89. Reflections on my first week back
I don’t know why I thought that flying into Kabul on
Emirates airlines would be any different than flying any of the Afghan
airlines. There were still the same unapologetic stares from men with 6 inch
beards and turbans on their heads on the plane who acted like they have never
seen anyone from the female species before.
But the flight looked full which was a good sign since I heard that most
people are flying out of Afghanistan and not in to it. I rushed off the plane struggling to get my
head scarf and winter coat on while running down the stairs to make it to
Passport Control before the rest of the masses got there. I made it, the lines were short and I was in
and out of passport control, baggage claim and security in less than 15
minutes. That was a record! It sure beat
the 2 hour ordeal I had to go through back in the good old days 11 years ago
when the baggage carousel didn’t work because there was no electricity and a
little old man would stand on it and hold up each piece of luggage and call out
to the mostly eager excited foreigners “whose bag is this?!?” and someone would
run up to him and claim it before he moved on to the next.
As I stepped outside the terminal, the first thing that hit
me was that smell….the smell of Afghanistan.
I don’t know really what it is but there is nothing like it in the
world. The best way I can describe it is
a combination of diesel, burning tires, fresh bread and pine trees. The crisp cold air made the smell even
stronger. I stood there under the warm
sun for a minute and just took a deep breath.
Before I take another step into this adventure and all the experiences
that are waiting for me, I wanted so much to just cherish this one minute when
it was just me, the sun, the ground that belonged to my ancestors and that
smell that has always made me feel like I have come home.
The drive from the airport to the hotel was quite long since
my driver decided to take me to every other hotel in downtown Kabul before he
figured out where the one that I am booked at is. But it gave me a chance to notice the changes
that have come about in Kabul in the 18 months I have been away. To be honest, there were surprisingly very
few changes that I could see. The
buildings still looked the same, there were just as many cars and people on the
streets (including many women) running to wherever they were heading to, the
layer of smog that blankets Kabul was just as thick, there were still mounds of
trash everywhere, the city still looked like a shade between grey and brown
with the exception of the new little green trees that were planted on the
dividers on the roads. Pretty much every
landmark and all the places I frequented in the past were in the same
place. The city was alive and kicking as
fervently as it always has. Really the
only changes were that I didn’t see any women in burqa’s – but that might have
just been because I was in downtown, there were a few more malls and wedding
halls and the signage on buildings were looking slightly better than I
remembered in the past but that’s about all the physical changes I observed.
I had a nice chat with my driver. I love hearing the perspective of these “real
people” in Kabul. These people work hard
and lead a minimalistic life. Their lack
of comprehension of the sophisticated manipulations of the powers that run this
nation and their simplistic language and choice of words make them so endearing
to me. And my driver, let’s call him Mo,
fit the bill perfectly. He was an
interesting combination of cheerfulness that comes from sheer ignorance of
reality and cynical pessimism from resignation to a life and future that will
either stay the same or get worse. I
asked him about his thoughts on 2014 and he very bluntly told me that people
have turned 2014 into a “ba-baow” – a dari/farsi term for the “boogy man”. At that moment, I made the decision that I like
Mo and that we will become friends. I
know it’s sad that my friends are usually my drivers, body guards and cleaners
in my office but honestly they turn out to be the most loyal, nonjudgmental,
entertaining and sincere people I come across in Afghanistan.
I checked into my hotel and was disappointed that it didn’t
look as bright and welcoming as its pictures on their website, but nothing in
Kabul does. However, it had running
water, a clean bathroom, and a heater.
That’s all a girl can ask for.
But I wasn’t prepared for the type of traffic the hotel has and the type
of people that create this traffic.
Apparently, the hotel rents out its banquet rooms for conferences and
although I was pleasantly surprised to see the number of women that come
through who are dressed very elegantly and professionally, I was disappointed
to see that most of the attendees and the guests of the hotel are men who look
like the ones that were staring at me on the plane in traditional Afghan attire
and turbans. And after eating my breakfast
in the morning in the main dining room under the stares of these men, I knew I
couldn’t stay there too long. Fortunately,
my old landlord has a unit available which I can move into tomorrow. I won’t have the conveniences of a hotel but
the apartment is in a safe low profile location, has a great bathroom and no
one will be staring at me there.
Work has been fun. As
much as I love the work I do in America, the type of work I do here in
Afghanistan has a very different sense of satisfaction and excitement. No one listens, everyone does the opposite of
what you ask, nothing ever gets done, people come up with a million and one
excuses for everything and the level of politics and office drama is off the charts
but I love it (but check in with me in a couple of weeks when I might love it a
little less). The media industry in
Afghanistan is one of the most demanding industries to work for. But it’s also at
the forefront of innovation and change and has led this nation out of darkness
and ignorance and introduced the Afghan people to the world and to their own
potential. I am looking forward to the
projects that I will be working on.
My office cleaner is Mah Mah Shirine – which literally translates
into “The Sweet Uncle” – and that he is.
I love how he makes his goal in life my happiness (or at least pretends
to in front of me). He brings me tea, get’s me fresh fruit from
the market, cleans my office, scolds people for hanging out near my office,
turns on my heater before I get to the office, brings me lunch and locks the
bathroom in front of my office so no one else can use it but me. Do you guys still wonder why I keep coming
back here? I am partly kidding. But it is nice to be pampered and taken care
of. I just have to teach him how to make
coffee and then I’ll be all set.
So all in all its been a great start with a few hiccups here
and there but hopefully the beginning of a new chapter in my life and an
exciting year for Afghanistan as it enters a new era with the Presidential
Elections coming up in a couple of months, the determination of whether
international troops will still remain and a turning point for how the future
will roll out for the people of this nation.
Stay tuned for more…..





So great to be reading your words again. I look forward to hearing about your adventures and all the little details that paint a picture of Afghanistan today.
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