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GIVEAWAY: AFGHANISTAN PHOTO BOOK

November 29, 2014

By Humaira

This blog has been in existence for over five years because of you - my readers. Your words of support, encouragement and gratitude has fueled my search for interesting recipes, stories and cultural tidbits that makes Afghanistan so unique.

In an effort to keep fresh, I’ve recently revamped the blog - new site, new photos, new categories (vegetarian and gluten free). I hope the new structure makes it easy to find recipes and engages you further in learning about Afghanistan. During this process, we’ve experienced a few technical difficulties - if you’ve been spammed, please accept my apology.

I would like to give back to you, my readers, a special gift of two copies of Book of Photographs by my photographer friend Joe Hoyt, who traveled in Afghanistan from 1970-1975.

Seven years ago, I met Joe when we were panelists at an event in San Francisco. When I first saw Joe’s photos, I was brought to tears. Through his small lense, he has captured the Afghanistan I once knew, “From an Era of Peace”, so perfectly named.

Praise for Joe’s work:

“For years now, Afghanistan has become synonymous with the Taliban, Al Qaeda, and terrorism. But it wasn’t always so. For most of the previous century, Afghanistan lived in peaceful anonymity. It was a magnet for travelers who came to see the rugged beauty of the land, to walk along the old Silk Route, and to meet its kind and hospitable people. Joe Hoyt’s lens gloriously brings back this bygone Afghanistan. In his photos, we get a glimpse of a land that was once a meeting point of cultures, a link between east and west. He captures the raw, ethereal beauty of this land, a taste of its prosperous history, and the unique spirit of its proud and resilient people. What’s more, looking at Hoyt’s photographs of this happier era, the suffering and tumult that the Afghan people have endured since is made more personal. The toll of the tragedy becomes palpable. This is testament to Hoyt’s skills as a photographer as well as his personal affection for this war-scarred land and its people”
— Khaled Hosseini, Author Kite Runner

To enter for the giveaway, write a comment at the bottom of this post saying how you came across this blog and name your favorite Afghan dish. The deadline for entering is Monday December 1st, midnight Pacific Daylight time. All entries must be a subscriber to this blog and a US resident, (apologies, we are not able to ship books outside the US). All entries will be entered into a random drawing and there will be two winner. You will receive one entry for each of the following - leaving a comment here, following me on Twitter and Instagram. You must be a subscriber to this blog and must be 18 years and older to win.

 

In Books & Visual
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Pearl-that-broke-its-shell

Pearl-that-broke-its-shell

THE PEARL THAT BROKE IT'S SHELL - A BOOK

July 11, 2014

By Humaira

As a little girl in Kabul, I loved playing football (soccer), biking, and jumping off our home's ten foot high wall into a pile of snow. In the two countries where I spent most of my childhood, India and Afghanistan, boys had freedoms that girls could only dream about. Perhaps that is why I decided to take on a boyish persona. Without any labels or criticism, my Afghan parents accepted my eccentracities and accomodated my request for short hair and boyish clothes. 

HG & Baba

HG & Baba

Baba and I, 1977 Kabul, Afghanistan

Now, my eldest daugther has the same tendencies. Perhaps the tomboy gene was passed on to her. While fellow moms in San Francisco congratulate me on how I handle this "situation", I delight in her obsession with building a skate board as opposed to shopping for makeup.

It was last year when I first learned about the popularity of a practice called "bacha posh", dresses like a boy. The director of Love In Afghanistan, asked me for cultural advice on the unique play she was directing for the Arena Theatre. The play is a love story, if you didn't already guess it, between an African American rap artist and an Afghan girl who is a bacha posh.  

Prior to this call I was familiar with the term but I thought it was something that came about during the time of Taliban, when women were imprisoned in their homes and needed a man to represent them in the outside world. 

It turns out that Dan Rather's popular documentry, "A Family Secret", brought families dressing their daugthers in boys' clothes is a widely practiced, ancient custom in Afghanistan. My family and I are  not convinced that the practic of bacha posh is "widely" practiced, as the documentry claims.

