought and sold like property, forced into exhausting and dangerous labor under armed militias, with no regard for human dignity or life.The memoir provides disturbing yet necessary detail of systematic torture and abuse within detention centers such as Tagoura, including beatings, prolonged isolation, psychological torment, and sexual violence. These accounts reveal how violence is not incidental but institutionalized-used as a tool of control, punishment, and profit.Despite the overwhelming cruelty, The Price of Freedom is also a testament to resilience and survival against impossible odds. Hasan reflects on the strength required to endure sustained trauma, the fragile bonds formed among migrants, and the will to live when hope itself feels dangerous.Ultimately, the book is written to raise awareness, bear witness, and honor those who did not survive the journey. Hasan reframes the concept of freedom-not as a privilege or abstract ideal, but as something brutally expensive, paid for with suffering, loss, and lifelong scars. The 'price' in the title is not metaphorical; it is measured in broken bodies, silenced voices, and enduring trauma.The Price of Freedom stands as both a personal memoir and a moral indictment of a global system that allows such atrocities to persist in silence.