Sunday, June 11, 2006

A POSTMAN IN THE HAZARAJAT...OR MAYBE IN THE MOON


Notice!: to read the full story, have a look at my book “Vagabonding in the Axis of Evil – By thumb in Iraq, Iran and Afghanistan”. Clic here to learn more. Order a book and keep me on the road!

So I hit the road towards Bamian, town that became sadly famous in 2001 when the Taliban destroyed the biggest Buda statues in the world. Morgan had given me Justin’s telephone number. Justin was another North American who worked as volunteer in agriculture related projects. I was carrying two letters for him, which had arrived five months before from Taiwan and U.S to Herat but in the absence of a credible post service to Bamian had got stacked there.


While my parents and uncles expected me to become a successful lawyer, I had dreamt of becoming a postman. Now, in Afghanistan, I was not going to let the chance go. I designed my own stamps though. They showed a white thumbing hand framed by a yellow square and said: “By Thumb mail”.





Having a mission also attenuated the fact that I was 4 days away from Bamian. The start was slow. I walked to Pozelek village and sat by the road side to smoke my pipe. I started singing alone to a Fito Paez song: ” I like to be by the roadside, smoking as everything passes by...” And three black cows and their shepherd boy marched into scene. Then a man in a motorcycle carrying a rifle. Then I remembered that the commander had warned me of some warring tribes between Chagcharan and Lal. So I skipped lines and sang “...the breeze of Death dwells around as an assassin angel.” But something that day made me tremble with happiness. Or I was sitting in a bad position.

The Kamaz truck that finally put me in motion crossed the rivers by just driving in and sticking the wheels to a diagonal direction so as to correct the pulling force of the stream. The lights of the truck, barely over the water level as the eyes of a hippopotamus. I made it to Dowlat Yar by dusk. Somebody interrupted the village’s teacher in mid-prayer to tell him there was an American in town. Azis was an educated man from Kabul who not only hosted me but also gave me a history class in good English.

I had asked why half of the houses were destroyed. It followed that, during the Russian occupation, people in the Southern riverside were educated and received support from the Russian authorities. People on the “other side” received, instead, support and bribes from US and Pakistan. The deal: they should destroy their southern neighbors. The schools were special targets –regrets Azis- since somehow the people from the other side –and millions across Afghanistan- had been brainwashed to believe that studying implied abandoning Islam. This shows in a microcosmic level, how irresponsible Western intervention in Afghan affairs let a fertile ground for the upcoming Taliban.


Another interesting point about Dowlat Yar is its bazaar. ¨Why are there so many closed shops? ¨ I asked. ¨Well, opium harvest time hasn’t arrived yet. In a couple of months all those closed shops will be open, full of opium, and smugglers from Helmand and Kandahar will come here to buy, beginning the slow smuggling chain towards Europe, where the street price for a kilo of heroin can reach U$S 50,000..¨ With such figures there is simply no way Police officials couldn’t be involved. I instantly thought of Bolivia, but as a South American I know that coca growing has been a part Andean culture for centuries, while opium was introduced by the English from British India in the 19th century.

History lesson almost made me forget that I had started my trip exactly a year ago, when I hitched a sailboat from Ireland to Scotland. There was no point to celebrate: the closest to lust that could be found in the bazaar would have been a pack of strawberry biscuits. Better to keep accepting Azis ever flowing tea. ¨When do you think you will go back? - He asks me. Sometimes I think of home. But then I open my world map, the same that has always hanged from my room’s wall, the same where I had started to plan all this trip, and I realize that Greenland, Kirgizstan or he Falkland Islands are there waiting to be explored, and I feel that kind of tickle in the stomach that only recedes when I knock off kilometers.


Another truck, slow and big as a Galapagos turtle, forwards me to Kirmun village. There I was told by locals that the Shatu Pass was blocked by snow, and that the only way to cross the mountains on to Yakawlang was a secondary pass trough Sadbarg village, a road that didn’t even came up in my map.


I soon found myself crossing bridgeless rivers in a valley that got increasingly landlocked by snowcapped granite towers. In the first village a swarm of kids splashed out their houses to receive me so violently that a man started to keep them at distance using his extended lunghi (turban) as a lash. There is something strange in the kid’s faces: their eyes are too fine. Maybe I hit shortcut and ended up in Mongolia? No. Welcome to Hazarajat, the territory of the Hazara people, descendents of the destructive legions of Genghis Khan, and therefore regarded the last element in the Afghan ethnic ranking. When the Taliban rose to power, in a delayed and senseless revenge, they took a thousand Hazaras to Kabul, slaughtered them and piled their corpse in the parks.