However, it's a subject that has caught the imagination of the Western Media. Since  2010, there has been shows, articles, interviews and now a book by Nadia Hashimi, THE PEARL THAT BROKE'S IT'S SHELL.

I am thrilled to see an Afghan write about this subject. Nadia's book delves into the world of Rahima, who becomes Rahim while guided by stories of her great aunt Shekiba, who was also a bacha posh.

The book helps the reader get into the story immediately. Within the first couple of chapters, the reader experiences the family's struggle and the mother's desperation, which forces her into the decision of turning her daughter into a boy.

Rahima, reluctant about the transformation to Rahim, quickly embraces his new life as he delves into freedoms bestowed on boys. He covets the higher status in his family and exemption from girl chores. He is the one who rights the wrong of the mother with a cursed womb which can only carry girls.

Rahim eventually has to face going back to being a girl, once he reaches puberty. He has to give up his freedom to freely go outside, save his sister's honor and help his desperate mother, when the prospect of marriage to settle a family debt enters his reality.

I hope this introduction whets your appetite, and inspires you to pick up this book for your summer reading.  When my family left Kabul in 1979, I left my boyish persona behind and re-invented myself as a girl when we reached the United States. Unfortunately not all women have the luxury to freely cross the gender divide as I did at age thirteen. 

NadiaHashimi

NadiaHashimi

Nadia Hashimi was born and raised in New York and New Jersey. Both her parents were born in Afghanistan and left in the early 1970s, before the Soviet invasion. Her mother, granddaughter of a notable Afghan poet, went to Europe to obtain a Master’s degree in civil engineering and her father came to the United States, where he worked hard to fulfill his American dream and build a new, brighter life for his immediate and extended family. Nadia was fortunate to be surrounded by a large family of aunts, uncles and cousins, keeping the Afghan culture an important part of their daily lives. She and her husband are the beaming parents of two curious, rock star children and an African Grey parrot.

Humaira Ghilzai of Afghan Culture Unveiled speaks to Nadia Hashimi about her book, lessons learned and Nadia's challenges as a vegetarian Afghan.

Humaira: How did you get interested in the practice of bacha posh? 

Nadia: A few years back I read an article by Jenny Nordberg in the New York Times about the bacha posh practice.  I had heard of the practice but I started to think about what the tradition meant for girls of Afghanistan.  Most girls in Afghanistan do not experience life as a bacha posh but it is done.  What message does this send to the youth of the country?  How does a young woman cope with experiencing life as a boy and then again as a girl girl in a society with such a gender divide?  I came to appreciate that the bacha posh practice could be a compelling means of taking a closer look at the gender gap and its implications for Afghanistan's daughters.  

Humaira: What did you learn about yourself while researching and writing your book?

Nadia: Great question!  The biggest realization for me was that I am more outraged, than I thought, with the injustices suffered by women and girls in today's world.  I've always believed that women need to stand up for our rights because injustice reaches every corner of the planet. even a progressive country like the United States.  

The process of writing this story, however, channeled my energy.  I want others to be as outraged as I am at gender inequality in any form.  Sometimes it's subtle, like a salesperson sidestepping a woman to address her husband, the assumed "decision maker" in the family.  Sometimes it's blatant and brutal, like rapes dismissed with a shrug of the shoulders because "boys will be boys."  I've realized also that I need to be very conscious of how I raise my daughter and what I teach her.  

Though she is only three years old, I encourage her to stand up for herself around other children (including her four year old brother!) and that sometimes she will need to raise her voice.  It is equally important to me that I raise my son to respect a girl's personal space and opinion.  As parents, it's our responsibility to model this behavior in the home and deliver clear messages to our children if we want to see a change in the world around us.  

Humaira: I believe you've been there once with your parents. Is that right? What were your impressions of Afghanistan the first time you visited? 

Nadia: My trip to Afghanistan in 2002 was both heartwarming and heartbreaking.  I was so happy to meet cousins, uncles and aunts and to walk through the neighborhoods I'd gotten to know through my parents' stories.  I was thrilled to see school children lining up excitedly in the school yard at the start of the day and meet Afghan physicians staffing a new hospital for patients with tuberculosis.  

