The Underground Girls of Kabul (42 page)

BOOK: The Underground Girls of Kabul
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We should strongly desire such a development in Afghanistan, not just out of the goodness of our hearts or any idealist notions, but because research overwhelmingly shows that countries with increased equality are much less violent and more economically stable. In terms of “national security” and foreign affairs, Afghan women, as well as women globally, should be everyone’s concern, up to and including the military.

In
Sex and World Peace
, a study on
the relationship between gender
and violence, political science scholars conclude that violence on a micro level—for instance between a husband and wife—is directly reflected in how violent a
society
is. Both within its borders and against outsiders. Countries that suppress its women are more likely to threaten their neighbors as well as other countries farther away. So the more progress for women Afghanistan sees, the less of a threat the country is to the rest of the world.

Why, then, are women so often relegated to an “issue” and not standing at the top of every agenda on foreign policy?

Women were never an “issue.” Afghanistan’s history in the last decades is one example of how women—and control over them—were always at the very core of conflict. The authors of the study, which, together with the work of Gerda Lerner, should be required reading for students everywhere, go as far as to suggest that the “clash of civilizations” of the future will be based not on ethnopolitical differences but on gender beliefs. From that perspective, what is mistakenly referred to as “women’s rights” is not even just about human rights. It’s about evolution and building peaceful civilizations.

Gerda Lerner, after she had researched the origins of patriarchy, predicted that the construct would one day come to an end, since it is a human-made idea. There will perhaps always be sexism, just as there is racism today. But slavery is officially abolished in most places on earth. The journey toward freedom for Afghan women will continue for a long time yet. But it does not have to be endless.

S
OMEDAY IN OUR FUTURE
it may be possible for women everywhere not to be restricted to those roles society deems natural, God-given, or appropriately feminine. A woman will not need to be disguised as a man to go outside, to climb a tree, or to make money. She will not need to make an effort to resemble a man, or to think like one. Instead, she can speak a language that men will want to understand. She will be free to wear a suit or a skirt or something entirely different. She will not count as three-quarters of a man, and her
testimony will not be worth half of a man’s. She will be recognized as someone’s sister, mother, and daughter. And maybe, someday, her identity will not be confined to how she relates to a brother, a son, or a father. Instead, she will be recognized as an individual, whose life holds value only in itself.

It will not be the end of the world, the nation-state, or sexuality. It will not solve all the world’s problems. But it is an exciting promise of how we might continue to evolve, through small bursts of individual greatness alongside a slow overhaul of our civilization.

This possible future could only expand the human experience and be liberating to men and women alike. And it will be interesting to all. Because, maybe what Azita once said about why she was glad to have been born a girl holds some truth:

“We know what it’s like to be men. But they know nothing about us.”

VIERGE MODERNE

I am no woman. I am a neuter
.
I am a child, a page-boy, and a bold decision
,
I am a laughing glimpse of a burning sun

I am a net for all voracious fish
,
I am a toast to every woman’s honor
,
I am a step toward chance and disaster
,
I am a leap in freedom and the self

I am the blood’s whisper in a man’s ear
,
I am the soul’s shiver, the flesh’s longing and denial
,
I am an entry sign to new paradises

I am a flame, seeking and jolly
,
I am a water, deep, but daring up to the knees
,
I am fire and water, in sincere context, on free terms

E
DITH
S
ÖDERGRAN
Finland, 1916

AUTHOR’S NOTE

A
S SHE APPROACHED
her tenth birthday, Mehran became a student, along with her older sisters, at an all-girls school in Kabul. She wears the uniform for girls. In the afternoons, she is allowed to switch into boys’ clothing at home and when she is out in the neighborhood. She keeps her hair short and is still considered to be the wildest member of the family.

A
ZITA NEVER REENTERED
parliament. In late 2011, along with dozens of other candidates, her victory was acknowledged as valid by a court appointed to resolve the political impasse from the fraught elections of the year before. But Afghanistan’s president Hamid Karzai ultimately agreed only to reinstate ten parliamentarians in the lower house, with the blessing of the United Nations. Azita was not among them. Instead, she helped form a new political party in opposition to the government and eventually got a job with a European aid organization. Her modest salary allowed her to keep the family in Kabul and her daughters in school. The family of eight moved to a smaller apartment and now shares three rooms. In the summer of 2013, she sought medical treatment due to blunt strokes to her neck and chest, which were photographed and copies were forwarded to me. In an interview in Kabul, her husband confirmed that their marriage had again come to include violence.
In early 2014 Azita was let go from her job, as the funding for her organization was to expire.

