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November 2007

November 30, 2007

Brass Cresent Blog Awards

As a non-Muslim who is nonetheless concerned about Islamaphobia and about xenophobia generally, I'm suprised, flattered and honoured to have this blog nominated in the Best South/South-East Aisan Blog section of the Brass Cresent Blog Awards. My photoblog was also nominated in another category.

The Brass Cresent is an annual awards ceremony that "honors the best writers and thinkers of the emerging Muslim blogosphere (aka the Islamsphere)." I'm not at all convinced that my blog measures up to those high standards, but I recommend a visit to the site to check out some of the other nominees.

One of my existing blog favorites is nominated in the Best Mid-East/Central Asian Blog category: Laila Al-Haddad of Raising Yousuf: Unplugged but many of the others are new to me I can see I have some more exploring to do. Enjoy!

16 Days

Sadats_wife_with_the_washing

The wife of my colleague agreed to let me take her photo this week on the condition that her face was obscured. She was shy, but still friendly to a strange woman who turned up outside her house trying to speak Dari to her even though she only speaks Pashtu. Duh

This week I've been emotionally triggered what feels like a thousand times a day. I'm heading into my very last week in Ghor and my emotions are heightened, but the events of the week were fairly intense anyway.

Between last Friday and today the good people of Ghor have experienced tribal conflicts in Shahrak which had in the preceeding week culminated in an ambush on a police convoy killing the District Chief of Police and at least five of his soldiers, plus two tribal elders in the vehicle with him. The police this past week set out to rescue three men abducted in the ambush. Officially this rescue was to recover police officers but according to some local sources they were armed men from one tribe who had been travelling with the police to carry out attacks on the other tribe's villages. In any case the police operation seems almost certainly to have been complemented by reprisal attacks from the other tribe which were either ignored or actively supported by the police.

I don't know what kinds of feelings are generated in you when you read this kind of report. Pema Chodron talks about the reversion to numbness in the face of an overwhelming sense of helplessness. That seems to be a common response in much of the world, and understandably so. As for me I feel angry and sad at the same time about these events, and yes, I feel some hopelessness.

The week went on. This week was the first week of the international campaign "16 Days of Activism to Eliminate Violence against Women" (let's just say "16 days" from here on in, huh?). In my part of the world this week was marked by a grenade attack on the home of the Head of the Department of Women's Affairs, a grenade attack on the home of the female Provincial Prosecutor, renewed death threats against another woman holding a position of public office and rumours about the Head Teacher of the Girls High School.

I struggle to know what to do with the sadness and anger that is generated by these attacks. The morning after the first grenade attack I was at her house, and she was calmly showing me where the windows where smashed, where her car was damanged and where she shot a bullet into the door of her own car as she grabbed a gun and fired wildly in response to the attack. She took calls as we talked and thanked me for coming to see her and she asked me how my trip to America was - she herself having just returned from a trip away. I watched her and tried to learn from her how to behave under these circumstances.

Three days later she called me to her office, asking me to come alone and therefore without a translator. I went and we struggled to understand each other but in the end I got the point. She wanted to know what I was doing to push the police to find the person who attacked her. She was insisting that I should personally do more. My reaction? Not anything I'm proud of. I was overcome with a wave of anger.

It was anger born out of frustration because I have been meeting the responsible security officials, I have been exhorting them to do everything they can to find whoever is doing this, but they look me straight in the eye and tell me whatever they think I want to hear and I know that these meetings are achieving nothing.

So was I really angry at her for asking me to help? Of course not.

I was angry at the people who threw the grenade in the first place, for not having the courage and the decency to come out and publically speak their minds rather than sneaking around at night throwing grenades, putting children at risk and terrorizing those people in this town who are standing up for what they believe in.

I was angry at the Chief of Police for not putting an end to this - in a town of 10,000 people I cannot believe that it is impossible to find and arrest the person who has carried out five such attacks in the past month.

I was angry at myself for being so entirely useless in these circumstances.

I was angry at the journalist who had been visiting for two days, giving the impression that Afghanistan and it's stories of grenades and improvised explosive devices was a great lark, a 'boy's own adventure'.and who seemed disinterested and distracted from the real stories all around him.

For several days I allowed all these triggers to feed the angry, despairing wolf and by Wednesday as I sat in a special ceremony to mark the "16 days" I was on the verge of tears the whole time.

