This photo taken on January 8, 2015 shows Naznin Akter Happy, at a court in Dhaka after making rape allegations against cricket star Rubel Hossain AFP"We've been swamped by orders for the book from all parts of the country," said Mohammad Obaidullah, owner of Maktabatul Azhar, a publishing house specialising in Islamic books.
"Everyone wants to know what prompted her to quit the celebrity lifestyle for the ordinary life of a devout Muslim."
Happy was a star in Dhallywood, the Bangladeshi film industry, shooting to fame in her 2013 debut "Kichu Asha Kichu Valobasha" (Some Hopes, Some Loves).Also Read- Actress sues cricketer Rubel
But it was the controversy surrounding shock rape allegations she levelled against star fast bowler Rubel Hossain in late 2014 that made Happy a household name across cricket-mad Bangladesh. Happy alleged she was involved in an "intimate affair" with the then 25-year-old cricketer, whom she accused of walking away from a promise of marriage. The revelations proved scandalous in the Muslim-majority country, where sexual relationships outside marriage are frowned upon and allegations of coercion can be seen to restore honour. Rubel claimed he was being blackmailed but was remanded in custody. He was released a few days later to play in the World Cup, and a court later found no evidence to convict him. Every twist received saturation coverage, spurring gossip long after Happy dropped the charges, saying she had forgiven Rubel.
Erasing her past
After so long in the public eye her sudden appearance in the black burka worn by only the most devout Bangladeshis fanned even greater curiosity about the young woman's life. Happy was weathering the Rubel scandal and part-way through shooting a new movie when the actress claims she had an "epiphany" that altered her life. Overnight, she committed to joining Tablighi Jamaat -- a Sunni Islam evangelical movement that boasts millions of adherents in Bangladesh -- and began severing all ties to her past life."That night she started deleting thousands of photos of herself she posted on Facebook. She then cut ties with the movie world," said Abdullah Al Faruque, who co-authored the book with his wife Sadeka Sultana Saqi, who was granted access to Happy for the interview. "She renamed herself Amatullah. She started to wear a full-veiled burka and now even covers her hands and toes with socks." Happy turned her back on her fans and a stunned film industry to embrace the austerity of a missionary's life, retreating to a madrasa to study the Koran where nobody would see "even the nails of my fingers".Also Read- Happy unhappy as Rubel given clean chit
Determined to erase her past entirely and cement her pious makeover, Happy even fought unsuccessfully to stop the release of her final film "Real Man," arguing it starred a completely different person. "I felt like a newborn baby," she wrote in the book, about the moment she donned the burka and abandoned her former name and identity. "Now, I have no ties with my previous life. That's the tale of a different person."


