Summary
When a military junta took power in Myanmar (then called Burma) in 1988, Aung San Suu Kyi—the daughter of General Aung San, who negotiated Burma's independence from Britain in 1947—entered Burmese politics. Heavily influenced by Gandhi’s philosophy of nonviolent protest, Suu Kyi helped found the National League for Democracy to encourage the establishment of democracy in Myanmar. When the military junta held general elections in 1990, the National League won easily, and Suu Kyi should have assumed the position of prime minister. Instead, the military nullified the election, and she was placed under house arrest after refusing to leave the country. Suu Kyi was still in confinement when she was awarded the 1991 Nobel Peace Prize. She has subsequently been in and out of house arrest, despite appeals from international organizations, including the United Nations, to free her permanently. An informative and inspiring biography, Aung San Suu Kyi tells the story of this brave woman who, despite being faced with insurmountable odds, continues to work toward democratic reforms in Myanmar.