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Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Back to the Old Sod


Tuesday April 29, 2008
A timeless afternoon at 35,000 feet altitude
Somewhere between Amsterdam and New England


Nine weeks later, home is on the way. It is light out, and I am sitting in the first row of this old 757 flying west across the Atlantic Ocean. I’m taking a break from a tear-jerking love and death movie, P.S. I Love You, and mulling over the sudden changes in landscape from the India-Afghanistan-India-Europe trek, a tour which will land me in springtime Leverett Massachusetts in another three or four hours. Life moves fast these days—unnaturally so, and some part of body and mind take their own time to catch up. There’s often a funny quality of surreal netherworldliness in the first days of our sudden presence in a realm previously hidden by extreme distance and inaccessibility. Here we go.

We landed at Amsterdam’s Schippol Airport around 7 a.m., and with the next flight at 1 p.m. decided to take the metro into town for a grey morning’s amble in my namesake town, A’dam (that abbreviation is everywhere around Amsterdam, making me feel oddly at home). Tonight and tomorrow the Dutch celebrate Queen’s Day—everywhere town was festive with orange balloons and streamers (the House of Orange, don’t you know), though mostly the town was slowly rising at 8 a.m. The friendly cobblestone streets, quirky beautiful architecture and sight of the houseboats hugging the walls of Amsterdam’s canals tugged at my heart like they always do there—there’s just something so livable and aesthetically pleasing and, well, civilized about the Netherlands. Even the airport, as much as I’ve heard people diss it, seems well-designed and speckled with high culture—there was a mini-Rijks Museum exhibit with a dozen or so original Vincent Van Gogh paintings on display about 100 yards from our boarding gate—when was the last time you saw original Master’s art hanging in an airport?

I had a nice surprise as I was finally checking into the flight queue back at the airport—my brain, after some initial resistance, finally allowed me to hear what for a moment had been sounding so unlikely: someone calling out my name in the terminal. Turns out my good friend Monique, a Dutch national who’s been a Leverett neighbor and friend for years, was calling out to me from the check-in line. Small world: Monique and her eldest son Remer—somehow 18 already and basically bigger than me—are on my flight back to New England, after spending 8 days on the old sod checking out various Universities for him to begin next fall. Remer has settled on the University at Maastricht, which Monique described as a wonderful little mini-Amsterdam and a terrific place to go to school. Lucky man, Remer—what a wonderful opportunity to be a curious student and citizen of the world.

And with that, the journey home begins its final leg.

And in the Third Month Comes Return


Sunday April 27, 2008 2:48 p.m.
Delhi National/Domestic Airport


OK, the always frazzling final Delhi work stretch is completed: we are now cooling our heels at the airport waiting for our flight down to Mumbai, where our return on Northwest Airlines departs tomorrow night back to the states via A’dam (Amsterdam).

Since we returned from Afghanistan it has been more than 40-42 degrees centigrade in Delhi, or way above 100F—brutal. I wilt in this kind of weather—I do not know how people live in heat like this for months at a time. I suppose it’s partly the heat, partly the final wave of non-doing that is just beginning to settle upon me after pretty much 60 straight days of major doing (not counting a couple days here and there in sick bay). But I feel spent—utterly drained of energy, totally ready to come home. Or already be home, really, but first there’s 50+ hours of travel to endure, including the upcoming 24 hour Mumbai window. After all this travel, I guess another couple days shouldn’t be too bad. I’ll just keep holding the vision of strolling barefoot in the fresh growing grass back at Tree Toad Farm.

Upon arriving home, the next wave of the trip unfolds: the months of reviewing and editing footage to develop some finished video pieces from the journey. The idea is to integrate a lot of this work into the new Dharma Boutique web shop/adventure site that I am working on for a summertime launch—so it will be a busy season once I get home. A little time to decompress sounds good first, though.