I crossed that valley of the Hazarajat almost on foot, carrying both of Justin’s letters, and sharing some of the way with two teachers whose motorcycle had run short of gasoline. No vehicle used the road in the whole day. When in 1954 British explorer Wilfred Thesiger did his trip to the Hazarajat, he found them rather inhospitable. Even if in no way I can complain about their hospitality, I don’t want to thoughtlessly follow the stream of travelers that in any developing country, no matter what they find, they say the people there is just gorgeous. In one or two guesthouses I entered, people just started to pronounce the word “dollar” every five seconds. I understand the first time they meet somebody from the “other world” that is slowly trying to set their standard. For a while I had the impression that the loudspeakers in the minarets could start screaming ¨Dollar Akbar¨ (The dollar is great) instead of ¨Allah Akbar¨ (God is great) and nobody would have noticed.


That said, in Nodros and Denikoch I was hosted and fed by locals, but they lacked the joyful tone of their Tajik or Pashto neighbors’ hospitality. Their features were strong and proud, and any im promptu group of villagers in a tea house appealed to me as a chieftains meeting. My memory clings to the image of those orphans of history.



After a short visit to Bande Amir, Afghanistan’s only lake, I finally arrived to Bamian. It was after 9 pm, time when every Afghan city becomes deserted. At the question of ¨where can I find a telephone? ¨ (I needed to phone Justin) the local police whisper to each other in the dark. ¨Maybe the Neo Zealanders have one¨. They board me in their jeep and speed towards the New Zealand led PRT base. The light rays of the jeep made the sign visible: ¨Kiwi Base¨ It looks like the sign of a beach, not a military base. Let me say in the first place that I found the idea of knocking the door of the PRT to ask for a telephone absolutely ridiculous. But how charming can the consequences of ridiculous acts be! So I let them do. The bearded policeman bumped vainly the plastic disc in the center of the wheel: the horn didn’t work. So he started screaming in Dari. The young kiwi soldier that was in the nightshift clearly didn’t have a clue of Dari, and was growing dangerously nervous. He advanced toward the Afghan police finger-in-trigger. So I stepped in scene and talked in English to the guy. The kiwi soldier was that happy that he congratulated me on speaking English! But, of course, no public phone available in the base.

On the way back the Afghan policemen started to sing enthusiastically inside the jeep. In the climax of the chorus, the jeep ended up against some trees. The wheels, traction less in a water channel. I thanked them for their professional help and walked away. Not that they noticed my departure: they were too busy kicking each other. I would call Justin the following morning. Though neither rain nor sleet nor dark of night would keep this postman from the swift completion of his appointed rounds, he could use some rest .

BUSHKASHI: A PORTRAY OF THE AFGHAN SOUL


Fourty horsemen competing to hurl a beheaded goat into a goal. That’s bushkashi, the Afghan national sport. Some say it is a portray of the Afghan soul and I agree, not because of its brutality, what because players don’t form teams, but play each for themselves….



The game field doesn’t have specific limits and action can happen anywhere...




…even fearfully near the photographer….!!

Saturday, June 10, 2006

KABUL BUSES: AN ACT OF DEFIANCE TO GRAMMAR


"Welcome to Benz. Good your journey. Kabul to all city of Afghanistan"


While local women receive bad looks of they don’t wear their burkas, pictures with unveiled foreign famous singers charm up local buses.



Transport consists of all European buses bought second hand. Some still bear inscriptions in German or English. And if they don’t, locals will improvise a faked, grammatically incorrect, foreign aesthetic…

CONTRASTS IN KABUL


A vendor sells coconuts next to a flashy UN four wheeled drive….

KABUL ZOO


Entrance to Kabul’s zoo is not particularly enticing. Most of the animals escaped during the war. But the on in the picture was loyal…

Friday, June 09, 2006

SHORT STORIES FROM KABUL: EXILE, BLACK TURBANS AND PARTY IN THE AFGHAN CAPITAL.



Notice: to read the full story have a look at my book "Vagabonding in the Axis of Evil – By thumb in Iraq, Iran and Afghanistan". Clic here to learn more. Order a book and keep me on the road!