I was aware of the young Lithuanian soldiers patrolling the perimeter on foot specifically because I was here. Because by standing alongside the Head of Women's Affairs to give our speeches at this occassion I was now putting myself at risk of grenade attack. I thought about the risk that this entailed for those young men and I thought about their families at home.

I thought about why I needed to be at the ceremony and about all the other people who had agreed to come and stand up for women's rights. The Deputy Governor, one of the local Mullahs, the Head of the Provincial Council, the Head of the Afghan Independent Human Rights Commission. I thought about the people who, by sneaking about at night and throwing hand grenades, were trying to undermine all that this ceremony stood for.

I watched five young girls sing a song based on the Convention for the Elimination of Discrimination against Women and I wondered which one of them might be killed, maimed, beaten, raped or tortured in the years to come. I watched five beautiful boys stand up along side those girls and participate in a battle of the genders quizz. And I thought about which of those beautiful boys would end up hating his life, beating his wife, consumed by anger and hopelessness.

I know! Great thoughts for feeding the despairing wolf right, right?

Finally when the ceremony was over I came home and let myself have a good cry. I just let the anger and the sadness wash out of me.

When the crying was over I wrote. I wrote for myself, I wrote to the journalist, I wrote to friends who would understand and share with me in the pain. I wrote out the anger. I wrote to the other side. Sometimes, for me, writing is what I can do when I am too filled with emotion to sit in meditation. Sometimes writing is what I need to do first.

Then I sat, and I tried to get in touch with my natural openness, my natural warmth, my natural intelligence. Here are some of the things that came up for me:

Maybe the journalist was not callous and shallow. Maybe he was out of his depth and a bit overwhelmed. Maybe the sarcastic humour was a cover for confusion or even fear. Maybe the distracted twitchiness was not because he found the people around him uninteresting but because he didn't know where to look first, he didn't know who to talk to or what to make of it all. Maybe a little more kindness from me would have made all the difference.

I have to confess I didn't get quite that far with the guy(s) throwing the grenades. But I did find myself much less overwhelmed with emotion everytime I thought about them.

When I think about how hard it is for me to deal with all these emotions I have to stop for a moment and give respect to the people who are more directly affected by all these events. If it takes me a week to figure out how to stop reacting to the triggers and get back in touch with my basic goodness and my belief in the goodness of others then what does it take for the families in Shahrak whose fathers, brothers, sons were killed in the ambush? What does it take for the women whose homes have been attacked by grenades in the night, scattering deadly shards of glass across the room where their children sleep?

In these moments the cycle of violence makes sense to me, and I find myself coming back to the drawing board about how I can make my small contribution to peace in these times of war.

November 27, 2007

Vanity Fair

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Proof, as promised, that we made it to the highest peak on Friday.

A good friend sent me a list 35 questions to answer yesterday. She borrowed them from the back page of Vanity Fair magazine and was collecting answers from all her favorite people. Since it is a great privilege to be amongst her favorite people I, of course, happily complied. Here I share them, and my answers with you. Will you also answer?

1. What is your idea of perfect happiness?
Knowing that I’ve done my best, letting go of everything else.

2. What is your greatest fear?
Being abandoned or rejected by the people I love

3. Which living person do you most admire?
Kopalasingham Sritharan (aka Sri), human rights defender, colleague, inspiration and friend, read about him here

4. What is the trait you most deplore in yourself?
Envy

5. What is the trait you most deplore in others?
Cruelty

6. What do you consider the most overrated virtue?
A sense of humour – wonderful in so many ways but it doesn’t make up for a lack of integrity or kindness

7. On what occasion do you lie?
When the truth is going to put someone in danger

8. What do you dislike most about your appearance?
How tired I look some days

9. What is your greatest regret?
I have very few regrets and none that are great

10. What or who is the greatest love of your life?
That is a really tough question. Maybe I’m still looking. In the meantime the thing that makes my heart smile, without fail, is to see children be given a chance to reach their potential

11. Which talent would you most like to have?
The ability to sing beautifully

12. What is your current state of mind?
Tipsy (my colleague just got back from India with gin!)

13. If you could change one thing about yourself, what would it be?
My tendency to cry in the middle of arguments

14. What do you consider your greatest achievement?
Mentoring young Afghan men and women to promote human rights in their own country

15. If you were to die and come back as a person or thing, what do you think it would be?
A book of poems

16. What is your most treasured possession?
My iBook (and all that is stored in it) and/or my Canon EOS 400D

17. What do you regard as the lowest depth of misery?
Losing sight of my own basic goodness and the basic goodness of others

18. Where would you like to live?
If I could decide that then things might settle down a little bit…

19. What is your most marked characteristic?
Resilience? Compassion? Tenacity? Anal retentiveness? I’d like a second opinion.