Sara’s heard about some kind of evening reception on May 1st in New York, something regarding Afghanistan and photo-journalism—given our most recent adventures there, it would seem like a room we should perhaps be in. Though pulling that off barely 48 hours after we land seems a tad harsh to me. But we’ll see. The journey continues…

Sara has a post on her blog about Shira the Lion Cub of Mazar-e-Sharif—if you’re up for a good cry and some sweet photos, you can find them both there. Once I get to a semi-fast web connection, I’ll also try to throw some photos up here on some of the posts where I’ve been frustrated in uploading photos. But for now, there’s more cute puppy photos than you can throw a stick for right here:
http://www.sarakarl.blogspot.com/

But, now that our flight to Mumbai has been delayed by some unknown measure of time, I think I’ll first just lie down on the tile floor and pass out for a couple days.

Thursday, April 24, 2008

Love and Death; or, Time to Go Home

Wednesday April 23, 2008 2:21 p.m.
Delhi, Hindustan


It’s hard to write now, because the tears are still filling up my eyes and rolling down my cheeks. One of the many things left unwritten in recent days has been Sara’s, and to a lesser extent my own, adoption of a sick and tiny little puppy in Mazar-e-Sharif and subsequent adventure of trying to heal her up and bring her back to the states with us. She really was an amazing little pup: a sag-e-jangi, or Afghan fighting dog, she had already had her ears and tail cut off, while being bred to engage in the local blood sport of dog fighting. Yet she had a composure I’ve rarely seen in any animal, human or otherwise. When, after buying her freedom from the proprietors of the Mazar Hotel for the cost of 100 Afghanis (or $2 US, plus $2 for a little blue towel to swaddle her with), it was time to drive 10 hours during the heat of the day down into Kabul, she barely blinked the whole ride through—just relaxing and enjoying the ride as a chance to catch up on her rest and relaxation. Whenever she needed to do her business, she’d either give us a little whimper or just hop out of her little travel pouch and do her thing outside—and then climb back into bed.

Sara named her Shira, after shir which is the Dari word for “lion,” and shirac, the word for lion cub. The poor little thing was suffering from malnutrition, some sort of nasty intestinal illness (gastroenteritis, one vet said) which made her pass blood in her diarrhea, spent a fair amount of time either throwing up or otherwise writhing in bodily discomfort, and we picked more than half a dozen ticks off of her over 2-3 days—they just kept appearing. Conrad, and many others, were convinced she would indeed outweigh Sara herself within 2 years, and likely be close to as tall—these sag-e-jangis are huge, I guess. Meanwhile, she was the mellowest and most adorable thing that side of the Hindu Kush.

Shira died today, about an hour ago. Sara, miraculously, had gotten all her papers and shots and vet stuff in order, we flew her smoothly through customs from Kabul to Delhi, and it seemed like the toughest part was behind us. Just as we had gotten her to the veterinary clinic, figuring we’d check her in for 2-3 days of rehydrating and nourishing and medical attention to get her healthier and ready for the trip to the states, she passed away in Sara’s arms while I was across the road buying the medicines and supplies the clinic needed in order to treat her. Maybe… if the taxi driver had stayed and waited like he said he would rather than making us search 15 minutes for a new ride after dropping off our luggage at the guest house; if we hadn’t been the last people to get our luggage off the flight; if the vet clinic had had any supplies in stock, rather than making each animal’s parents buy and deliver everything necessary, including the IV tubes, the betadaine and every last item that took me 30 minutes to find and buy while Sara waited with Shira at the clinic—maybe; maybe, maybe, maybe she might have lived.

But, she did not live. While I thought she was with us for a period of healing and rejuvenation and new life, and saw her health challenges in that light, in reality I guess she came to us in order to die. After probably 4-6 weeks of mostly motherless infancy, eating bread and being eaten by fleas and ticks, losing her tail and ears at the hands of those who wanted to breed her into a fighting machine, she discovered us and we all fell in love. She came with us and had several days of love and snuggling and kindness and encouragement, and just when we got her from the vet in Kabul to the vet in Delhi, she passed away. Ouch.

Shir-e-Mazar, the little Lion Cub of Mazar-e-Sharif, has left behind her mortal coil. I’m more beside myself with grief than I could have imagined possible only a few days ago. I guess I haven’t really let myself begin to love a dog like this since Gemma, our beloved greyhound, who was like an angel incarnated into the hell of dog racing and rejuvenated by the love of my partner Caroline, and the love of my own heart. I feel crushed, Sara is crushed, and sadness fills the suddenly steamy air of Delhi.