Justin and I had reached Kabul in an Afghan Police jeep. My North American friend was anxious enough to hitch hike for the first time as to vaguely reckon the danger of cruising through Taliban positive areas. Once in the Afghan capital we had split, and I had ended up in the Leiva’s house, an Argentinean family who has carried on social aid work in Afghanistan for over 9 years.



“Afghanistan was safer during the Taliban time” – had said Fabian. I had –and everybody would have- requested an explanation: “The Taliban were so brutal in their interpretation of Islamic law, that few people were willing to risk their arms or heads and commit a crime. Before people could understand that the Taliban really meant what they preached the prisons were full of inmates waiting for amputations. In that time, travelling in the southern Taliban strongholds of Helmand, Oruzgan and Qandahar was perfectly safe. A lot of people were indeed happy: in contrast with the prevailing anarchy the Taliban, who were originally a group of Theology students from Qandahar, proposed a return to the Qoran, as the source of both moral and politic systems. In the beginning they even avoided corruption…”
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-But… what happened next?

“They were not ready to govern a country, so they sought support in Al Qaeda. It was the moment of the “Black Turbans”, merciless mercenaries from all over the Islamic world from Chechnya to Morocco. It was normal to see a Taliban in each corner, but if he was a black turban, it was mandatory to run away” Betty silences Fabian with a mate and goes on. “Once black turban grabbed me from the hair and lifted me in the air for not wearing a burka. As we Latin blend in with the local stock someone had to point that I was a foreigner…”

-So he apologized…
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Apologize? –Betty laughs- No, he dropped me by the ground, did a deep throat sound and spit over me with accuracy. Besides, it was a dark age. The country stayed cut off from the rest of the world. Commerce was virtually non existent and everything on the shelves had been smuggled in. While renting a house coasted U$S25, a Toblerone set you back U$S50. I once received a Toblerone for my birthday. And I don’t like chocolate! I would have preferred the money. Also, the Taliban condemned technology: TVs, taper recorders and computers were confiscated and crashed by tanks. Radio Kabul was renamed Radio Sharia and only broadcasted the Holy Qoran. Even universities were shut!

As Betty spoke, I couldn’t avoid remembering Foucault’s “knowledge is power”. It evidently didn’t integrate the Taliban’s ethics. As the Church in the Middle Ages, the Taliban had decided to thrust against just everything that didn’t fit in the Qoranic verses. As they thought the entire new generation that hadn’t received any religious education during the Russian occupation was lost, they sent children to madrasas (Islamic schools). The most sophisticated thing they learnt there was how to wash their feet according to the way prescribed by Mohammed. Islam and the art of feet washing. Tempting title for an essay.

To compensate further, they denied girls the access to education, and women couldn’t work in anything but the health sector. This comeback of pastoralism was soon causing troubles to the regime itself: when in 1998 a multinational gas company called Bridas initiated talks with the Taliban over the construction of a gas duct, all contracts should be translated to Dari, since no one among the Taliban spoke decent English. Moreover, a graduated from Engineering without working experience was all they had to revise the technical aspects of the master plan. Until what extent, in a country where a particular exegesis of religion has encouraged ignorance, is cultural relativism an excuse to step aside? Fabian thinks that the Afghans suffer their own culture.

The transition to (or the sudden encounter with) knowledge can be somehow funny. Someone has still to explain some Afghans that Alexander the Great –who marched through their country- was not Muslim, and certainly did not introduce Islam in the region. When the movie “Alexander the Great” hit the cinemas, many complained and argued that the movie was a defamatory distortion of reality plotted no doubt by the CIA. In another occasion, a man got angry when Fabian, pointing a plated full moon, exclaimed: “And just think that there was once someone up there!” That was not possible! Not because of technical difficulties, but because the moon is, in the collective imagination, a woman, which a man cannot touch. Let alone the possibility of landing. I personally witness a third example, when a woman who was watching a TV displayed in a shop covered her face and ran away when the news presenters claimed the screen’s 28 inches.
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Exploring Kabul is impossible to find a building that doesn’t resemble a piece of gruyere cheese. Bullet pockets ornate each house. The ruined theatre, built by the Russian, represents efficiently the anger of the tribal, provincial Taliban towards the more urban minded Russian. Those who have been here during the occupation time remember women in short skirts strolling around Kabul. This explains why the Taliban aimed to shell the city rather than conquer it.