20. Who are your favorite writers?
Mary Oliver, Rumi

21. Who is your favorite hero of fiction?
Pippi Longstockings

22. Who are your heroes in real life?
Sri (see no 3 above), Horia Mosadiq, Pema Chodron and Raji Sourani

23. What is it that you most dislike?
Cynicism and apathy

24. What is your motto?
“Be the change you want to see in the world”

25. Favorite Journey?
Walking along a sun-kissed beach with a good friend and the promise of a perfect glass of wine at the other end.

26. What do you value most in your friends?
The fact that they choose to be my friends despite everything

27. Which words or phrases do you must overuse?
“Quickly, please, I’m in a hurry”

28. Which historical figure do you most identify with?
Dame Whina Cooper (Did I say identify with? I guess I may have meant admire. Still, I aspire to identify with the Dame)

29. What is your greatest extravagance?
Air travel and Jo Malone products

30. If you could change one thing about your family, what would it be?
Nothing at all – they are perfect in their own maddening way

31. What is your favorite occupation?
Photography

32. What is the quality you most like in a woman?
Kindness

33. What is the quality you most like in a man?
Kindness

34. How would you like to die?
Unafraid

35. If you could chose what to come back as, what would it be?
A seabird

Here are some other answers:
Home in Kabul, soon to be Home in Herat
Rickshaw Diaries>
Thailand Gal

November 24, 2007

Thanksgiving: Ghor-style

J_and_i_on_hill

Remember these guys? Do you recall that I mentioned in that post that we were cooking up "schemes to walk all the way to the summit one weekend"?

Well, after various comings and goings we are all back in town again. Yesterday the three of us headed out in an attempt to reach the even-farther-away hill. There is nothing better, in this town, than striding out over the hills with two good-hearted, funny, do-gooder blokes for company.

We pushed ourselves a little harder and further this time and I was not the only one huffing and puffing up the final hill, but we got there and although I don't have a photo to prove it (I was walking camera-free yesterday) I can assure you the view was stunning.

As we walked (for two and a half hours this time) we talked about our work, the challenges of our isolation and the frustrations of our failures. We talked about our respective plans to travel home for Christmas (two of us are leaving Afghanistan at Christmas and the third will be home until mid-January) and our concerns that we may be overwhelmed by the abundance. We talked about how will will respond (or how we hope we will respond) and what we are looking forward to most.

We talked about books we are reading about Afghanistan and about developments in the southern part of Ghor. We talked about what a man could do to capture a woman's heart (I suggested making her icecream - a little tip I picked up from Boho-boy).

We talked about why we are here and what we hope we are achieving. We laughed at ourselves and at each other, we laughed at our puffing and wheezing. We posed for a self-timer portrait of the three of us at the summit, although not on my camera or I would show you all the proof that we really got there.

Then we started to talk about dinner, which I had decided to host at my place, and we got hungry. So we walked back, found the fourth member of the tiny community we call ours, and set about cooking up a pasta storm in my teeny kitchenette.

As we cooked and ate we talked some more. We also had some treats to share with each other. I had chocolate from a lovely friend who thought of me in the midst of all that she was going through herself. He had cheese that he had carried all the way from his home in France. She had more chocolate. He had one precious bottle of red wine. We swapped books we had finished reading and shared our treats and I knew that each small luxury was appreciated by this wee group more than a feast or a pile of gifts would be appreciated in many other settings.

We were very thankful.
Thankful for our cheese, chocolate and red wine.
Thankful for the chance to live and work here.
Thankful for each other's company and friendship.
I guess although only one of us is American we kind of got the idea of this Thanksgiving deal.

November 21, 2007

Dreaming of a happpy ending.

So where is the happy ending?