I know life goes on, and there is so much to feel grateful for. But man, the last thing I want to do now is stay in Delhi for several roasting hot days and finish dealing with money and shipping details for getting my goods en route to the USA. I just want to be home, and take a bath and stare out at springtime’s renewal in a million shades of green, and roam barefoot in my back meadow, and see my friends and family, and rest. I feel like I’ve lived through several epochs in just the last two months. I’m wrung out. I’ve found some amazing items to bring home, seen parts of the planet never seen before by me, and lived through adventures large and small. Now, it’s time to go home.

Almost.

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

A weekend in Balkh & Mazar-e-Sharif

Tuesday April 22, 2008 8:05 a.m.
Back in Kabul Afghanistan


Well, so much for flying to Delhi last week. We just couldn’t drag ourselves away yet from this first engagement with Afghanistan—so we changed our tickets (at no cost, thank you Afghan air travel system) and went exploring furthur into the Afghan hill country. Nothing like 20+ hours of driving to get a quick hit of a place.

We launched on a fantastic weekend road trip north of Afghanistan across the Salang Pass high country into Mazar-e-Sharif with our favorite Zuhaak driver, Said. It’s a solid nine to ten hour drive from Kabul up to Mazar, even with not many stops made along the constantly incredible terrain. We traversed numerous landscapes and colorful stone canyons and had a wonderful time leaving Kabul far behind. Landing in Mazar-e-Sharif after dark, we had a mellow night of it, deciding with some regret not to join the several folks from TMF who had also driven up that morning—Tommy, Jila and Constance—as they left the following dawn to visit and meet with an archeologist working a nearby site where, quite possibly, Alexander the Great met and married Roxanne here in the farthest reaches of the Greek empire. It sounded just staggering, and right near a place called the healing spring too. We tried to visit later but our driver had heard of security concerns and didn’t want to bring us there.

I stayed back to deal with some necessary e-mail business, sorting out details of a selection of vintage Uzbek and Tajik textiles I’ve been sourcing for my former employer ABC Home in New York. By late morning we headed out to meet our TMF friends in Balkh—a wonderful quiet little town evincing little hint of its former glories: stomping ground of Alexander and Roxanne, birthplace of Zoroaster, and the place where the mystic poet Rumi grew up until age twelve when he and his family fled the incoming Mongol hordes. We searched for Rumi’s family house, or what was left of it, and before finding it we were led first to an amazing ancient decomposing domed mosque, where we feasted on ripening fresh mulberry fruits, a first for me. After prying ourselves away from that gorgeous building, we eventually found it: the old mud walls comprising the remains of the Rumi family domicile. We found a group of more than a dozen local kids running around, unusually friendly and engaging, though many were girls and hence usually much more reserved.

There’s too much to express right now—having landed back in Kabul, it is now time to finish up everything: FedEx’ing these textiles to America, finishing up my buying here with a few pieces of Afghan lapis jewelry and another stellar batch of great vintage textiles. I’m particularly delighted by a stylish collection of incredible embroidered boots (unbelievable!) and velvet and vintage textile vests and “cosmic smoking jackets” that I scored in the last couple days—I can’t wait to have a little “Afghan goodies” sale after I get home and all these goods arrive—way cool!

OK, time to get up and enjoy the last day here in Afghanistan. More details, and photos, later…

Wednesday, April 16, 2008

Mountains of Textiles and Mixed Feelings

Wednesday April 16, 2008 7:45 a.m.
Turquoise Mountain Foundation Compound
Kabul Afghanistan



Well, my heart is a jumble of mixed emotions these days. On the one hand, I feel turned slightly inside out by the whole experience of being here in Kabul, and being at the end of this road trip I’m feeling my desire to be home again, in my own backyard. And, I’m pretty much out of money, and I need to re-focus on finishing my work in India and getting my goods out of Delhi and on to Boston. On the other hand, I feel like while I am here I want to enjoy more of the amazing possibilities for exploration that this country possesses in such abundance—including road trips west to Bamiyan and Herat near the Iranian border, north to the mountainous Salang Pass and over to Mazar-e-Sharif and so much in between.

