Remembering Nancy Hatch Dupree 1: Nancy in Her Own Words

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Remembering Nancy Hatch Dupree 1: Nancy in Her Own Words Remembering Nancy Hatch Dupree 1: Nancy in her own words Author : AAN Team Published: 20 October 2017 Downloaded: 5 September 2018 Download URL: https://www.afghanistan-analysts.org/remembering-nancy-hatch-dupree-1-nancy-in-her-own-words/?format=pdf It is 40 days since the historian, archivist and activist on behalf of Afghans, Nancy Hatch Dupree, died, aged 89. As a tribute to this remarkable woman, we are publishing two pieces. The first is an interview which Nancy gave in 2007 to Markus Hakansson for a book authored by Nancy and published by the Afghanistan Swedish Committee, which features 58 chronicles about Afghanistan. In this interview, Nancy tells how she came to Afghanistan and fell in love with the country and with her husband Louis. She describes the fifteen wonderful years they had, excavating archaeological sites and with her writing guide books. She tells of the 1978 coup, Louis’ imprisonment and there eventual exile to Pakistan where they set up a project to collect and collate information. The extract ends with her eventual return to Kabul. AAN will publish a second dispatch which will be a collection of tributes from people who knew Nancy. Nancy Hatch Dupree moved back to the Afghan capital a few years after this interview took place. In 2013, she inaugurated the Afghanistan Centre at Kabul University in 2013 (six years 1 / 20 after she secured initial funding for it of two million dollars). A description of the centre, which houses the now 100,000 document archive and provides research facilities to all, can be found here). AAN’s obituary for Nancy can be read here. The following is an extract from Markus Hakansson’s “A Chat with Afghanistan’s Grandmother”, taken from Afghanistan Over a Cup of Tea; 1995 – 2010, 58 chronicles by Nancy Hatch Dupree, translated by Norman Burns, Swedish Committee for Afghanistan, 2010 (2nd edition). “It’s important to remember that it is often simply chance that lies behind decisive things that happen in your life. That's been the case in my life anyway. That I ended up in Afghanistan was nothing more than pure coincidence,” says Nancy Hatch Dupree, an American living in Peshawar in Pakistan, close to the border to Afghanistan. When she is not working, and that's not very often, this cultural worker who lived in Kabul between 1962 and 1978 likes to relax and lean back with a good detective story, preferably one by Ian Rankin. Holland House is the name of the building where the Country Director of the Swedish Committee for Afghanistan lives and it is here on the veranda that Nancy Dupree and I are sitting on the first day of our interview. It's a nice, warm day. Not too hot. The cars honk as they drive by the closed gate, lacking up a little cloud of dust. But in our enclosed garden we can hear the pleasant chirping of birds. A thought comes to me that I mustn't forget to ask about a special bird that means something special to Nancy. But I'll wait for a while with that. Right now, I'll/be content with underlining one of the points I have written down for this conversation: the hoopoe. We are sitting right in the heart of Kabul, a city dominated by contrasts. It's a beautiful city in all of its raggedness, genuine in spite of foreign military columns, hospitable but still strange. I have been here once before, in 2004. But since then, they have erected more buildings, and taller ones. Buildings with green or blue facades, just like in Dubai. But the neighbours of these glass giants are still small simple mud houses where people buy and sell, talk and make noise, live their lives. This is a city full of life but also a city where security has become much worse in the last few years, as it has in the country as a whole. Suicide bombers in the summer of 2007 are still a relatively new phenomenon. For me as a westerner, restrictions are many and I can only imagine how the true Afghanistan really is and try to take in the impressions I experience in my immediate surroundings. Instead, it will have to be through Nancy's stories that I will manage to see and feel the real Afghanistan. It is through her shrewd eyes that the brown dust is dissipated and the Afghanistan that once was makes its appearance. “Why Afghanistan?” I ask when I finally get my technical gear in order – an mp3 player with dictaphone function. '“Why did you end up