Today I finally settled into catch up on all that has been going on in Ghor while I was away. There have been more grenade attacks in town - last night a rocket was fired into a small wooded area on the edge of town. There are rumours around town that these attacks have been carried out by the police themselves in order to distract attention from the fact that they are busy providing an armed escort to drug traffickers hauling their illicit wares across the province.

In Passaband in the south of Ghor there was an advance into the province of numbers of Taleban fighters, faced with an advancing regiment of Afghan National Police they seem to have retreated to just inside the border and regrouped.

In Shahrak, in response to an ambush on a police convoy earlier this week that killed 10 police officers (including the Cheif of Police) and saw five more wounded and five abducted - the Afghan National Police are now preparing for operations in the area which may - sadly - turn out to look more like retribution than crime control.

All over the province there are reports of an impending humanitarian disaster as food aid trucks continue to fail to get through to Ghor. I just got back from a long meeting which made me realise finally just how confused everyone is about the food shortage and just how unprepared some key players seem to be.

I had a long meeting this morning about a string of unresolved human rights cases in relation to which the Government does not seem to be taking very proactive steps towards resolution. One case was of a 15 year old girl abducted and forceably married to the soldier of one powerful commander and then taken for a month to the house of the commander himself where she was allegedly repeatedly raped by the commander and eight of his armed men.

And everyone is looking at me asking me to help them find a solution.

And I have just over two weeks left here.

Talk about feeling separation guilt. I'm drowning in it tonight. One half of my heart and mind is screaming at me "How can you leave!!! You know that you have been making a difference here. You know that you can do more. These are your friends and your colleagues and you can't really be planning to abandon them!".

Another part of my heart and mind knows perfectly that I am not the solution to anyone's problems, that these problems are not going away anywhere fast and that it will never be the right time to leave. It may never be the right time to leave but I think that it is the right time to go home.

Then I got this email from a dear Palestinian friend living in Gaza:

"Dear Marianne,

I am not good my dear, every things around us in Gaza very disappointed, and so hard this time, no medical supplies in Gaza, no drinks, no food, every thing finished from the markets, we will not found it after that, I don't feel for any hope in the near future that something good will happen in Gaza, I think it will be more more worse, more closure for long time………. Any way, this is Gaza.

Thanks Marianne again for your kind message, and keep in touch.

With my love,

J"

I remembered with a rush the same mix of emotions thoughts and feeling when I left Gaza. I know very well that I could have stayed in Gaza all these years and the outcome for my friends there would not have been significantly altered. These messes are so much bigger than us.

That isn't the voice of hopelessness - I still believe we all have to do as much good as we can with whatever resources and opportunities we can find or make for ourselves. But I also know that the macro-level dynamics of Gaza and Ghor are equally out of the hands of one human rights officer/ humanitarian worker.

So it is pretty important not to start to feel as though you should be able to do more than you can do. It is pretty important not to start believing that this place and these people "need" me. It is pretty important to stay focused on doing what good I can and then letting go of the rest.

Still tonight I can't help heading off to bed dreaming of a happy ending for Gaza and for Ghor.

November 18, 2007

Five things that are making me smile today

1. The High Commissioner for Human Rights, Louise Arbour, was in Afghanistan this past weekend and I got to attend two meetings with her. The first was a meeting with women from families of victims of human rights abuses and violations during the past decaddes of war in Afghanistan. Women who have come together despite their differences to raise their voices in pursuit of justice. The subject of transitional justice, or lack of it, has been one that I have found incredibly disappointing. On Friday, though, both courage of these women and the wisdom and experience of Ms Arbour gave me new hope. More than anything else, this meeting made me smile.

2. Yesterday was my nephew's third birthday party and a large chunk of the party was spent chasing a small group of sheep who had escaped from their paddock - my sister's email about their sheep chasing adventures (involving my parents, sister and brother-in-law and the kids) made me smile.

3. An email from a beautiful Mermaid is making me smile.

4. Listening to great Kiwi music is always making me smile.

5. Photos (like the one below) from my holiday in California are making me smile.

Messy_thrilling_us1

Me, Denise, Christine and Susannah taken in Santa Monica, by Susannah, the master of the arm's length selp portrait

PS: Happy Birthday Gorgeous!!