Also, I am just hitting my stride in the hunt for goods here, at least vintage textile-wise. Affordable decent handicrafts are still tough to find so far, but I’ve spent the last several days searching deep in the dusty stacks of an increasing handful of small shops just bursting to the seams with chappans (the overcoats that Hamid Karzai is rarely seen not wearing over his shoulders), red onion- and pomegranate-dyed silk scarves from Herat and Mazar, various hand-embroidered textiles from Tajikistan and Uzbekistan and the heavily Tajik and Uzbek areas of northern Afghanistan, and these super funky embroidered boots that I’ve scored a nice collection of. Too much great stuff! I wish I had another five or ten thousand dollars and a couple more weeks to spend here…

But, I suppose all good things come to an end, someday. Everyone here says “you’ll be back—everyone who comes here gets it in their bones and returns, don’t worry.” But I don’t know if I’ll ever have again the kind of friendly support structure that Jenny and the good folks here at Turquoise Mountain have offered us during these last weeks. And I know how hard it can be to make it back to some great place across the other side of the planet after we’ve once again gotten swept back into what seems to make sense at home. And who knows how the political and social situation in Afghanistan develops from here—it may never again be as easy to head into the hills here as it is right now, this next week.

So it’s not without a somewhat heavy heart and sense of missed opportunity that I prepare to enjoy my last two days here in Kabul and return to Delhi at dawn on Friday. But there’s also no mistaking that the last couple of weeks have been a Grade A experience of something truly new to me, coming here to a place virtually nobody I know has ever been to and seeing the post-Taliban, post-everything Afghanistan with my own eyes. I can’t wait to get into the film editing mode and put some of this footage together so you can check out a slice of this place as well.

Anyway, time to get geared up for the day. I need to return this bogus “Nokia” phone I bought the other day (which nobody can hear me speak on) and then try to find a different vintage textile market area that I heard about yesterday—as well as find boxes to ship these goods home. I didn’t realize finding boxes was going to be a three day affair! But welcome to Kabul, 2008.

Saturday, April 12, 2008

The Panjshir Valley, & an ancient Buddhist stupa


Saturday April 12, 2008 9:04 a.m.
Turquoise Mountain Foundation Compound
Kabul Afghanistan

sorry--this is a long post!


Yesterday we launched on an epic adventure far from Kabul’s center of gravity and dove deep into the serious mountains of northeastern Afghanistan. We’d been looking forward since last week to our planned day trip to the Panjshir, but I had no clue that the evening would also bring us face to face with a stunning 3rd or 4th century Buddhist stupa in the hills on the outskirts of the Shomali plains, in a place that seemed forgotten by time and Taliban alike.

We left around 8 a.m., a group of seven: our driver Reza bringing myself and Sara, Jenny and Conrad, the English earth-architecture builder Grahame and Fatma, the Afghan native raised largely in the Netherlands. Two or three hours of driving brought us to the narrow entrance of the stunning Panjshir Valley, or valley of the five lions—a region neither the Soviets nor Taliban were ever able to take and hold from the local people, led by Ahmad Shah Massoud. The Taliban sent a pair of “reporters” to interview and assassinate Massoud a day or two before the September 11th attacks, finally neutralizing one of their most hated foes just before the bull pucky that was about to start flying hit the fan. Before that, he had long outfoxed them and earned his reputation as “the Lion of Panjshir” and the hero of the people of northern Afghanistan. I’ve seen Massoud’s picture emblazoned everywhere I’ve been, on car windshields, billboards, posters, shop windows, you name it.

The steep, stony canyons of the Panjshir were littered with hundreds of rusting hulks of Soviet tanks, some scattered randomly in the fertile plains, some half-buried with only portions of their formerly fearsome iron mass emerging to remind one of the long and violent history still too fresh in local memory. An entire generation of Afghans has lived with constant doses of war, violence and brutality—starting in 1979 under the savage Soviet occupation, then the civil war amongst various warlords and tribal armies competing to fill the vacuum left by the Russians’ departure. Finally the Taliban emerged to offer stability and a relative quiet still remembered fondly by many here. I’m still wrapping my mind around how much Taliban appreciation exists here in the capital and in the supposedly anti-Taliban north: there’s not a lot of black and white here, at least not that my unstudied eye can perceive.