In the present date, the centre of the city, Wazir Akbar Khan, where embassies and the UN compound are, is slowly recovering from 30 years of civil war. There is even an all-glass shopping mall (which mirrors the surrounding chaos tenfold). Taxis and 4WDs of UN and other foreign agencies share the roads. A lot of the last ones, since foreign aid workers deployed in Kabul are normally forbidden to walk the streets. Symmetrically, if an Afghan befriends –or works for- a foreigner, he will be nicked “kafir” (disloyal) by friends and family. Thus, foreigners in Kabul carry on an entropic life, a forced seclusion that dangerously reminds the situation of the foreign elite living in China by the time of the Boxer Rebellion.
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During my stay in Kabul I had the chance to attend one of these all foreigner events, a BBQ celebrating the new born baby of a North American couple. Between sausages and salads someone introduced me to Georg, a 56 years old German who has an executive position in an NGO called Shelter Now. To my random question of “When did you first arrive to Afghanistan?” the answer caught me unaware: “For the first time? In 1965, in a double Decker we had bought among 20” Not far from there another man whose beard was white washed by the calendar, joined the conversation: “Really? I arrived in ’67 in a VW van. We were in our way to India, but we couldn’t drive the VW further than Lahore, in the Pakistani–Indian border… some papers were missing.”

They were old timers, hippies from the Old Guard. I should take my hat off, look to the ground and listen. On their way to India, both travellers had got acquainted with the already tough Afghan reality, and had decided to settle there to work to the refugees. In Georg’s case, dedicating his life to the Afghan people almost resulted in loosing his life, paradoxically, in hands of those he pretended to help. Two months before S-11, Georg and other 5 member of Shelter Now team were imprisoned by the Taliban under charges of Christian proselytism. As he strolled around the prison premises the guards nicked him “George Bush”, which is, let’s say, a nickname you don’t want to have in Kabul on September 2001. He miraculously saved his life.


In my last afternoon in Kabul I met, while walking up Chicken Street, two French travellers who had also arrived overland. Gerome and Adrien told me of another kind of parties, organized by the French ex-pat community, in which bowls of condoms shared the table with wine and good food. Self affirmation of Western society in minority conditions or flat and plain Dionysian celebration, who doesn’t feel a bit French in a suburb of the heart? Next morning I left Kabul bound for Jalalabad and the Pakistani border.

Sunday, June 04, 2006

BEFORE ARCHIVE


These tiny girls asked to have their pictures taken. In a few years they would be considered whores if they dared to.

WOMEN DEVELOPMENT CENTER IN BAMIAN


Attempts to reconstruct the social tissue are the day’s menu in Afghanistan. Unfortunately, the lack the most basic premises… This Women Development Center carries on its activities by the roadside.

TRAFFIC POLICEMEN LOOK LIKE THIS...


This official makes his best to call the attention and order traffic in the bazaar’s roundabout. Locals told me he used to sell guns at the bazaar during the Taliban era.

HAZARA ICONS


Since Bamian area is home to a sizeable population of Hazaras, so you can often see images of their devoted leaders.

THE BUDDAHS AT BAMIAN…. OR WHAT REMAINS OF THEM.


Less famously, hundreds of small monastic caves ooze around the Giant Buddhas.

Only the void remains of the once might figures that had witnessed the Silk Road caravans pass by..

A new hitch-hiking monk pays homage to the site…


Sight of Bamian Valley from one of the caves.



A less romantic view of the Buddha.

A RIDE THROUGH TALIBAN POSITIVE VALLEYS...


Notice: to read the full story, have a look at my book "Vagabonding in the Axis of Evil – By thumb in Iraq, Iran and Afghanistan". Clic here to learn more. Order a book and keep me on the road!

Sited on the floor at Justin’s place in Bamian, Afghanistan, and observing with some attention the shelves on the opposite wall, it was possible to read the basements of my host’s personality. On the left, food and spices: rice, oats, basil, pepper, cinnamon. On the right, books. Food for the body and for the soul. I still ignored whether my new friend was sensible to the metaphor or not, since by the moment he limited himself to read the longed for letters I had brought him from Chaghcharan. When he was done with the task, he emptied two cups of rice in the pan and expressed his anthem: good short grain rice from Japan, decent pipe tobacco and a thought provoking book. I can be happy with that”. That was the spark of a strong empathy that grew even deeper when he confessed having turned away the chance of studying art photography in a U$S25,000 a year Art School to come, instead, to do reforestation in Afghanistan for U$S650 a month. Deserters like each other…


As I related how I had got there from Europe overland I noticed Justin was making more questions than would arise from plain curiosity. He was suddenly hypnotized by how little money I had needed to travel round the world for a year. When the rice was already served in tiny bowls, he went to the point: for months he had been bearing a neat impulse to go cycling round the world. Four days before Quentin had phoned from Chaghcharan announcing my visit, Justin had been praying for a signal. Now, the signal had arrived, with enough dust to nurture a new world and two letters in hand.