A
T SEVENTEEN
, Z
AHRA
adopted a new hairstyle that she says is an attempt to replicate Justin Bieber’s. She still wears male clothing. She has dropped out of school; she could no longer bear exhortations by her Pashto teacher to dress like a woman. Her mother still insists she should get married. Her father says he will never force her. Zahra refuses to go to weddings, fearing she may be spotted by a future mother-in-law. She holds on to a dream of immigrating to another country, where there are more of her kind.

S
HUKRIA LIVES WITH
her three children in Kabul. She continues to work full-time as a nurse and is studying to become a doctor.

N
ADER STILL DRIVES
her car around Kabul and teaches tae kwon do in a basement.

I
N A FAILED
attempt to flee Afghanistan through Tajikistan, Shahed had all her savings stolen by a smuggler.

F
INALLY
,
A NOTE
on Setareh: She is the only character in the book who in reality is a construct of several people. I worked with several translators who, for an extra layer of protection and according to their wishes, I have called by a single name. For each character interviewed, and for different occasions, my translator needed to possess different skills and knowledge of different ethnicities, neighborhoods, and cities. So “Setareh” is Pashtun and she is Tajik and she is Hazara. She speaks several dialects of Dari, as well as Pashto, Urdu, and English. She has a degree in literature, in law, and in political science, and she is a very clever street kid. She is a poet, a teacher, an aspiring lawyer, and a budding businesswoman. She is upper class and middle class and she is a refugee. She is a student. She wears a full hijab and a sloppy head scarf; she prays
five times a day and not at all. And within each young woman who took the role of Setareh for me, there are many more who are constantly shape-shifting and adapting to whatever circumstances they are thrown into. The way Afghans always do.

New York, February 2014

@nordbergj

bachaposh.com

NOTES

1
“But Not an Afghan Woman”
First published by the U.S. nonprofit Afghan Women’s Writing Project (
awwproject.​org
) in 2010. AWWP was founded by American journalist and author Masha Hamilton. The organization serves as a platform for and offers training to young female writers in Afghanistan.

PROLOGUE

1
announced that U.S. troops would begin to withdraw
In “Remarks by the President in Address to the Nation on the Way Forward in Afghanistan and Pakistan,” December 1, 2009,
whitehouse.​gov
, the president discussed his policy for withdrawing U.S. soldiers from Afghanistan after the surge: “And as Commander-in-Chief, I have determined that it is in our vital national interest to send an additional 30,000 U.S. troops to Afghanistan. After 18 months, our troops will begin to come home.”

In 2011, the president reiterated his commitment to troop withdrawal. See “Remarks by the President on the Way Forward in Afghanistan,” June 22, 2011,
whitehouse.​gov
, where he says: “By 2014, this process of transition will be complete, and the Afghan people will be responsible for their own security.” In 2014, the president announced that U.S. troop withdrawal would be completed by 2016.

CHAPTER 1: THE REBEL MOTHER

1
Elected to the Wolesi Jirga
For more background on the Wolesi Jirga, see Martine van Bijlert and Sari Kouvo, eds.,
Snapshots of an Intervention, The Unlearned Lessons of Afghanistan’s Decade of Assistance (2001–11)
(Kabul: Afghanistan Analysts Network [AAN], 2012).

2
heavily populated with drug kingpins and warlords
See Declan Walsh, “Warlords and Women Take Seats in Afghan Parliament,”
The Guardian
, December 18, 2005,
theguardian.​com
.

3
more girls are enrolled in school
The World Bank’s arm for helping the poorest countries, International Development Association,
worldbank.​org
, cites the following figures: “Enrollment in grades 1–12 increased from 3.9 million in 2004 to 6.2 million in 2008. Girls’ enrollment skyrocketed from 839,000 to more than 2.2 million, and boys’ from 2.6 million to 3.9 million—the highest enrollment in the history of Afghanistan.”