November 15, 2007

Goodbyes

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I'm getting ready to say goodbye to Afghanistan. I have decided not to extend my contract at the end of this year and the weeks are zooming by so that my departure date seems to be speeding towards me. I can feel the goodbyes looming and although I am sure that it is time to go home for a while, I also know that these goodbyes will be hard, some of them heart-breaking.

So I will be writing about saying goodbye over the coming weeks, about the temptation to withdraw rather than look the people I love and care about here in the face and say "I'm leaving. Goodbye. May you be well despite all this and may we meet again".

But first I want to re-post something I wrote about goodbyes about one year ago. I have said so many goodbyes in my short life and although I can feel a part of me retreating from the fullness of the emotions that will come with this next round of leave-taking, I also know that there is only one kind of life for me and that is a life felt-fully.

Here is what I wrote last year:

1995 Goodbye David Goodbye my husband, my love. Nobody else knows the young woman I am today like you do, and no one ever will. You have been my friend, my love, my playmate and my confidant through these crazy, fantastic years of our youth. Through death and loss and grief you have loved me. Through confusion and doubt you have always stayed close. We set out on this adventure of life together. We cast our simple but surprisingly sturdy little boat out into these turbulent waters. You have never failed me, nor betrayed my trust in you. We have tried everything that we could think of, we have tried and then tried again. No, we have not failed each other, but we have come to the end of our trying. We are worn out, exhausted and sad, so sad. Goodbye my lovely philosopher. Goodbye my friend.

1996 Goodbye New Zealand
Goodbye my homeland. Goodbye my turangawaewae, my place to stand. As long as I know you are here, I will never be lost. But now I need to leave. I need to be away from here. Suddenly you seem too small to contain the pain that is burning within me and the desire that is bursting out of me. I could drive through one day and a night and come to the edge of your beautiful shoulders. I need to go further. I need to spread out my arms and not touch the edges. I need to get lost in a sea of strangers. I need to stand in the middle of a desert so vast I can sense the majesty of the universe and imagine being lost in it myself. I need to cast myself into the world with no one beside me. I need to discover again what I can do alone. Though I will always return to you, though I belong to you, goodbye Aotearoa.

2001 Goodbye Gaza, Goodbye Israel
Goodbye courageous Gaza, do you know that you’ve captured a part of my heart. I will never truly leave you. I will also never again be the girl I was when I landed here and you embraced me in your warm, passionate arms. Goodbye crazy, wonderful Gaza, but how can I leave you like this? Your streets are in flames and your children are fighting again. Goodbye my beloved Gaza, and all my friends here.

Goodbye Bassam, you were so kind to this stranger, you and Donia and the girls, there are no words for what you gave me. Goodbye Raji, you pushed me and pulled me and stretched me and tested me, you taught me what I was capable of and yet never managed to toughen me up. Goodbye Ibrahim, I sat in your house three times every week as you taught me Arabic and how hard life can be here. Goodbye Tariq, and Jehan and Ala, you opened your hearts and your homes to me and taught me how to live in this place. Goodbye Sharifa, you came to be my housemate and we discovered we were soul mates. Goodbye Ross, you were with me from the first day and you have always been here, letting me sit in your studio while you work. I have always known that I could rely on you for some sanity when I was losing mine. Goodbye Mehdi, you shared a little of your soul with me and reminded me of my own path. Goodbye Amanda, Eva and Imogen, goodbye Tim, Bahaar, Ludvig and Vincent. You have been my sisters and my brothers here for almost two years, through the disagreements and tensions and laughter and tears I have grown to love you.

Goodbye Israel, because I love you too though you drive me almost insane. Though your army in Gaza breaks my heart a hundred times everyday. Though your soldiers and checkpoints have reduced me to tears of anger, desperation, and deep sadness. Goodbye Israel and Aviva, Asaf, and Tamar, you are family to me and your home is my home. Goodbye darling Adomy, my lover and my friend. You have always been ready with a story, a cinnamon roll and a sweet kiss, to nurse me back into wholeness after weeks of the madness of life here. Goodbye Rachel and Assaf, my cousins. Your lives ‘on the other side’ are so very far from mine, but you have still opened you arms to me. Goodbye Jerusalem, goodbye Al Quds. No other city has moved me as you do and I will never recover from this first love of your pinks and greys, your sounds and smells, your soul.