We would lit our pipes to witness the evenings roll down the spiral of time in what turned to be, for both of us, highly therapeutic meetings. As Justin started to take his dreams seriously I tuned more finely my own pulse of continuous motion. Not different from an exorcism, as if the mouthfuls of smoke of Captain Black would incense away the demons of bicephaly (consequence of reducing your self to a mere guest), fears became words, unveiled their inner layering of prejudice and social commandment and conveyed their magnitude converted into confidence. The fear of becoming a bum without credit card, a present day Diogenes requesting Bill Gates to move from the sun. On the contrary, a sustainable nomadic lifestyle was postulated with the help of mathematics.


With five dollars a day, and poetry books or photographs to sell any trip’s deadline is anything but financial. Confronted with such viable perspectives, social threads already cut, Justin spoke out another ghost: “how to continue to be yourself in spite of the constant exposure to novelty?” Having noticed that half of the books were Christian literature I tried to be as diplomatic as possible: “but how do you know that you are yourself if you’ve never faced change?” Travelling implies testing daily our own identity. And that’s a desirable point…Challenge. Maybe the word is exceeded by the circumstance of an American hitch-hiking to Kabul in the first decade of the 21st century. Untouched by what I would call the worst case scenario, Justin had decided to get road-borne and hitch it with me to the capital of the Transitional Islamic Republic of Afghanistan. “If you can do it here you can do it everywhere” – it was my duty to point. The morning of the departure –as usual- Justin wore the local one piece neck-to-knee gray garment. From the distance one could even have said he was Afghan. However, a white supermarket style nylon bag bebrothered him, Afghan or American, with the universal bum.


Challenge. Maybe the word is exceeded by the circumstance of an American hitch-hiking to Kabul in the first decade of the 21st century. Untouched by what I would call the worst case scenario, Justin had decided to get road-borne and hitch it with me to the capital of the Transitional Islamic Republic of Afghanistan. “If you can do it here you can do it everywhere” – it was my duty to point. The morning of the departure –as usual- Justin wore the local one piece neck-to-knee gray garment. From the distance one could even have said he was Afghan. However, a white supermarket style nylon bag bebrothered him, Afghan or American, with the universal bum.




On the way to the road we halted for a minute to digest our share of the sadness radiated by the empty niches of the destroyed Buddhas, once the biggest on Earth. When rockets and tank fire were not enough the Taliban whistled in an expert in explosives from Middle East to complete the task and, in a scaleless display of non sense hate, erase forever the formidable images. Eventually we reached a reasonable place to hitch hike. That was us, a man from the Great Prairies and one from the Pampas. Cowboy and Gaucho, on the way to Kabul.



The idea of Justin dressing as an Afghan found base in the assumption that most of the traffic would consist of local trucks. Instead, we started to be passed by UN pick ups, New Zealand Army convoys and other NGO cars. Hence, we should change strategy, since the “gringos” were stopping to see what the problem was but then, confused by the weird conjunction of Justin’s American accent and Afghan frugality, preferred to speed away. So Justin went behind some rocks and made a comeback with a pair of Lewis and a striped T-shirt. Now he was an honourable ambassador of the American Way of Life… We decided to walk to the checkpoint where the road split in two. Looking at the map it was clear at first glance that the South fork was shorter, so we started marching without paying too much attention to the fact that all NGO’s vehicles were taking the other road…The first vehicle we came across was an old Russian jeep of the Afghan Police. And it stopped, among a galaxy sized cloud of dust. Cowboy, who spoke fluent Dari, introduced us as two globetrotters. When asked about nationality, he managed to hide his being American without having to lie: ‘my grandparents were born in Czechoslovakia” – he said. From American aid worker to Czechoslovakian globetrotter… how truth it finally was! Travelling is really a constant challenge to one’s identity.

The man making questions was the Commander of Bamian Province Police, who was going all the way to Kabul along with his driver and armed escort. The commander, a ginger bearded blue eyed tall man, concluded right away that we were out of our minds for taking that road. “Taliban perpetrate hit-and-go attacks weekly. What are you doing here? – He said, still laughing at our unconsciousness. “A week ago – he went on- a police vehicle like this one was blown up with a rocket from atop a hill. Too late we had understood why NGO vehicles were taking the North road, and why the almost teenage cadet was holding his machine gun all the time and kept his eyes surfing the landscape.