(The post-Taliban history is at least distantly familiar for many Americans by virtue of the largely monolithic press coverage that has come our way: good America vs. evil Muslim fundamentalists, America rides in to save the day. How easy to forget that only months before 9/11, George Bush’s government representatives and American oil company executives were hosting their friends the Taliban in Texas, negotiating oil pipeline deals. When the Taliban were not cooperative enough, threats of an October US invasion of Afghanistan were made well before 9/11—when such an idea suddenly made sense for other reasons. The CIA funded support of Osama bin Laden and his fellow “freedom fighters” during the Soviet war, support that by 2001 had already gone badly awry. These and a host of other uncomfortable details only serve to muddy the waters. But that’s a rant for another day, and a more honest time in America’s future, should that era ever come.)

As we made progress into the valley, we all stopped to pay our respects at the still-under-construction burial shrine of Ahmad Shah Massoud, on top of a low hill in the midst of the precipitous stony walls of the Panjshir. I spoke for a few minutes with a group of young Afghan men who, like me, were ambling about on the two dead Soviet-era tanks in the shadow of Massoud’s grave. As an American, I have generally gotten a pretty warm response—not as super-friendly as Indians usually offer, but not hostile either. As usual, a gesture of respect and a friendly smile go a long way. Sometimes it’s amazing how much can be shared between individuals with no history and no shared words.

Heading farther north from there, the valley’s lush fertile farmland blossomed with springtime’s verdant regeneration. We kept driving on what was, by far, the smoothest, best-paved road I’ve yet seen in Afghanistan. Apparently, the first Karzai cabinet was composed largely of Panjshiris, who deftly diverted many other reconstruction projects’ dollars into their own neighborhood, establishing a modern access route into this remote mountain valley. At some point, the smooth asphalt turns into a bumpy, dusty and pock-marked one lane mountain death trap route up to Tajikistan; we drove just far enough to experience a small amount of that—it’s a bone-jarring routine.

We stopped in a small village en route to score some fresh lamb kebabs for lunch—this is not a vegetarian-friendly country, unless bread and rice suffices—and drove on until we found a good access point to the Panjshir River where we could have our little picnic. I don’t think I’ve eaten lamb in more than 25 years, but when in Rome—well, I’ve tried to abide by the maxim that when someone offers me food, that food is in some way blessed, even if it is not strictly in accordance with our personal dietary preferences. I’ve heard even the vegetarian Dalai Lama eats meat when it is offered to him.

We peeled off our shoes and socks and enjoyed a pleasant picnic on the river’s grassy plain. Ambling afterwards along the river’s edge, finally we took off as many clothes as we could while still respecting local customs and enjoying a dip in the Panjshir’s chilly flowing waters. I looked up to barely notice in the distance a single shepherd winding his way across the massive rocky mountain face with his sheep and cows—a nicer office environment I have rarely seen. Later a few of his cows ambled by, nimbly picking their way along the river’s edge while we splashed and enjoyed a rare moment of frolic.

I have for years enjoyed, though on too rare occasions, hiking and “seeing all” in various regions of high mountain splendor: Colorado’s Rocky Mountains, California’s High Sierra, the Torres del Paine in Patagonia, the icy crags of India’s majestic Pir Panjal. Few things match the simple, elemental glory of seeing a new range of high altitude rocky peaks reveal themselves before me. Just soaking it all into my eyes was a balm to my already Kabul-addled senses. I was a very happy camper.

