Minneapolis artist Heba Amin didn't have to be asked twice if she wanted to illustrate a book on female Muslim heroes. Not only was it a chance to get a paycheck from her art after a decade spent earning three college degrees, but it was a project she wholeheartedly embraced.
"I'm very aware of cultural stereotypes," she said. "The image of Muslim women in the United States is of veiled, oppressed people who have no voice. But in fact, Muslim women have a long history of remarkable achievements."
"Extraordinary Women From the Muslim World" profiles 13 of them, including the world's first female military pilot and a Nobel Peace Prize winner. Amin was hired to paint portraits of the subjects, but she's just as excited about the women's stories.
"They are such wonderful role models -- not just for Muslim girls, for all girls," she said.
It was her enthusiasm that got her the job, said author/publisher Sep Riahi. He runs a business that produces films and interactive video games with positive messages aimed at youngsters. He was having a hard time finding an illustrator for his company's first book.
"We looked for several months," he said. "We were going to art fairs and book fairs. And not just us; we hired agents. But we couldn't find what we were looking for."
He was looking for a young, female artist, preferably with a Muslim background, who could relate to the women in the book. While noodling around on the Internet, he stumbled on Amin's blog, which she was using to muse about the thesis she was writing as part of her master of fine arts program at the University of Minnesota.
"So we called, came to Minneapolis and had dinner with her," he said. "At that point, we hadn't even seen her art. We were impressed by her paintings, but we also were impressed by the way she believed in the ethos of the project. That was the main reason we hired her: She really believed in it."