here and why is it that you have chosen to spend your entire adult life here?” At first sight, Nancy looks like any sweet old grandmother. She is small and slender and speaks with a frail but self-confident voice. She could easily be taken for a person whose daily routine is 2 / 20 filled with baking cookies and drinking coffee. But instead, here we have an eighty-year-old woman who is cherished and surrounded with such respect, such esteem that she has almost become a legend. And wearing a patterned tunic with matching wide trousers and scarf, she seems to hover over the streets of Kabul. Here, everyone knows who she is and when I tell people why I am here in Kabul this time, I am met with jealous glances and comments. One day, and this was a long time ago, Nancy was standing with her [first] husband, an American diplomat in the Pakistan city of Lahore, at the Khyber Pass on the border between Pakistan and Afghanistan. “We ought to make a trip to Afghanistan next time we get some time off,” she said. He was not thinking of safety in those days. He liked the fashionable hot spots with zazzy nightlife. However, back in Washington, it didn't take more than a year or so before he came home from work one day and said: “Well, your wish has been fulfilled. I have been stationed in Kabul, Afghanistan,” Nancy jumped for joy. He looked disgusted. That was in 1962. As a young student at Barnard College, the women's branch of Columbia University, Nancy had her sights aimed at a career in music. She played the harp and from what I understand, there were times when it really sounded quite good. Her parents had spent a lot of money on an expensive harp and soon she was a part of the professional world of music. Her music teacher obviously felt that Nancy had talent as she often took her along on her musical tours. They played duets and were especially sought after around Christmas and Easter when churches for some reason are particularly interested in harp music. Nancy and her teacher toured all over the United States, in and out of cars, trains and buses and always dragging those cumbersome instruments behind them. “That was a very special period in my life but... it didn't take me long to realize that this wasn't what I wanted to do. This was not the way I wanted to live my life.” Nancy wanted to travel overseas and told her parents of her plans of putting her harp playing aside for a while. Her musical career was exchanged for studies in Chinese language, history, art history and economy. It was during her student years at Columbia University that she met her [first] husband-to-be and they were soon to be stationed in Lahore. Her days were taken up simply enough by being a housewife. But she had actually had a job during an earlier stationing in Iraq as an editor for a small news bulletin with a limited circle of readers consisting of embassy staff. Then came that day in 1962 when the big move was made to Afghanistan. After only a short period of time, Nancy's husband was called upon to make his first field trip. A whole staff of people were to go along with him and they were all up in the air about the trip which was planned for Bamiyan. Nancy was designated to be the guide for the trip. Upon their return to Kabul, a great dinner party was thrown to celebrate the ambassador's safe return. 3 / 20 That evening, Nancy found herself in conversation with two gentlemen. Mr Abdul Wahab Tarzi was the head of the newly established Department of Tourism. The other gentleman was a French archaeologist. Tarzi asked what she thought of Bamiyan. As the good wife of a diplomat, she was expected to respond with a fitting answer, something along the lines of how fantastic it was, the landscape, the culture and the people, everything was just extraordinary. That would have been a suitable response. But Nancy is a person who doesn’t make a secret of what she thinks, whether it is fitting for the situation or not. “Mr Tarzi, it's a scandal,” she said. “Bamiyan is one of the most beautiful places in the world. And you don't even have a guide. I know I must have missed half of what there is to see there!” Mr Tarzi responded in his kind Afghani manner: “You're absolutely right. You ought to do something about that!” The Frenchman, who had up to now only stood in the background, steps into the discussion. He asks Nancy if she likes to have tea and gossip with the other diplomat wives. “Not at all,” she said. “A waste of time.” “Do you like to play bridge?” he continued.