I thought our day was complete, lacking only the long drive back to dusty civilization. I had no idea that the little sign-post “town” of Toop Dara, most of the way back down into the Shomali plains, held for us such an ancient gem. Grahame had mentioned that he had heard of, but never visited, an old Buddhist stupa somewhere in the hills up there—why don’t we try and find it? The slow incline, up the steep road with no guard rail to protect against a precipitous and deadly fall, became the sort of winding, slippery dangerous ascent that only a minivan in balding tires can truly provide—there were definitely a couple of moments in which we didn’t quite have control; the wrong slip could have been pretty awful. But we persevered and arrived to the end of the road, nestled between two groups of mud-walled houses (bristling with small children) that seemed less like villages and more like extended clan settlements. We caused a bit of a local stir, and walked up maybe 10 to 20 minutes until we came within sight of a round, somewhat decomposed but largely intact stone stupa maybe 30 feet across and 40-50 feet high—an ancient signal from another era.

Grahame said it was back in the 3rd or 4th century that Buddhism was thriving in these hills, making this old spot maybe 1800 years old—amazing. But if I had to guess, I’d say we were the first visitors this old stupa had seen in many moons—we were pretty clearly the most exciting thing this neighborhood had seen in a dog’s age. Before long the few folks we had walking along with us became several dozen people—children, young men, older men. All men, come to think of it.

Somewhere, the all men part got sticky. Some comments were made, some photos taken even after Fatma requested no photos, and things snowballed. Sara and I had somehow gotten separated from where the rest of our group wandered—we stayed near the stone monument itself and wondered where everyone had gone—and we were taking in the sunset gloaming on the far-off snow-capped peaks of the Hindu Kush. We were surrounded by maybe 10 or 20 guys, all seeming pretty friendly, doing our best to communicate over the language barrier. I had a good laugh when, in the shadow of this ancient monument, I attempted to share my response with one of the senior-feeling men with a rifle who had climbed up beside me. We got nowhere, but when I looked at him and said “Wow!” he laughed and said “Wow!” and somehow, I realized that Wow is one of the crucial elements of the universal language. It was a fun moment.

With darkness coming quickly, it was clearly time to be leaving soon—but suddenly our group reappeared and we were all leaving swiftly, with an energetic ripple of “something had gone wrong” and it was time to go now. Slowly it became evident: there was a breach of honor and/or protocol afoot and, as can apparently often happen out here, things had the potential to snowball rapidly into an out of control situation.

Here in the central Asian mountain cultures, the idea of the “headman” of the area, from whom decisions, permissions and policies flow, is very relevant--in fact, a defining characteristic. Conrad just recently graduated from Princeton with a degree in Near Eastern Studies, thus making him the most knowledgeable in history, culture and language of any of our group (even including Fatma and Reza). Nonetheless, at 23, he is a bit young to be our “headman.” But in reality our headman he was, and being as how the leading man of the village or group is the point of contact and negotiation over weird situations like this, it was he whom we counted on to negotiate our way through what could have careened out of hand. Dusk encroaching, a car full of gringos and strangers at the end of a dirt road far from civilization, a sudden clash of honor arising—this had all the hallmarks of something that could get quite ugly, and quite quickly at that.

It was something, watching Conrad and the local headman, a white bearded man with soft eyes and a gentle feel to him, communicating and negotiating a mutually honorable solution to the conduct of the recent hour, while surrounded by dozens of noisy neighbors, protagonists and bystanders alike. I gathered very few words, but the gestures and demeanor were clearly serious, though all along I felt hopeful of a civil end result.

But it was a case study of one of the root realities of life here in Afghanistan: tribal culture has its own very distinct rules and practices, and a westerner like me has little grasp on the contours of this culture. Still, every action taken can cause ripples that I would have zero idea of. And traveling with someone like Sara—blond, white, female and energetically spunky—simply creates its own gravity and external social responses no matter how innocuous, gentle or inoffensive we are imagining our intentions or behavior to be.

There’s a reason many western women visiting here take on the trappings of this culture: covering the head, arms and bottom absolutely at all times, touching no man even in a handshake, making no eye contact with strangers, etc. Even though it seems messed up, unfair or ridiculous—and it often feels like all those things—still, the actual reality on the ground is that, this is how the culture operates here. When a western woman here thinks “oh, I’m just rolling up my sleeves, or smiling or offering to shake a guy’s hand, it’s no big deal,” the local men, with their own worldview and extreme sensitivity to minor gestures, aspects of dress and behavior, are liable to think instead “oh, this is one of those loose western whores we’ve been led to believe the majority of white women are” or some variant of this theme.

