Sunday, August 31, 2008

Afghanistan Journal



4.28.03


I woke up at 5:30 this morning. I went into the bathroom to check if there was hot water it was time for a shower. I was too exhausted to take one the night before, so I set my alarm clock for the morning because I knew I had to take a shower, I had to look nice for this day.


My bathroom tap had no hot water so I went to the next bathroom, and sure enough there was a little more than a trickle of steaming hot water. I tried to balance it with some cold, but the knobs, the whole system does not really work like that.

The roosters were crowing during my shower and I could hear the morning prayers, the house was silent.


My friend and I put on our long linen button down robe type shirts. Although we have to be conservative, we are still cute. Hers is bright red and she wraps a red and black scarf around her head. I am all black with fringe coming off my scarf. We both wear makeup and little bit of hair sneaks out the front. At 6:30 the Minister’s car will be coming for us.


Today is Independence Day for Afghanistan. The festivities are said to begin at 8 but we soon found out that Afghans have the same lag in start time that Iranians do. I asked the Minister if he could get me and my friend inside, and sure enough at 11 PM the night before, we were confirmed. The US embassy told all Americans to avoid all festivities. But we could not resist.


We arrive and there is not a woman to be seen. We go through the Palace compound with all its gates and road blocks and finally we are at festivity grounds. All around us are men in uniforms, some uniforms are similar to American army and others look like old Soviet uniforms. We arrive in land rover with tinted windows, again the false feeling of security. Eventually we park and have to get out, although we were hesitant. It seemed that not only were we the only women, we also the only people not in military garb. They take us to the women’s section and after our bags are checked we go to the front of the stands to take a seat. I am an Afghan woman to these eyes until I open my mouth. If I speak Persian I am definitely Iranian.


When I sit and look before me I am overwhelmed. There are the usual ruins all around, a little more ruined than a bombed building. These ruins look more like tourist sites of old Roman buildings, where one can rarely tell if it was they say it is. Embedded among the ruins is an immaculately kept mosque about half a mile long. The backdrop of this scene is a circle of mountains. The mosque is untouched because even in times of war, religious areas were protected. Between us and the mosque are thousand of soldiers in different uniforms, I can not tell which uniform relates to which military role.


However, the most excitement was occurring around me. A woman, dress in general’s uniform and hat comes down to sit near us. When she walks by I see so many gold medals on her uniform that she leans to one side when she walks. Her hair is pulled up into her hat but she is wearing heavy amounts of mascara and eyeliner, not denying her desire for beauty among all the hostility. She fascinates us, the whole crowd of women. Everyone stares. I wonder in what army, when and how she managed to fight with such warriors?


Soon after that comes the next show of woman. A woman dressed in Western clothes (a long black skirt) comes into the section. People to begin whispering about her. She is not wearing a scarf. There she was, a mid-fifties chic, Afghan woman at a public event with nothing but a bow in her hair. She comes before everyone and begins to complain and ask where all the women are? Why hadn’t they come? She says “there are thousands of men here and not even a hundred women”. The women do not reply, but simply say that there were not enough invitations. She stands in front of our section and begins to take pictures of us, the women in the crowd. Then she takes her seat on bench, which ends in another men’s section. As if her behavior and dress was not defiant enough, she pulls out from her purse a cigarette and begins to smoke. My friend and I watch in amazement. The woman behind us leans down and asks us if we can believe a woman would dress like that, defying Islam. She soon finds out that we are Iranian and asks about 100 intrusive questions till my friend shows her annoyance and the interrogation ends.


The mix of the general and the feminist were quite a shock for all bystanders and fascinating for me.


Then a woman begins singing a prayer over the intercom and this is quite symbolic. To hear a female voice in such a venerable event, is quite a feat. The melodic voice echoes among the mountains.


