A housing estate in the Paris suburbs. Madjid is growing up caught
between two cultures. At home, he listens to his mother's constant
invective in Arabic as she attempts to make sense of her unfamiliar
surroundings; at school, he tries to be part of French culture, a
culture that rejects and insults Arabs. In a direct language, punctuated
by moments of poetic beauty, Mehdi Charef portrays a reality only too
rarely the subject of fiction. An immediate success upon publication in
France in 1983, Tea in the Harem became the rallying-point for
second-generation Algerians and Moroccans, who gave themselves the name
'beur': slang for 'Arab'.