I do not pretend to understand any of this—I am very new to this world. But, both during the episode and our de-briefing of it with Jenny and Conrad later in the evening, both Sara and I felt a kind of cultural chill. Here we are wandering about with video camera rolling, being largely ourselves with our respective gregarious and bubbly personalities, smiling and doing our best to be kind and communicative with people here, yet in reality we may be having a completely different effect than we think or hope.

When we arrived a week ago, Conrad said to us: “In Kabul, it’s not a war zone. Outside of Kabul, it is a war zone.” Getting out of here in one piece, even with only occasional forays into the lawless territory that is “Afghanistan” outside this capital city of Kabul, might not be as much of a given as it’s been easy to imagine. As a fellow press person (a western male) wrote to Sara last week: “don’t get lulled into a false sense of security.“ After last night’s adventures, we each had a starker sense of what he meant, and how quickly it can all get weird over here.

In some ways, yesterday’s brush with local mountain culture seemed, in retrospect, like a fairly low-cost reality check. We all escaped unharmed, despite the awkward moments. For me, as much as I’d like to continue traveling about (northern) Afghanistan—Herat, Mazar-e-Sharif, Bamiyan—I’m starting to count our blessings and look forward to another good push of work here followed by a return to the relative safety of India and, eventually, the good ol’ US of A. It won’t be long…

Wednesday, April 9, 2008

Istalif: Into the foothills of the Hindu Kush


Tuesday April 8, 2008 11:06 p.m.
Turquoise Mountain Foundation Compound
Kabul Afghanistan

Well, today was a fantastic trip out of Kabul, at last. We piled ten of us from Turquoise Mountain Foundation into a mini-van and rollicked across the fertile Shomali plains north of Kabul for the roughly hour and a half drive up to the town of Istalif, in the low foothills of the legendary Hindu Kush mountains.

I never knew that Hindu Kush meant Hindu Killer, but so I heard en route. What a relief to leave the big city behind—there’s so much more to explore, but I’m a country bumpkin at heart and the idea of a beautiful spring day in the hills was a dream come true, especially after so long scrubbing through the hot cities of northern India.

Istalif—a truly beautiful spot. Very small town, renowned for its rustic blue pottery, and reputedly a site of one of the Mughal emperor Babur’s famous gardens. We hiked for a bit less than an hour up the hill behind the main part of town, through the bombed-out ruins of the town, which was a fierce fighting area directly on one of the battle lines where Ahmad Shah Massoud fought against the Taliban (I believe this was in 1997). We walked directly amongst the destroyed area, which the Talib fighters eventually won control of. The Taliban came into the town and gave the town’s residents one hour to leave—after which they came in and ransacked the entire town, burning buildings and essentially razing the town down to the ground. It took five years for people to begin resettling their homes and neighborhoods.

TMF has been working over the last year or two to develop a visitor’s center and work space in Istalif, supporting the local crafts community, wihc is essentially the entire town. We got some great footage of one of the potters up on the hill throwing bowls on his kick-powered wheel, as well as some interviews with several of the old potter/shopkeepers along the old wild west-style main street (pretty much the only street, actually). Also shared lunch with the shura—the council of village elders, with whom TMF will be working as they integrate their educational programs into the local community.

While there we got sun, rain and hail—full on. We totally could have stayed up there for days soaking up the scene and shooting amazing footage. So much more to tell—but I’m so tired and another long day begins early tomorrow.

Briefly, we had an evening adventure too: after dinner, we accepted the invite of a couple of the TMFers to go out for a drink at one of the favorite expat watering holes: The Gandamack Lodge. Filled with journalists and assorted international aid worker types (and cigarette smoke), it was worth the trip—even though we had to willfully ignore the news that came across the transom earlier this morning: the main group that monitors and communicates the local security situation notified TMF (and others) this morning that there were rumors of some sort of Taliban attack to be aimed at symbols of western life here in Kabul somewhere in the next 48-72 hours. Gandamack certainly fits the bill, I’d say. But Allah was with us and all is well.

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