There are snipers everywhere; guns are plenty. I am comfortable with guns, they are at every party, among any crowd. Whether on the belt of a privatized American soldier or a long Kalashnikov held by an Afghan soldier-turned- bodyguard for the Minister, they are a regular part of life. The element of safety with a gun depends on the handler, and everyone here who has a gun is comfortable handling it.


After waiting for two hours, we finally see the hummers that carry the bodyguards of the president. 10 suburbans follow, they park and the president gets out and jumps on to the back of a open jeep. He stands up in the front and begins to wave. He drives in front of the crowd, and I amazed because that is quite a security risk. However, he successfully makes his circles and then joins his cabinet members.


The actual parade is actually just a show of might. Thousands of military march in huge lines and this continues for over an hour. The disabled also walk in the parade and I have never seen so many one legged people. Afghanistan has the largest numbers due to the mines.


We decide to leave and everyone notices. While sitting in the crowd we have already had the Minister come over and visit us and an army soldier offer us “whatever we need” because he realized that we are Iranian and we have come to Afghanistan to help. It seems I can never be too incognito.


There are parts of me in this woman or maybe there are parts of this woman in me. My aggressive, no bullshit ways in the Ministry amazed many. Without fear I walked in there without hejab and starting bossing around warlords, jihadis, even boys with klashnikovs. Of course it was not so Hollywood esque, but I did openly confront the men of the Ministry. I felt empowered to by the Minister. And I was driven by one goal only, to get work done, to get water to the people. If one were to view me they would think, what a strong and independent woman.


However, everything is not as it seems



I imagine these women going home. Instead of being the outspoken, agitating woman she is there, I see a woman who quietly opens the door to her house. She runs into the kitchen and puts on her apron. She goes upstairs to find the kids and ask them whether they have done their homework. They look the other direction. She tears the video game consuls out of their hands. She gets them behind their desks and they start to work. She runs downstairs and starts to cook. An hour later her husband arrives. He is round, with a nice charming smile. He kisses her first. He puts his satchel in its place in the foyer. He walks into the living room and turns on the television. He comes back into the kitchen and asks her about the kids. Then he asks her about her day. She goes into minor detail about the parade.


She asks him to go upstairs and help the kids with their homework. She knows he is tired and he probably doesn’t have the energy to honor that request. He knows she knows. He walks upstairs. He finds energy in seeing his children but he is having a hard time letting go of his day, of the exhaustion of the weight of the world on his shoulders. She feels the same.


They eat dinner together as a family. She is upset, but she doesn’t know why. She notices her husband is uncomfortable. She notices he is not present at the table. She begins to attempt to mitigate the situation. She makes jokes, the kids laugh. She makes fun at her husband, he smiles forcefully, trying to be light and fun for the kids. He is in thought.


She has disappeared from the table. Instead she sits in the minds of each one of her family member’s minds, hypersensitive to and predicting their needs with varying levels of success, worried her kids are bored or don’t like her food. She tries to distract her husband to bring him back to the table, make him laugh or feel good about them. She has disappeared from the table. Like a little fairy she is bouncing around between her family members trying to appease their present needs and desires.


That night she goes to bed. She has a slight subconscious itch. It is subconscious so she is unable to identify it accurately. The days pass through her mind, like a flash back scene from a movie. Most of it is irrelevant, even TV shows run through her mind. Then she remembers a coffee with a friend, a male language professor. He says “I don’t understand how you can be so clever in the daytime, but so clueless at night.” She disregarded the comment as indicative of his constant desire to sleep with her. But she had heard similar statements over the years, even before she got married. Something about “not getting it” when it came to relationships. She wondered what people were talking about.