Recommended publications
  • Afghanistan, 1989-1996: Between the Soviets and the Taliban
    Afghanistan, 1989-1996: Between the Soviets and the Taliban A thesis submitted to the Miami University Honors Program in partial fulfillment of the Requirements for University Honors with Distinction by, Brandon Smith May 2005 Oxford, OH ABSTRACT AFGHANISTAN, 1989-1996: BETWEEN THE SOVIETS AND THE TALIBAN by, BRANDON SMITH This paper examines why the Afghan resistance fighters from the war against the Soviets, the mujahideen, were unable to establish a government in the time period between the withdrawal of the Soviet army from Afghanistan in 1989 and the consolidation of power by the Taliban in 1996. A number of conflicting explanations exist regarding Afghanistan’s instability during this time period. This paper argues that the developments in Afghanistan from 1989 to 1996 can be linked to the influence of actors outside Afghanistan, but not to the extent that the choices and actions of individual actors can be overlooked or ignored. Further, the choices and actions of individual actors need not be explained in terms of ancient animosities or historic tendencies, but rather were calculated moves to secure power. In support of this argument, international, national, and individual level factors are examined. ii Afghanistan, 1989-1996: Between the Soviets and the Taliban by, Brandon Smith Approved by: _________________________, Advisor Karen L. Dawisha _________________________, Reader John M. Rothgeb, Jr. _________________________, Reader Homayun Sidky Accepted by: ________________________, Director, University Honors Program iii Thanks to Karen Dawisha for her guidance and willingness to help on her year off, and to John Rothgeb and Homayun Sidky for taking the time to read the final draft and offer their feedback.
    [Show full text]
  • Remembering Nancy Hatch Dupree 2: Nancy in the Words of Others
    Remembering Nancy Hatch Dupree 2: Nancy in the words of others Author : AAN Team Published: 21 October 2017 Downloaded: 5 September 2018 Download URL: https://www.afghanistan-analysts.org/remembering-nancy-hatch-dupree-2-nancy-in-the-words-of-others/?format=pdf It is 40 days since the historian, archivist and activist on behalf of Afghans, Nancy Hatch Dupree, died, aged 89. She had spent decades of her life in Afghanistan or, like many Afghans, in exile in neighbouring Pakistan. She was the author of guidebooks on Afghanistan and a publisher of books. Then, first with her husband, Louis, and, after he died in 1989, by herself, Nancy amassed the most extensive archive of documents of the last forty years. Those 100,000 documents are now housed in a special building, known as the Afghanistan Collection at Kabul University (ACKU). Last night, in London, friends and colleagues met to celebrate Nancy’s life and mark her passing. Here, we publish some of the tributes that were made that evening. 1 / 12 Our first despatch to mark Nancy’s ‘fortieth day’, a republishing of an interview she gave in 2007, can be read here. See also AAN’s obituary for her and our report about the opening of the AFKU here. Shoaib Sharifi, journalist My first exposure to the name ‘Nancy Dupree’ goes back 18 years to 1998 when I joined Voice of Sharia, the official name of Radio Afghanistan under the Taliban. At a time when the world thought of Afghanistan as in one of its darkest eras and against all odds, as a newly recruited intern, I was assigned to introduce Afghanistan, its art and culture to the world via Radio Voice of Sharia’s English Programme.
