Images of Afghanistan

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photographer's comments:

AFGHANISTAN 1970 -1975
IMAGES FROM AN ERA OF PEACE

The photographs in this collection reveal an Afghanistan very different from the one we hear about today. What we see in these images is not just an Afghanistan at peace, but also a people at peace with themselves, going about their daily routines.

Taken over thirty years ago and unseen by the public until 2005, the photographs show the vibrancy and nuance of an ancient culture nearly lost to 25 years of war and political turmoil. They portray the laughing children and the handsome faces of a rugged and courageous people, living as they have for centuries. These images were taken prior to the Russian invasion and many years before civil war ripped the country and allowed the establishment of the murderous rule of the Taliban and invasion of foreign fighters.

From the perspective of a young traveler, one might say the 1970’s saw Afghanistan at its best. With only recently opened borders, the country offered a kind of adventure travel not often seen since: safe, inexpensive travel through a land of towering mountains concealing verdant orchards and untouched torrents; vast deserts, wandering nomad tribes, and a welcoming people generous far beyond their means.

These images show a wide breadth of the country from intimate portraits to the towering 5th-century Buddhas of Bamiyan, since destroyed by Taliban extremists. The photographs convey a complex Afghanistan, a culture rich in history and tradition but modernizing and connecting to the outside world. The exhibit includes candid shots of Afghans at work and at play. Taken at a time when political content would have been irrelevant, when seen as a whole the exhibit offers the viewer a refreshing change from the ubiquitous, dreary media images of Afghanistan today.

This was a time when the economy was thriving, people were working and there was a burgeoning tourist trade. Libraries, schools and universities were open to most. Food was plentiful. Gardens and orchards were lovingly tended, and the ancient irrigation systems functioned as they had for centuries. The most beautiful fruits and vegetables in all of Central Asia could be had in the local markets. The bazaars were brimming with antique carpets, jewelry, beadwork and textiles. Foreign aid had built fine highways and the modern airports at Kabul and Kandahar were served by airlines from Europe, Russia, India and beyond. The Afghans loved their King, Mohammed Zahir Shah. They prayed, and they loved their land, their gardens, and their families. Afghanistan was then a nation with a thriving intellectual community with free exchange of ideas, respectful of its rich cultural heritage and seemingly willing to embrace its ethnic diversity. Hidden from the casual traveler, however, were factors political, religious and cultural that would in the ensuing years radically change the Afghanistan I was experiencing.

To be sure, this was a poor country; then, as now, one of the poorest on the planet. But this was a nation, hidden away in central Asia, with a recorded history dating to before 3000 BC. The ancient land had seen the coming of Alexander the Great and was an outpost of Greek culture. In the 3rd - 5th centuries it had been a great center of Buddhist culture and learning. It was the home of Tamerlane and had been invaded by Genghis Khan. The city of Balkh, known since antiquity as the Mother of Cities, located near present day Mazar-I-Sharif, was the birthplace of the beloved Sufi poet Jellaludin Rumi.

The Afghanistan we know today is a nation laid waste by more than 25 years of war and discord. Ten years of Russian occupation left the land littered with perhaps millions of land mines. Many thousands of Afghans have been killed. Countless others have been maimed, blinded, displaced and nearly forgotten. This and the brutal rule of the Taliban, even now in resurgence, have changed the country and its people, perhaps forever. To be hopeful for Afghanistan’s future we may find it helpful to look back at an era in it’s recent past when the nation was at peace.

My hope is that the viewer will experience a bit of the dignity, humanity, good will and humor that I found in these wonderful people and enjoy a glimpse of their of their fabled and beautiful land. The images show the spirit and resilience of a nearly lost culture. I want the viewer to see that Afghans deserve support as they try to rebuild their nation. Regional and world peace and security require this. But more importantly, the love and respect of all mankind require it of all of us.

 

Copyright © 2005-2008 Joseph Hoyt.  All rights reserved.

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