Today
I found out what is considered the proper seating arrangement in a car of 4+1
seats when the passengers are two women and two men. It is not, as one might
naively think, putting three people in the back seats and one in the front. No,
no, that would make people uncomfortable! In such a situation, both women ride
in front - yes on one seat, even when the road is a bumpy affair, barely
distinguishable from the rocky landscape...
Below are the impressions and thoughts of a young western woman working with a foreign NGO in Afghanistan. Often, the posts will be raw and unfiltered, as I am struggling to make sense of the things I hear and see around me. I mean to find the peaces (not the “peace”, as there is never just one peace), the beauty, the diversity of a society which has long been presented to us as a backwards haven for religious fanatics and violence. Readers are encouraged to help with pertinent comments.
Sunday, 31 July 2011
Saturday, 30 July 2011
The anonymous women
A
chadari is a traditional Afghan female garment, used to cover the entire body
from head to toe, including the face, leaving only a small slit for the eyes,
also covered by a net. It is usually a light-medium blue and has become quite
famous from the pictures published in the western media during and immediately
after the Taliban regime, becoming a symbol of the direct and structural
violence perpetrated against women during these short but extremely brutal
years.
In
addition to expelling women completely from public life – including trained
professionals who were a pillar of the country’s economy – the Taliban regime
imposed, under harsh punishments for transgressors, the obligation for each and
every woman to wear a chadari when leaving the house. This effectively ensured
that women, in those rare and limited instances when they stepped into the
public space, would be completely indistinguishable from one another, blue identical
ghosts who were not really individuals, did not have a face, nor feelings,
hopes, professional skills.
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