Thursday, August 28, 2008

Cancer

It happened to her again
10:30 AM over the phone
again
they found it in
a different place
not so serious
but she heard the word
again

"zendegi-ye digeh"
"this is life"
she tells me

I am young
these things don't happen to me
sitting next to her
I realize they can

She reads avidly
the computer screen
pictures
of worse cases
we laugh at the
descriptions
with her dark skin
her case is rare

lots of words
nothing concrete
too many options

health
little cells deciding to
multiply
in the wrong way
eating the wrong things
taking over

the news is cancer itself


Tuesday, August 26, 2008

I like Susan Faludi


Op-Ed Contributor: Second-Place Citizens
By SUSAN FALUDI

She explains why a number of women feel shafted by Hillary's defeat.

Michelle Obama

Is New.

Strip

Of all of it
fake dyes
cheap fabrics
expensive shoes
foreign jewels
strip me

I am enough

Life Again...

Life is neither good or bad but rather an opportunity or limitation that depends solely on the person living it.

Monday, August 25, 2008

Life



I think there are two ways that people approach life.

Life is something that is bad, that needs to be escaped with parties, vacations, jobs, ideology and consumption.

Life is something that is good, that needs to be lived, sensed, smelled, heard and seen with both eyes open- alone and with others.

Sunday, August 24, 2008

Interference


In the twilight

Soft water moved over my hands
transient light
folded in the bends of the ripples

my turbulent entrance
spun the plankton
into brilliance
Like spatulas, hands
shoveled the water to the sides
And the minuscule disco balls
Chased after the waves

Under the surface
I shook my body
the hurricane
created a galaxy

star powder
illuminated the ebony abyss
revealing lucid green water

Above the aqueous cavern
My head rested back on the surface
the still water
held me hovering at the horizon

Laying in quiet
I gazed into the heart of the sky
dots glowed above and below
me

I swam towards the line
Where the black sky
Met the black water
My wake
Resonated over the mangroves

Peering before infinity
I wondered if I had
exceeded my stay in the sea

Turning, I
pushed the horizon
and the handfuls of light behind me
with gentle strokes

I swam away from the dark celestial boundary
Ended my intrusion
And emerged from the night swim

Saturday, August 23, 2008

too cool

the hum of window air conditioners
was the bassline
behind grasshopper hiccups and wind trembles

summer had fooled us all
august night
too cool
we felt the end of
sunshine coming too soon

dazed,
the moon began to fade
into its sliver
the unknown of autumn
buzzed quietly

Friday, August 22, 2008

stillness within

it was quiet.
papers piled
and covered surface
surrounding her

chewing gum
pictures
scotch tape
notebooks
a mobile phone
and quotes
peppered her desk

she hadn't seen or spoken
to a person in hours
her focus was like
a thin needle
moving through a miniscule hole
in the thread of cloth

the movement of cars
the sun
and time
was apparent

but the tide was low,
the water was
a still lake
within her

Wednesday, August 20, 2008

Obliterating Iran

http://www.juancole.com/2008/08/davidson-privatizing-foreign-policy.html

The way Americans digest and decide on foreign policy.

Monday, August 18, 2008

Reactionary

My biggest concern about Iran is what if the regime were to go away? Activists inside and outside of Iran want it. But my question to all of them, specifically those that come out from the heart of the current government, those born-agains, those reformists, those women activists, those laborers, those that served years in prison thinking about it, from their writing, from their talking, I seek an answer that I have yet to find: what then?

I am afraid that though so much has been learned from the revolution, those that were part of it, those that are 40 and above, did not learn something essential. Creation. They are critical but they are not creative. They are reactionary. They know what they don't want but they do not know what they do want. If you ask someone what kind of government they want they will say democratic, just recently they have started talking about allowing minority rights, but do they know what an equality law is? Do they have one in mind? Or a law that protects citizen rights against dictators? Women that fight for equality, do they know what that should look like or do they focus on what it doesn't?

I am afraid Khomeini had his version of sharia to give him a vision. What vision do the democrats have?

When the moment of creating a new government comes, there is a huge responsibility to know what you want. I am afraid that essentially elite Iranians are scared of assuming that responsibility, and prefer, like many in the world, to defer to the leader.