On the other hand, it was disheartening to see an overflowing maternity hospital with laboring women in hallways, courtyards and unsanitary beds.  My mother's family home had been reduced to rubble, recognizable only by a curved railing that once led to their backyard.  

Hope and despair coexisted on the same street, in the same home.  The country has suffered greatly with decades of violence and instability. On the other hand, Afghan youth were particularly anxious to get an education and nearly every young person I spoke with had admirable, professional aspirations.  My hope and belief is that optimism will trump despair and that the nation will recover.

Humaira: What are your favorite Afghan dishes?

Nadia: I am, as my husband says, a rare Afghan in that I am a vegetarian (though in the last couple of years I've started eating fish as well).  For those familiar with Afghan food,meat is a huge part of our cuisine but there are plenty of yummy vegetable dishes as well.  Just this past weekend, my sister-in-law cooked vegetarian mantoo (dumplings) as a special treat.  Both my sister-in-laws are intuitive and creative cooks and I'm lucky that I get to enjoy their talents!  For my favorite rice dish, I would have to go with mosh-palow, rice with mong beans,  It's so hearty on a winter day!

Humaira: Do you enjoy cooking?  Do you cook Afghan food?

Nadia: I don't cook every day so when I do cook, I really enjoy it.  I make Afghan food regularly but I also find it fun to try new dishes and ingredients outside my comfort zone. With warmer weather here, I get to do some of my most enjoyable kind of cooking - grilling!  Our household loves grilled eggplant and it's wonderfully easy (as long as you don't get distracted).  I also like to do chicken kebabs.  I marinate them in yogurt and spices for a few hours and they seem to be a favorite with the family.  In the winter, I bring out the slow cooker for dishes like vegetable stew or soups that warm the belly with lots of flavor.

Of course, there's nothing like making good old fashioned cupcakes with the kids.  They love helping me measure and mix the ingredients, a good introduction to practical skills. I try to stick with dishes that are fairly uncomplicated because I want to enjoy my time in the kitchen.  Food is so important to our health. It plays a major role in our social lives and it's a daily necessity.  The more ways we find to enjoy it, the better!  

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MatalunCover_Final

MatalunCover_Final

AN AMERICAN'S MISSION TO PRESERVE AFGHAN PROVERBS

June 30, 2014

Just published, "Mataluna: 151 Afghan Pashto Proverbs" with a foreword by yours truely.

In development for over a year, this is the Pashto companion to  "Zarbul Masalha, 151 Afghan Dari Proverbs".  The first book captures Dari proverbs and thanks to Captain Edward Zellem's social media skills, the book has reached thousands of people around the world. My copy is marked up on all pages with sticky notes and stars. I rely on it to weave color into my Afghanistan related writing.

Pashto, a language spoken by over 40% of Afghans, has its own historic tradition of proverbs. Mataluna, the word for proverb, features 151 of the best Pashto proverbs in use today. It includes English translation and transliteration for those of us who can't read the Arabic script. The book also features 50 new artworks by the students of Marefat High School in Kabul.

Last summer, Captain Edward Zellem initiated a "crowdsourcing for proverbs" project which was immensely successful. The proverbs in the book were contributed by native Pashto speakers from all over the world. I want to thank my honorary Afghan friend, Captain Edward Zellem, for improving our world through bridge building, friendship and love of language. 

Support Afghan literacy and give the gift of Afghan Proverbs for Eid-e-Ramazin 2014. More information and links on where to buy the book can be found at  www.afghansayings.com.

ForewrodMataluna

ForewrodMataluna

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I have over sixty Afghan food recipes on this blog. Use this search field to find my most popular recipes—bolani, shohla, kebab—or a specific dish you may be looking for.

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Humaira opens the world to Afghan culture and cuisine through this blog. She shares the wonders of Afghanistan through stories of rich culture, delicious food and her family’s traditions. Learn more about Humaira’s work.


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Tim Vetter of the Voyager Podcast asked me about Afghan Culture and Food. I hope you enjoy this interview.

Tim Vetter of the Voyager Podcast asked me about Afghan Culture and Food. I hope you enjoy this interview.

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