Community | December 19, 2009 | 2 comments

Afghan-Americans express sharply different views on the war

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Viciouspike
President Obama's decision to escalate the war in Afghanistan is provoking strong and sometimes conflicting feelings among Afghan-Americans.
Moe Hashem, the owner of the Afghan Kabob restaurant in Springfield, VA, paints a rosy picture of post-U.S. occupation life in Afghanistan. "I support Mr. Obama 110%," Hashem said. "The [American] soldiers are my soldiers, my people. God bless them. They are helping the people. Under the Taliban, the women had no freedom, little girls were afraid to go to school. Now my sister's children go to school -- the girls and the boys. People see the beauty of life now because they are safer."
Hashem, who emigrated to the U.S. in 1990, said that he used to be afraid to go back to visit his family. "Before September 11, I was from Afghanistan, but I was not safe there. The Taliban would have killed me because I'm American. Now I visit my family every seven or eight months. If you are human, you appreciate the U.S. decisions."
Amena Chenzaie, a 34-year-old World Bank employee whose parents moved to the D.C. area from Afghanistan when she was six, is grateful to American troops for saving Afghan women from the Taliban. "From an Afghan-American woman's perspective, I support Obama sending more troops over there at this time... I can't even find a word to describe the condition of women living under the Taliban -- the curfews, the abuse. The women are prospering now."
But Sonali Kolhatkar, co-director of the Afghan Women's Mission in Pasadena, CA, says the war and the lawlessness in her native country are making life even worse for women than they were under the Taliban.

"It is a myth that women are better off under the new government than the Taliban," Kolhatkar said. "Overall, more women are being imprisoned for honor crimes, more women are being raped, women are killing themselves more, and maternal mortality rates have remained the same. There is an increasing lawlessness, so more women in general are being killed. What we're seeing today is similar to what we saw in the early 90s -- there is no accountability."
Kolhatkar said that unlike many Afghan-Americans who moved to the U.S. at a young age and have largely lost touch with their Afghan friends and relatives, she remains in close contact with women in all parts of Afghanistan and in refugee camps in Pakistan.
"The Afghan-American community is by definition a more conservative community," she added. "They are quick to support this war, but they don't have to live under the same conditions as the people. They might feel differently if they did."
As to the claim that girls now feel safe enough to go to school, she said, "Any claims about things like schools and hospitals are token claims, drops in the bucket. In the South and West, the Taliban is burning down women's schools and throwing acid in their faces. This is a new Taliban. The occupation makes them stronger, gives them legitimacy. They are able to say, 'We're protecting you from U.S. and NATO imperialism.'"
Heidar Nowrouz, who lives in Annandale, VA, but is currently working in Kabul for the Insurance Corporation of Afghanistan, said some Afghans are starting to wonder if they might prefer the Taliban to the current government. "At least there was more security under the Taliban in terms of justice. They shot women for committing adultery and chopped people's hands off for stealing; it was brutal, stupid and completely inhuman, but at least it was formal justice."
Nowrouz added, "Under the Bush Administration, everyone called the Afghan war 'the Good War.' It wasn't. The Bush Administration had no clue or didn't care about what was going on or what would be good for Afghanistan, and the people didn't see a whole lot of improvement in their lives. Afghans don't even like governments, but they will take whatever side is winning because they're destitute and helpless and need medical care."

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    Community,   Afghanistan News
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    Afghanistan War in Afghanistan Afghan-American
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2 comments // Afghan-Americans express sharply different views on the war

  • ozoneocean
    • 0
      ozoneocean  
    • No war is a good war and the worst war crime imaginable is to deliberately START a war. Al Quiada and the Taliban were different things, the stupid invasion had nothing to do with 9/11 except the idiot fantasy of "revenge". Afghanistan was a completely pointless war because a terrorist group like Al Quiada owes no allegiance to ANY nation and can set up anywhere on earth with ease. All the war did was kill far more human beings than ever died in the world trade centre, and they continue to die pointlessly even now.

    • 2 years ago
  • Viciouspike
    • 0
      Viciouspike  
    • ozoneocean:

      Actually... The Taliban are the ones who attacked America, and under Just War Theory war could be started against another nation for attacks such as this. Also the Taliban had a government set up in Afghanistan whether you want to recognize it or not.

      The Taliban's government had laws and all the necessary components to be seen as a country in the international community.

      Finally, War is inevitable... There will always be wars no point in trying to stop them. Also limiting war is completely stupid as well.. The best way to get rid of war is to let it be unrestricted allow people to die citizens and soldiers alike. Any weapons allowed, sounds crazy but it would stop a lot of wars...

    • 2 years ago
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