EMAIL SIGN UP!
Most Popular This Week
Popular content
Today's Top News
Afghan Elders Describe Cruelest Winter in Charahi Qambar Camp
KABUL—For the residents of the Charahi Qambar refugee camp, it’s been a long five years since they fled the U.S.-led destruction of their villages and put up tents in this destitute Kabul neighborhood. The majority is of Pashtun descent from Afghanistan’s southern Helmand Province, a warlord-torn region notorious for opium production. One would think that the 6,000 internally displaced people (IDPs) camping there for a half-decade have seen it all. But over the winter, it was not bombs but snowfalls that crushed shelters and threatened lives.
Afghanistan-Village girls wait as the Afghan National Police unload a shipment of humanitarian aid at their village (Photo: Creative Commons/Flickr/isafmedia)
The tarps of Charahi Qambar run alongside one of the capital’s outskirt roads, and extend deep into the horizon—juxtaposed by stunning views of the Hindu Kush. Our three-person Global Exchange delegation pulled up next to the tent and adobe city in a beat-up Corolla hatchback with an Afghan driver and guide. Several of the camp’s elders came to meet us. They greeted us cautiously and pulled us inside the winding pathways ankle-deep with mud that turn to thick sheets of ice by night. We ducked into one of the tents and kneeled atop thin carpets on the freezing dirt floor.
As one of three Americans, and two women, among a few dozen Afghan tribal leaders, initial awkwardness faded into a feeling of welcome as green tea and conversations began to flow.
A group of six elders, elected by Charahi Qambar’s IDPs governs the camp—a structure similar to the Council of Elders in the villages where they used to live. “We lost everything,” said one of them, Ismael. He explained that as a farmer back in the Helmand Province his harvests included staple foods like wheat and corn, along with seasonal vegetables. After NATO forces destroyed his home and livelihood, Ismael came to Kabul as a refugee. Today, his family survives on meager aid handouts. And as a camp representative, he cares for some 850 families as well.
This winter brought the lowest temperatures in at least 20 years to Kabul, and in impoverished Charahi Qambar, supplies like firewood quickly dwindled. When a 70-year-old woman and seven children under the age of five froze to death in their camp, the elders experienced interchanging feelings of helplessness and outrage. “We are humans like everyone else, and our children shouldn’t have to die,” said Khoja Mohamed, also a chosen representative. “All we are asking for is a real home where we can be safe again,” he lamented. He reiterated his point by using a Pashto proverb that says everyone should have a graveyard—a place to rest—in both life and death.
Others around the circle told us what brought them to Charahi Qambar. One man spoke of his uncle’s daughter, who was killed in his village by a NATO bombing campaign. Another said that he lost his business when U.S. jets bombed the local bazaar. Bearded and wearing turbans, the elders emphasized that their choice of appearance was part of their culture. “We feel targeted by Western forces because of the way we look,” said Ismael, “And most don’t take the time to understand our religion.”
The recent Qur’an burning at Bagram Airfield sent ripples of anger through Charahi Qambar. Some elders called for protests in the camp, but opted for patience when President Karzai pleaded a peaceful reaction. “We have to respect our leader,” said Khoja Mohamed, “But if you could take out my heart, you could see the pain. We are Muslim, and after all we have been through they burned our holy book.” Khoja Mohamed pointed out that the international community, including Western troops, were guests in Afghanistan. “No matter what, we will not punish many for the actions of one. We know how to separate the bad from the good, and we hope that your country can learn to do the same,” he said.
In Charahi Qambar and the other 40 camps around Kabul, IDPs and their elders wait for an end to a winter—both figuratively and literally—that has lasted far too long.
Comments
Note: Disqus 2012 is best viewed on an up to date browser. Click here for information. Instructions for how to sign up to comment can be viewed here. Our Comment Policy can be viewed here. Please follow the guidelines. Note to Readers: Spam Filter May Capture Legitimate Comments...


6 Comments so far
Show AllWhat can one say on top of this?
"We know how to separate the bad from the good, and hope that your country can learn to do the same." Khoja Mohamed
If only our country's leaders could even try to emulate the wisdom of these elders.
You will have a long wait before they even try.
They never will until Burnham Wood comes to Dunsinane.
Then it will be too late for the USA.
The circumstances in this camp remind me of Haiti. Who reading this doesn't feel outrage that there's always money to build bombs or fund the Homeland Security Hydra, but never funds to build rudimentary housing for those whose lives and security were shattered--directly (war) or indirectly (climate change) by the U.S. and its martial allies? What enormous debts our nation owes to all those who suffer inside the growing legion of tent camps... I pray for Deliverance from the warrior caste that all the fruits it seizes unto itself be instead converted into fish and loaves to spread among the poor, the hungry, and the cold.
Thank you Siouxrose for saying what has to be said.
I wish I had a media pulpit from which to REALLY say it! And it would be articulated on behalf of all persons of decency and conscience. What we're being asked, no, demanded, to accept as Official Policy is only different from what Jim Jones enforced upon his followers by degree... and species of poison. We must scream like the canaries in the poisoned coal-mines, lest they stamp out our voices, altogether, along with the living ecosystems the miracle of life depends upon.
Thank you for validating the perspective held by most awakened souls, Jclientelle.