Goodbye beloved Gaza, goodbye Israel. Thank you for all that you have taught me, for all you have shared with me and for the grace and good humour you have shown to a young, naïve do-gooder. Goodbye and may you have justice. May you have justice and peace, the blossom of justice.

2001 Goodbye Vaughn
Goodbye Vaughn, though those words stick in my throat. I have so many other things to say to you before I am ready to say goodbye. Like “Why?” and “Why?” and “Why?” Like “She loves you” and “We all love you”. So I won’t say goodbye. I can’t say good bye, years from now I will still not be ready to say goodbye to you. I watch my beloved sister grieve for you with an intensity and pain that I cannot bear even from where I sit, once removed. Goodbye Vaughn, though it is not your time. Goodbye sweet Vaughn, because although the words still stick in my throat it is time to let you have things your way. Goodbye.

2002-2005 The frequent flyer mile years.
Goodbye Auckland, hello Wellington. Goodbye Wellington, hello Sydney. Goodbye Sydney, hello Darwin. Goodbye Darwin, hello Dili. Goodbye Dili, hello Darwin. Goodbye Darwin, hello Sydney. Goodbye Sydney, hello Wellington. Goodbye Wellington, hello Auckland. Goodbye Auckland, hello Wellington. Goodbye Wellington, hello Sydney. Goodbye Sydney, hello Darwin. Goodbye Darwin, hello Dili. Goodbye Dili, hello Darwin. Goodbye Darwin, hello Sydney. Goodbye Sydney, hello Wellington. Goodbye Wellington, hello Auckland. Goodbye Auckland, hello Bangkok. Goodbye Bangkok, hello Wellington. Goodbye Wellington, hello Christchurch. Goodbye Christchurch, hello Wellington. Goodbye Wellington, hello Santiago. Goodbye Santiago, hello Buenos Aires. Goodbye Buenos Aires, hello Sao Paulo. Goodbye Brazil, hello London. Goodbye London, hello Oslo. Goodbye Oslo, hello Amsterdam. Goodbye Amsterdam, hello Athens. Goodbye Athens, hello Wellington. Goodbye Wellington, hello Bangkok. Goodbye Bangkok, hello Tel Aviv. Goodbye Tel Aviv, hello Jerusalem. Goodbye Jerusalem, hello Ramallah. Goodbye Ramallah, hello Haifa. Goodbye Haifa, hello Tel Aviv. Goodbye Tel Aviv, hello Bangkok. Goodbye Bangkok, hello Wellington. Goodbye Wellington, hello Sydney. Goodbye Sydney, hello Darwin. Goodbye Darwin, hello Dili. Goodbye Dili, hello Darwin. Goodbye Darwin, hello Sydney. Goodbye Sydney, hello Wellington. Goodbye Wellington, hello Denpasar. Goodbye Bali, hello Wellington. Goodbye Wellington, hello Auckland. Goodbye Auckland, hello Wellington. Goodbye Wellington, hello Kabul.

2005 Goodbye Grandpa
Goodbye darling Grandpa, I wish I could have said this to you before you went. But I understand that you have been saying goodbye to me, to all of us, for months now. I knew it even then, when you squeezed me a little bit too hard, held my hand for a little bit too long, and looked me in the eye and told me again and again that you loved me. Goodbye Grandpa, I understand that you were ready. But do you understand that we were not, that we never ever would have been. Grandpa, can you believe that they have made me godmother of your namesake, little Archie? Goodbye beloved Grandpa, but please don’t stray to far from me, if this Archie is to be even a fraction of the man you were then I’m going to need all your wisdom to guide me and all of your love to pass on.


2006 Goodbye Marc
Goodbye beloved Marc, yes I’m going on this adventure for the both of us. I’ll be back soon to tell you all about it in person. It’s true, I don’t know if I will be able to bear being away from you while you set out on your journey to beat this cancer, to fight your way to the long, happy life that we both know will be yours. You know that I am only a phone call away and I’ll be on the first plane if those doctors start abusing your human rights again (if they steal your voice again, write me a note!). I’ll write you long and hopefully entertaining messages about life in Kabul to read when you are recovering from chemotherapy. Goodbye Marc, I promise I will even learn to sit still so that I can practice those healing meditations for you. Good bye my friend and my brother, see you soon.