    [Show full text]
  • Final Report
    FINAL REPORT Assistance with Professional Training for Afghan Cultural Heritage Officials Part 2 January 12, 2014 TABLE OF CONTENTS EXECUTIVE SUMMARY ................................................................................................................................. 3 PROJECT NARRATIVE .................................................................................................................................... 4 SECTION 1 – PROGRAM BACKGROUND ......................................................................................... 4 SECTION 2 – UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA PROJECT TEAM ................................................................. 5 SECTION 3 – PROGRAM ACTIVITIES ............................................................................................... 6 Project Set-Up Arrival and Orientation Program Curriculum Teaching Modalities Symposium: Afghanistan: Cultural Heritage at the Crossroads SECTION 4 – PROGRAM EVALUATION ......................................................................................... 10 Program Structure and Administration Program Curriculum KU Faculty Participants Budget Other SECTION 5 – RECOMMENDATIONS FOR FUTURE PROGRAM FUNDING .................................. 14 APPENDICES ............................................................................................................................................. 18 APPENDIX 1: Project Administrative Data APPENDIX 2: Proposal: “University Partnerships: Building a Professional Education Program for Afghan Cultural Heritage
    [Show full text]
  • Afghanistan's Flawed Constitutional Process
    AFGHANISTAN’S FLAWED CONSTITUTIONAL PROCESS 12 June 2003 ICG Asia Report N°56 Kabul/Brussels TABLE OF CONTENTS EXECUTIVE SUMMARY AND RECOMMENDATIONS ...................................................i I. INTRODUCTION ...............................................................................................................1 II. AFGHANISTAN’S MANY CONSTITUTIONS ............................................................2 A. THE PUSH FOR MODERNITY: THE 1923 CONSTITUTION...................................................... 3 B. THE PARTIAL REVOLUTION: THE 1964 CONSTITUTION...................................................... 4 III. SUBSTANTIVE TRIGGERS FOR CONFLICT IN THE CONSTITUTIONAL DEBATE.........................................................................................................................................6 A. RELATIONS BETWEEN CENTRE AND PROVINCES................................................................ 6 B. THE ROLE OF RELIGION IN THE CONSTITUTIONAL DEBATE................................................ 8 IV. THE LEGAL FRAMEWORK FOR THE CONSTITUTIONAL PROCESS.........11 A. THE BONN PROCESS .......................................................................................................11 B. BACKGROUND LAW OF CONSTITUTIONAL CHANGE..........................................................12 V. THE CONSTITUTION-MAKING PROCESS ............................................................13 A. THE DRAFTING COMMISSION............................................................................................13
    [Show full text]
  • To “Not Wait for the Archive” Is to Enter the River of Time Sideways, a Bit Unannounced, Much Like the Digital Itself Did, Not So Long Ago
    mousse 34 ~ Afghan Films To “not wait for the archive” is to enter the river of time sideways, a bit unannounced, much like the digital itself did, not so long ago. (1) BY SHAINA ANAND & ASHOK SUKUMARAN, FAIZA AHMAD KHAN, MARIAM GHANI In 1996 the Taliban set fire to Afghan Film, the National Film Archives founded in 1968 that contained a fine collection of independently produced films and works from the Soviet Union, Iran and many Western countries. A small group of courageous employees managed to save about 6,000 reels of film. Today, thanks to the operation of restoration and digital transfer led by Mariam Ghani, Faiza Ahmad Khan and Pad.ma, this heritage can once again be fully accessed and appreciated. STILLS / ANNOTATIONS the girl to and from the celebration. The child’s- eye-view of the world offered byM anand Woqab is unsentimental, but always alive to the unexpected — 1960s beauty and wonder of the everyday made strange. Afghanistan: Land of Hospitality & Beauty documentary short — Between 1968 and 1972 Fashion show newsreel contrasting solutions are displayed in the film: one traditional, the beating of the fields by farmers with sticks, brooms, rakes and their own feet; and one modern, the spraying of pesticide from crop- dusting planes. No comment is offered as to which method ultimately proved most effective, though the first certainly looks more fun than the second. This film was made in the early 1960s (before the official launch ofA fghan Films) to promote tour- ism to Afghanistan, and features most of the fa- — 1965 mous beauty spots and historical landmarks in the Manand Woqab (Like the Eagle) This newsreel is not dated, but we can guess that country.