No longer were we simple passengers, we should also be alert. But despite the underlying pressure there was hardly a second fit for solemnity, as the commander – a liked to compare the mountain pass that was coming ahead with a woman’s breasts. The driver, at his turn, insisted that the commander could only bring security to barren unpopulated regions, as that mountain pass. At the pass itself, the jeep’s engine overheated, impasse that the crew conveniently used to load in some snow to refrigerate a Cola drink for the picnic.





Yeah, you read well… a picnic! Already downhill Justin and I had the most bizarre picnic ever, with the unusual party of three Afghan policemen, over a blossomed prairie next to the river, their machine guns resting their steel death over soft cushioned grass and purple flowers. And Cola. All the way to Kabul fear was dispersed by the intriguing stories of our commander, who since the age of 19 had fought on the side of mujahidin Massoud (Afghan national hero), and had killed more Taliban that his fingers allowed him to count.





Reaching the grey, polluted city, Kabul, capital of the Aftermath, Cowboy and I split. “See you some day in Oklahoma or Buenos Aires”. I can only look back with satisfaction to those evenings in Bamian, smoking our pipes and fear-chasing, under the candlelight. The perspective of the Central Afghan Road behind, 800 km of unpaved, dusty, carless road, with its nomads, Hazaras, aid workers, NATO soldiers, mine fields, shepherds and even hilltop Taliban, also gave me food for thought. Now pavement had reappeared, I was supposed to be safer. Or so say the people who believe in safety. For me, it had been a matter of faith in Human Being.




I wonder if the same kind of faith could help me to live in a country like Afghanistan. As Leiva family does. Fabian and Betty are Argentinean, and long before being a family they had felt a calling to go to Afghanistan to help others. They currently live here, with their four noisy, bilingual, and lovely daughters. I stayed five days in their place in Kabul. As every foreigner’s house, there is a big wall around. You may think some mafia leader lives inside…



What about Afghanistan? – I ask Betty as we drink mate, a tea-like beverage that no Argentinean would dare to lack. Even in Afghanistan. “Kabul is a bomb!”- says Betty with an enviable sense of humour. Nine years. No need to ask, they were here even during the Taliban’s regime. “Do you want milk or tea with milk?” – asks Betty in perfect Spanish to her daughter Abigail. Her answer leaves me astonished: “I want leche (milk) only mommy….!” Her daughters, who attend an international school, not only speak two languages, but also speak them simultaneously….


When Fabian arrives from work and sees the guest in post-road conditions, he tells him: “you are too late to be a hippie…” Then he hugs me and adds: “You are crazy! They could have chopped off your head in the road you took.” So you live with your four tiny daughters in Kabul and I am the crazy one! He had to concede the point: we were both crazy. A month ago two bombs exploded in the girl’s school. One at each side, but nobody was injured. “Back in the Taliban time it was safer – surprisingly assures Fabian- until the Black Turbans arrived”. “Who were the Black Turbans? – I felt as if had arrived to the theatre in mid-play. “The Black Turbans? –replied Fabian- Well, I guess the CNN made the story too simple, but you are running short of space Juan… I will tell you the story on the next article…”

Tuesday, May 30, 2006

OPEN AIR SCHOOL IN DOWLAT YAR...


Since the original school was burned by the Taliban, classes carry on over a carpet... A blackboard, a flag, and a water pump are all the components of the school. As there are not enough teachers, the older ppils take care of the younger ones as the teacher rotates from carpet to carpet...



Ageless.... Is she an little girl wrinkled as an old lady? Or an old lady with a childish face? Eye inflamation are a common consequence of exposure to wind and dust.

Overall view....



A secret being told.....!

Sunday, May 28, 2006

PHOTO SESSION IN CHAGHCHARAN MILITARY CEMETERY



Smiling to your executor – only a kid could involuntary produce such a wise answer to violence.



Dozens of kids have fun playing with discarded Russian military vehicles, a leftover from the occupation.


From the picture above this one, it took ten seconds for thirty locals to spot me and take their place in this photo. I had no option but to shot the picture.


Jealous Afghan soldiers, near by, immediately demanded to have their picture taken. When I accepted, they grabbed as many weapons as they could handle and posed like Rambo…