2006 Goodbye Kabul
Goodbye Kabul, goodbye new friends, new home, new job and new life. It seems I have barely settled in and yet here it is again, time to say goodbye. Goodbye Horia, my heroine, you have shown me what people mean when they talk about grace under fire. Goodbye brave Shinkai, you trusted me and gave me the chance to discover something new about myself. Goodbye Kate, Sarah, and Rachel. Goodbye Monday night yoga and Thursday night ladies’ drinks. Goodbye to my women of Kabul, you have cried and laughed with me, you have so quickly come to know me. Goodbye Timur, Kai, Tamim, Wagma, and Azma. You have shown me what hospitality should look like and you have taught me a little about growing up Afghan in America. Goodbye Jamie, Sarah, Jeremy and Scott. You have made me laugh when the pipes were frozen over and when it seemed the report would never get written. Goodbye Javier and Herman, you have taken me on as your housemate and made me feel like your star. Goodbye Nellika, you offered me a home away from home. Goodbye Norman and Mala, you offered me your doggy trust and helped me learn to be less afraid of all dogs in the process. Goodbye Mohammedullah, Shapour and Azim, you have endured having this strange and sometimes unpredictable Haraji as your manager with good humour and generosity. Goodbye my Kabul life and, deep breath, hello Herat.

November 14, 2007

We walk the same line

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Me and Major Dan in Portland, Forest Park

This week one dear friend and one new friend shared on their blogs honest accounts of their recent experiences of this hard line we all walk.

Another very special woman who walked with me through a hard passage wrote me an email sharing the pain that a certain ongoing conflict is causing her.

I bumped into a colleague in the courtyard of our HQ and we somehow tumbled into real talk, sharing our honest hurts and struggles and before we knew it we were in tears in the middle of the compound.

Another dear friend is tired after another long session with her therapist, working through more loss than anyone should ever have to deal with in any life time.

Tonight I went for dinner and a very long talk with two women whom I've discovered in very different and special ways here in Kabul. We spoke honestly about this tricky, marvelous, crazy life we all lead and I felt so normal, so connected, so real.

Every day, in different ways, I am reminded that we walk the same line - all in our very unique and irreplicable ways but nonetheless recognisable to each other if we are ready to look beyond the surface and really see each other.

Tonight I just feel so grateful for my tribe of women, and for the knowledge that they are there ready to walk with me through any joy or sorrow and knowing that they will also know that I am here for them.

It's a hard knock life, so tonight I thank goodness for those who walk with us.

November 10, 2007

Food issues in Ghor

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A woman collecting her food rations as part of the WFP/DoWA food for literacy project in Ghor

I've caught myself complaining quite a lot lately about the poor quality of the food I can access in Ghor. I was complaining mostly about the failure of my colleagues in HQ to send up the boxes of fruit and vegetables I had been promised. I love to feed my body well, to eat heathily and choose the freshest ingredients so that I can eat raw as much as possible.

In the Ghor market there are often only one or two vegetables available and even those are never fresh, having been transported over bad roads for days to reach our remote location.

While in the USA recently I visited a Whole Foods supermarket and that moment consituted the height of my culture shock on the trip. I stood in the middle of a deli section completely overwhelmed by the abundance and range of food available.

In Ghor I will go into town and come home thrilled if I found some home-made yoghurt or white cheese, so many people sold their livestock during the big drought two seasons ago that very few local families have dairy products to sell.

I am always happy when a colleague or friend comes back from their village because they bring me eggs. Eggs which the local communinty in that village almost certainly need more than I do but which constitute the basic form of protein in my diet.

I struggle to know what is ethical in this situation. I've heard of people living in these kind of remote posts who refuse to have food shipped in. I never heard a full explanation of their argument for this position so I may have missed an important point but my tendency is to the opposite. I'm happy to support the local shop-owners by buying tinned beans and pistachio nuts from him, but for fresh fruit, vegetables, dairy products and eggs I feel uncomfortable consuming the local supplies when I know there is already not enough to go around.

This feels like a question to which there is no entirely correct answer, whether I ship food in or buy from the very scant local market I am always going to be massively more privileged than anyone in the local community. On the one hand that is completely unjustifiable - there is no justification for me to have more, to enjoy more, than anyone else here. But on the other hand I want to maintain my health for the long term and this poor diet has had a noticeable impact on my immune system and my general well-being (skin, hair and nails are all showing signs of degradation).