4
The majority of marriages are still forced
UNIFEM Afghanistan Mission, “UNIFEM Afghanistan Fact Sheet 2007,”
unifem.​org
. This states: “70 to 80% of women face forced marriages in Afghanistan.”

5
honor killings are not unusual
Human Rights, United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan Kabul, Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Geneva,
Harmful Traditional Practices and Implementation of the Law on Elimination of Violence against Women in Afghanistan
, December 9, 2010,
unama.​unmissions.​org
. The report cites one of several harmful traditional practices: “So-called ‘honour’ killings recognize a man’s right to kill a woman with impunity because of the damage that her immoral actions have caused to family honour. It is a killing of a family member by one or several relatives who believe the victim has brought shame upon the family.”

6
involvement of the justice system in a rape case
Human Rights, United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan Kabul, Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Geneva,
Silence Is Violence: End the Abuse of Women in Afghanistan
, Kabul, July 8, 2009. This report discusses the high incidence of rape in Afghanistan, as well as why victims are reluctant to report it or to seek redress. In particular, it notes: “Shame is attached to rape victims rather than to the perpetrator. Victims often find themselves being prosecuted for the offence of
zina
(adultery) and are denied access to justice.”

7
Women burn themselves to death
Human Rights, United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan Kabul, Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Geneva,
Harmful Traditional
Practices and Implementation of the Law on Elimination of Violence against Women in Afghanistan
, December 9, 2010,
unama.​unmissions.​org
. “Among the most tragic consequences of harmful traditional practices is self-immolation—an apparently growing trend in some parts of Afghanistan.”

8
daughters are still a viable, informal currency
Human Rights, United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan Kabul, Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Geneva,
Silence Is Violence: End the Abuse of Women in Afghanistan
, Kabul, July 8, 2009. It states: “Monetary compensation or
baad
is often also part of what is seen as an acceptable solution to all parties.”

9
literacy rate is no more than 10 percent
Ibid.: “The adult literacy rate of Afghans over 15 years is 28% including 12.6% for females. In rural areas, where 74% of Afghans reside, it is estimated that 90% of women cannot read or write.”

CHAPTER 2: THE FOREIGNER

1
lives of Afghan women were to be improved
For information on European Commission aid for Afghanistan and the inclusion of “gender” in its programs, see European Commission,
Country Strategy Paper Islamic Republic of Afghanistan 2007–2013
,
eeas.​europa.​eu
.

2
Celebrated for publishing several travel guides
See Nancy Hatch Duprée,
An Historical Guide to Afghanistan
(Kabul: Afghan Air Authority, Afghan Tourist Organization, 1977).

3
the country’s last king, who was ousted in 1973
Afghanistan’s last king ruled for forty years before he was removed. See Barry Bearak, “Mohammad Zahir Shah, Last Afghan King, Dies at 92,”
New York Times
, July 24, 2007,
nytimes.​com
.

4
stand guard in Habībullāh Khan’s harem
Habībullāh Khan ruled Afghanistan from 1901 to 1919. See Encyclopaedia Britannica Online,
www.​britannica.​com
.

5
Afghans have been driven out
Zarif Nazar and Farangis Najibullah, “Kabul Housing Shortage Leaves the Middle Class Behind,” Radio Free Europe, January 31, 2011,
rferl.​org
.

6
figures ranging from twenty-three to twenty-nine million
Andrew Pinney,
Snapshots of an Intervention, The Unlearned Lessons of Afghanistan’s Decade of Assistance (2001–11)
(Kabul: Afghanistan Analysts Network [AAN], 2012).

7
for an illiterate person to have memorized
See Louis Duprée,
Afghanistan
(New York: Oxford University Press, 1973, sixth impression,
2010), pp. 74–75, in which he says Afghanistan “has a literate
culture
, but a non-literate
society
.” Duprée’s book, written before the Soviet invasion, is still one of the most comprehensive sourcebooks on Afghanistan, as Louis Duprée was a lifelong researcher of the country. The Louis and Nancy Hatch Duprée Foundation at Kabul University is dedicated to helping to preserve the cultural heritage of the people of Afghanistan and support education about it: dupree
foundation.​org
.

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