Rights mean responsibility for regular citizens as well. I think Americans, Westerners and Iranians shirk from that responsibility. The responsibility of defining what your rights and desires are for yourself without a leader, without the media, without the church. Its hard.

Saturday, August 16, 2008

Zhus Du Et

A man would do nothing,if he waited until he could do it so wellthat no one would find faultwith what he has done.
~ John Henry Cardinal Newman

Thursday, August 14, 2008

You Go Away

you go away
like the sun
during the rain
and i can feel you
slowly
I savor you
like a letter written
or an instrument played
by a lover
you go away
like the summer
during the winter
and the thought of you
warms me
you go away
like a blanket
on a cool night
so I can pull you over me
you go away
like a mother
busy at work
so I can wait for you
you go away
like a round trip flight
so I can dream about you
you go away
so I can put you
inside of me

Wednesday, August 13, 2008

Impregnable

they asked her to explain
to conceptualize
they demanded sentences
subjects verbs actions adjectives
paragraphs in logical order
a beginning and an end
a common thread
and most importantly,
a final moral
but she couldn't speak in form
or structure
all she saw were images like a film in her head
smells, as if carried from a spontaneous breeze
she felt skin that was not clearly separated from hers
the experience was not in her brain
but somewhere else
perhaps in the molecules bouncing around her
perhaps in the tiny space between her chest cavity
and her heart
or in a chakra in the middle of her stomach
wherever it was
their time together was impregnable by linear thought

subconscious decisions

http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/health-and-wellbeing/health-news/why-women-cant-sniff-out-mr-right-when-they-take-the-pill-ndash-and-how-it-affects-us-all-892862.html

Tuesday, August 5, 2008

a verte

estoy viajando
a ver
quien eres tu

estoy viajando
a sentir
tan grande
eres tu

estoy en la aire
a oir
como eres tu

estoy nadando
en el mar
a ver
como ries tu

estory caminando
a ver
si puedas
estar parado de mi

estoy aqui
a saber
quien somos
nosotros



Straws Separating

there were four of us
lives changing faster than
the movement of the nightime clouds
above us

we were separating
like peices of straw
sitting in dirt

she was there
with two carats
her eyes were big
and curious
about how this story would end

the other one sat
next to me
her hands with his

his warmth
calmed us
into ourselves

the august night was cool
people filled the tables
in our kitchen
we didn't see them
or our waters get filled
by the waiter

she left the airport
and arrived
at our table
soon after


discussing sandals
and marriage
the time went from
8 to 10:30












Family Dance

She is short
And little
thin, legs 2.5 feet long
A small torso another 2 feet
And then her head
She stands a little below my head
That I came from inside of her
Is one of those tricks in quantum physics
Or like one of those strange posters
Where one has to cross one’s eyes
To see the picture,
To comprehend the physical aspect of motherhood
is to use the mind
In a novel way
There she is
Laughing
High off of family members whose heads bounce in the
Crowd of well-dressed cocktail drinkers
She can’t stay with one, because she must see all
Takes me around
“my daughter” everyone nods, we all wonder where the
Conversation is to go from that nutritious start
She doesn’t concern herself
She simply wanted to make the presentation
We hold hands and twirl around the group
Mingle, as they say

Later love music comes on
its a wedding
She is with me on the dance floor
He joins us
He bounces from right foot to left
His smile is the one he gave me
Square
And gushing
We have been dancing for years
He knows this
I was his designated dance partner
Though all of that has blurred now
All three of the Abolfazli women
Take turns with the jigging dad

He is tall
And thin
His nose bends down
Like mine
His eyebrows grow to the sky
His almond eyes spurt out eyelashes
Like water

Leila is there
We are four
Four on the dance floor
We twirl
Trade
Swirl around each other
It is fluid
Mom and dad dance
Leila and Mary dance
Mom and Mary dance
Leila and Dad dance
It’s a republic
All people are free
It took thirty years