    [Show full text]
  • Nancy Hatch Dupree Says It May Be Time to Move On
    World April 18, 2013 2:55 PM ‘Grandmother of Afghanistan’ Nancy Hatch Dupree says it may be time to move on Dupree came to Afghanistan in 1962 with her first husband, a U.S. diplomat. She’ll leave, if she can finally make herself do it, as a revered figure. During her decades here, she’s been ejected by the Russians, turned down a request for help from Osama bin Laden, guided countless relief efforts, aided refugees, advised journalists, politicians and the United Nations, and written five travel guides and hundreds of articles on topics including Afghan history, archaeology, women issues and libraries. Nancy Hatch Dupree stands outside the new Afghanistan Centre at Kabul University, which she helped establish. MCT By Jay Price - McClatchy Newspapers o LinkedIn o Google+ o Pinterest o Reddit o Print o Order Reprint of this Story After more than half a century of helping Afghans preserve their history and culture and improve their lives, Nancy Hatch Dupree’sACKU extraordinary run in Afghanistan might be ending. Dupree came to Afghanistan in 1962 with her first husband, a U.S. diplomat. She’ll leave, if she can finally make herself do it, as a revered figure who’s been called the grandmother of this country, a title used even by President Hamid Karzai. During her decades here, she’s been ejected by the Russians, turned down a request for help from Osama bin Laden, guided countless relief efforts, aided refugees, advised journalists, politicians and the United Nations, and written five travel guides and hundreds of articles on topics including Afghan history, archaeology, women issues and libraries.
    [Show full text]
  • Afghanistan Centre at Kabul University
    Afghanistan Centre at Kabul University Nation Building through Information Sharing 1 ABOUT ACKU The Afghanistan Centre at Kabul University (ACKU), formerly the ACBAR Resource and Information Centre (ARIC), as envisioned by Professor Louis Dupree, was established in Peshawar (Pakistan) in 1989. Professor Louis Dupree often stated that his ambition was to understand Afghanistan “from one cell up” and during the 1970s, the Dupree home in Kabul was filled with Afghan and inter- national scholars and students exchanging knowledge and ideas. During the war years, Louis gained new insights while traveling across the border from Peshawar; meanwhile, Nancy Hatch Du- pree kept track of happenings among the world’s largest refugee population. Here was history in the making, a crucial component of Afghan heritage that desperately needed to be recorded. Louis then launched the idea of a resource centre that would preserve information from a wide variety of sources on every aspect of this traumatic period. Following Professor Louis’s death in 1989, Nancy picked up the reins. Time Photo: Magazine In 2005, Ashraf Ghani Ahmadzai, then Chancellor of the Kabul University, provided temporary space in the University’s Main Library. In 2007, President Karzai authorized development funds to be made available from the Government’s budget for the con- struction of a new facility at the University Campus. In 2007, the Dupree Foundation was established in New York to support the program in Afghanistan (http://dupreefoundation.org). 2 Photo: David Gill David Photo: On 27 March 2013 ACKU inaugurated the new building, located analyses, unique documents charting the struggle for women’s at the center of the Kabul University Campus.
    [Show full text]
  • Spach: Ten Years Preserving Afghanistan's Cultural Heritage
    gth International Seminar of Kushan studies Kabul, January 2004 International Centre for Kushan Studies Academy of Sciences of Afghanistan SPACH: TEN YEARS PRESERVING AFGHANISTAN'S CULTURAL HERITAGE Good afternoon Ladies, Gentlemen, Professors, Researchers and Afghan Professionals: It's a great honor for me to participate in this Seminar among so distinguished scholars in the field of Afghanistan's Cultural Heritage. At the request of Mr. Azizi, not only Director of the International Centre of Kushan Studies but an eminent and productive Afghan Researcher, I will give a report on SPACH activities but before this I would like to take this opportunity to express my great admiration and gratitude to all of you, Afghan Researchers and Afghan Professionals who under very difficult circumstances have played the central role of preserving the cultural heritage of this country so important for the History of the Humankind. So let me begin with A Short History of SPACH SPACH was established in 1994 in Islamabad, Pakistan, by a group of concerned individuals, in response to the increasing vulnerability of the cultural heritage of Afghanistan. Indeed, from the beginning of the war, and particularly since 1992, Afghan culture has been threatened by fighting, looting and neglect. Initially SPACH concentrated on advocacy, both in the international media and within Afghanistan, and was specifically concerned with the looting of the Kabul Museum collection; but little by little its activities extended to support of Afghan professional conservationists, surveying the condition of monuments and sites, and emergency protection work on them where it was deemed most urgent. [Fig 2: Mr.