I was overwhelmed with the easy access to good food that I enjoyed in my two week holiday in the States. Even here in Kabul, if you have the money you can get hold of pretty much anything you want (in Kabul I recently ate imported French cheese with a friend who had got it at one of the stores targetting the international workers in the city).

In Ghor we are still struggling to get in place the 14000 metric tonnes of food aid which it has been calculated will be required to get the population through the winter without too many casualties. The security problems on the southern ring road (which passes through Kandahar, Helmand and Farah) have been causing endless hold-ups and several serious losses.

In the face of that scale of suffering how can I possibly complain about not getting my box of fruit and vegetables this week? Or feel a pang of envy when I read about a dear friend's morning juice recipe, knowing how much good a juice like that will be doing her and what good it would do my tired innards as well.

One of the reasons for living a life which takes me into spaces like Ghor where I might never otherwise get to go - a life which brings me face to face with the true living situation of most people on our planet is exactly this - to remind me always that I did not earn the incredible privilege into which I was born. To remind me that we are all connected and that the suffering of staving families in Ghor is, whether we like it or not, connected to the over-stocked supermarkets in the West.

It is not an comfortable truth and not one that I like to wave in people's faces - for fear that I will simply induce guilt - an emotion I believe is unlikely to inspire productive response for change. But it is true and it makes me stop myself in my tracks when I start (again) to complain about the poor food available to me.

Still - it is fair enough for me to want to take care of my long term health and the serious negative physical impacts of life in Afghanistan (lung infections all over the place from the pollution and dust, loss of bone density due to the restrictions on all forms of walking and malnutrition from the poor food availability and quality) are also a good reason to go home after two years and take a healing, recuperative break.

November 08, 2007

Practicing peace in times of war II: feeding the right wolf


Orphanage Boys II.JPG, originally uploaded by frida world.

I arrived back in Afghanistan just before the largest and deadliest suicide attack to take place in this country detonated in Baghlan killing at least 42 adults (including 6 MPs) and 3 children and maiming/wounding 66 adults and 63 children.

I chose this photo for todays post because there is a kind of resigned sadness in the face of this boy that reflect how I've been feeling for the past two days since the bombing.

Over these two days I have, however, also been reflecting on one of the key teachings from the first session Pema Chodron gave at the PPTOW retreat this past summer (I listened to her on my journey home).

The teaching was illustrated by a story told by Richard Reoch in the opening remarks. He told of a Native American man responding to his grandson's question in the wake of the 9/11 attacks in NYC and Washington DC. The child had asked him "what will happen now?".

The grandfather responded that it was like there were two wolves fighting inside his heart. One was vengeful, and full of anger - seeking revenge and ready to strike out against the 'enemy'. The other wolf was filled with love and belief in the basic goodness of ll, ready to try and understand and too seek peace.

The grandson asked "Which wolf will win the fight?". His grandfather answered "The wolf that will win is the one that I chose to feed".

Pema expands on this story a little, explaining that for some of us the first wolf is anger turned inwards - the first wolf may be despairing, numb, feeling incapable of acting in the face of terror and suffering. Just like the angry wolf this wolf will paralyse us from doing our part to mkae peace.

Seated meditation is a practice in disciplining the mind, a practice in being fully present. It is a practice which trains me to take a moment to refect before reacting, it is a practice which trains me to stop looking back (holding onto past pains) and to stop reaching forward (building my expectations for what will be). It is a practice which trains me to sit still in the moment. Seated meditation is the practice which will help me train in feeding the wolf which I want to win. It helps me to train in feeding the wolf which is filled with love and hope, and which believes whole-heartedly in my own basic goodness and in the basic goodness of all people.

I have neglected my practice while I've been travelling but last night as I felt myself sinking into feelings of despair about the mounting violence in Afghanistan I knew I needed to choose to train in feeding the hopeful wolf. He needs all the help he can get at the moment because the angry, despairing wolf is being triggered by all that is going on around me.

This morning I woke a little earlier and sat in meditation for just 15 minutes. It might seem like such a small thing to do in the face of the many people who were killed this week in Baghlan and the many more who are now facing a life time without eye-sight, hearing, arms, legs or the ability to sleep at night.

It is a small thing, but it is my small thing - I will not allow the wolf of despair to win the fight in my heart.