    [Show full text]
  • Afghanistan 2004 -Security with a Human Face
    AFGHANISTAN NATIONAL HUMAN DEVELOPMENT REPORT 2004 Security with a Human Face: Challenges and Responsibilities U N D P Afghanistan Islamic Republic of Afghanistan ©United Nations Development Programme 2004 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior permission of UNDP. The analysis and policy recommendations of this report do not necessarily reflect the views of the UNDP nor those of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan. The report is a publication commissioned by UNDP and authored by an independent team. Cover designed by the Afghan artist Sharif Ahmad Haidari, from Herat, winner of the UNDP competition for the National Human Development Report cover. Design and Printing: Army Press, Plot # 1, Street 40, I & T Center, G-10/4, Islamabad, Pakistan The Preparatory Team National Coordinator of the Project Background Paper Authors Abdullah Mojaddedi Mohammad Najeeb Azizi, Homira Nassery, Daud S. Saba, Lutfullah Safi, Naqibullah Safi, Said Mubin Editor-in-Chief Shah and Nasrullah Stanikzai Shahrbanou Tadjbakhsh Thematic Paper Authors Principal Authors Abdul Baqi Banwal, Ramazan Bashar Dost, Nancy Daud S. Saba and Omar Zakhilwal Dupree, Abdul Rashid Fakhri, Abdullah Haqaiqi, Mir Ahmad Joyenda, Partaw Nadiri, Ahmad Zia Neikbin, Contributing Authors Daud Rawish, Asadullah Walwalji and Seddiq Weera Abi Masefield and Michael Schoiswohl Statistician National Advisory Panel R. N. Pandey Minister Haneef Atmar (Chair), Abdul Baqi Banwal, Data Analyst Abdul Rashid Fakhri, Hafizullah Haddad, Abdullah Haqiq Rahmani Haqaiqi, Helena Malikyar, Nilab Mobarez, Daud Administrative and Research Assistant Rawish, Safia Siddiqi and Asadullah Walwalji Sadeq Wardak International Expert Committee Research Assistants Katarina Ammitzboell, Nancy Hatch Dupree, Carol Abdul Latif Bari and Khial M.
    [Show full text]
  • The Soviet-Afghan War: a Superpower Mired in the Mountains
    WARNING! The views expressed in FMSO publications and reports are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official policy or position of the Department of the Army, Department of Defense, or the U.S. Government. THE SOVIET-AFGHAN WAR: A SUPERPOWER MIRED IN THE MOUNTAINS by Lester W. Grau, Foreign Military Studies Office, Fort Leavenworth, KS. This article was previously published in The Journal of Slavic Military Studies March 2004 Volume 17, Number 1 The Soviet-Afghan War involved more than the Soviets and Mujahideen resistance. Afghan communists (the DRA) were involved in the immediate struggle and a large number of countries supplied the Mujahideen during this "Cold War" hot war. Their struggle and their lessons are outlined. The author does not usually write without footnotes, but he wrote this article during a trip to Iraq and lacked his reference library. Needless to say, he drew on his knowledge about the war and the knowledge he gained from noted authorities on the subject. These include Ali Jalali, Barnett Rubin, Riaz Khan, Mohammad Youssaf, Brace Amstutz, Artem Borovik, Aleksandr Lyakhovskiy, Aleksandr Mayorov, Scott McMichael, Makhmut Gareev, David Isby, Boris Gromov, Rasul Rais, and Louis Dupree. Soaring mountains dominate Afghanistan and shape its culture, history, social structure, customs, politics and economy. Vast, trackless deserts, mighty rivers and lush cropland further define this remote country. Militarily, the operational key terrain is the limited road network that connects its cities in a giant ring with side roads to Pakistan, Iran, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and Tajikistan. There are only 24 kilometers of railroad in Afghanistan--and these are split in two unconnected segments--leftover spurs from the former Soviet Union’s incursion.
    [Show full text]
  • The War-Ravaged Cultural Heritage of Afghanistan: an Overview of Projects of Assessment, Mitigation, and Preservation
    The War-Ravaged Cultural Heritage of Afghanistan: An Overview of Projects of Assessment, Mitigation, and Preservation Qalat Ihtiyaraddin Citadel in Herat – restored by the Agha Khan Trust for Culture, with funding from the US Department of State. Photograph by Gil Stein. Gil J. Stein fghanistan is the quintessential “crossroads of cultures” looked, impact on their historical development. As early as the where the civilizations of the Near East, Central Asia, 5th millennium b.c.e., lapis lazuli from Afghanistan was traded South Asia, and China interacted over the millennia in a to Iran, Mesopotamia, Syria, and Egypt (Herrmann 1968). The Aconstantly shifting mixture of trade, emulation, migration, imperial Chalcolithic and Bronze Ages (4th–2nd millennia b.c.e.) saw the formations, and periodic conflict (fig. 1). This complex history of rise of a linked set of urbanized proto-state and state societies contacts gave rise to some of the most important archaeological, across Afghanistan, eastern Iran, Turkmenistan, and Uzbeki- artistic, architectural, and textual treasures in world cultural stan in a development parallel and linked to the flourishing of heritage – encompassing cultures as diverse as the Bronze Age urban societies in Mesopotamia and the Indus Valley (Hiebert cities of Bactria, the Persian Empire, the easternmost colonies and Lamberg-Karlovsky 1992; Kohl 1981; Masson 1992; Masson founded by Alexander the Great and his Hellenistic successors, the and Sarianidi 1972; Tosi 1973, 1973–74; 1977; Tosi et al. 1992). Kushan Empire astride the Silk Road, the monumental Bamiyan Afghanistan encompasses some of the most important eastern Buddhas, and Islamic dynasties such as the Ghaznavids, Timurids, satrapies of the Persian Empire – Bactria/Balkh, Araeia/Herat, and Moghuls.
    [Show full text]
  • Untold Stories: Oral Histories of Afghanistan's Cultural Heritage
    Untold Stories: Oral Histories of Afghanistan’s Cultural Heritage With Shaharzad Akbar and Joanie Meharry To many, Afghanistan is a war-torn country doomed to conflict. For those who have discovered its true identity and potential, however, there are many stories to be told about it besides war. Shaharzad Akbar and Joanie Meharry are two young women who are up for this task. They met at the Next Generation Dialogue on Afghanistan – U.S. Relations: Development, Investment and Cultural Exchange organized by the Hollings Center, and they decided to organize an oral history project to document efforts to preserve Afghanistan’s cultural heritage. The Hollings Center supported this project through its Small Grants Program. Below readers can learn about the project and read a fascinating interview with Akbar and Meharry about their experiences in the field and how the project influenced them. The Story of “Untold Stories” Joanie Meharry and Shaharzad Akbar shooting on Shortly before the exhibition Afghanistan: Crossroads site at Darulaman Palace. Photo by Jake Simkin. of the Ancient World went on display at the British Museum in March, 2011, Carla Grissmann – a stunning and stoic woman who had spent a better part of her life protecting Afghanistan’s cultural heritage – passed away. With her went innumerable untold stories about the protection of the country’s cultural heritage from those tremendous years of political turmoil during the Soviet occupation, Mujahideen civil war, and Taliban era. Joanie Meharry had interviewed her in person once in her London flat two years earlier, but not on a recorder and certainly not on video.
    [Show full text]