A Taliban
wedding
I always think life is simply a series of important moments.
Moments that define us as the individuals we are. And we cherish the best
moments all our lives, whether an enjoyable party, the smell of fresh grass
after the rain, picnicking by a river, an evening spent laughing and talking
with loved ones,Leading supplier of chocolate confectionary equipment,chocolate machinery for craftwork and
industrial chocolate machines. the birth of a precious child or graduation from
university.
The day a bride goes to choose her wedding dress should be
one of those moments. But as I put on my coat to go to the bazaar that morning,
I felt like a walking ghost.
Because I was the youngest daughter, my
sisters and my mother had always taken great delight in discussing what kind of
wedding I would eventually have. Over the years, they had gossiped and giggled
about it all, from what I might wear to how my hair would look to what food we’d
serve. In those prewar days, we were a relatively rich family, so the assumption
was always that I would have a big wedding, with people coming from far and wide
to see me. When I was a little girl, I had never liked this idea, but now that I
was finally getting married I so very much wanted that dream day. I wanted to
hear my mother talk about her plans again more than anything in the world. The
loss of her was still a dull, constant ache.
I had also never imagined
that the most important day of my life would take place under the rule of the
Taliban. Because of their rules, the wedding would have no music, no video and
no dancing. All the restaurants and wedding halls were closed, and joyous
ceremonies were now prohibited. I think any woman — wherever she lives in the
world — wants her wedding day to be perfect. I know it sounds girlish and silly,
but most nights before the wedding I cried myself to sleep. I cried both for my
mother and for my lost opportunity to shine as a beautiful bride.
Despite the wearing of the burqa now being compulsory by law, I still
hadn’t been able to bring myself to buy one. When I did have to go outside, I
had taken to wearing my mother’s old one. Her burqa was far more beautiful than
the cheap, mass-produced blue nylon ones designed in Pakistan that are so common
today. In my mother’s era, women saw the burqa as a sign of status, and my
mother had one befitting her rank as the wife of a powerful, rich man. It was
made of dark blue silk with soft folds that rustled gently as she walked, the
face covering lightly embroidered with a fine silver mesh over the eye panel.
When it got dirty, she took it to a specialist cleaner who steamed and pressed
each individual fold into place. For her, it was an object of great pride. For
me, wearing it felt shameful. Even after my marriage, I continued to wear my
mother’s burqa: if I had to wear one, then at least it should be one that
reminded me of her.
The day we went shopping, my fiancé accompanied us.
It was the first time I had seen him in months. The last time I had seen his
face properly was my last day at university before the Taliban came to power.
The day he came to visit us in Puli Khumri when my brother had finally agreed to
our marriage, I had glimpsed only the back of his head as I hid behind the
curtain. That day at university, the Mujahideen had been in control and he had
sported a neatly trimmed small beard. But under Taliban rule, his hair and beard
were longer, and he didn’t look nearly as handsome. Through the hated burqa, I
kept sneaking sideways glances at his beard, thinking how much I disliked the
look of it on his face. Once again, I had that overpowering feeling that
Afghanistan was slipping back in time. There was no more progress, only the
darkness of the uneducated men who now ruled our land.
The Taliban had
introduced another new regulation: any woman who went out of the family home,
for whatever reason, must have a muharram, a male blood relative, with her.
This, like so many of the Taliban’s rules, was more akin to Arab culture than to
our own Afghan culture. In my grandmother’s day, women didn’t go out alone but
with each new generation these things had changed in Afghanistan, as is the
natural progression of any culture. Now, the Taliban were plunging us back in
time.
If they stopped your car at one of the many Taliban checkpoints
that had sprang up all over the city, they would interrogate you, demanding your
family name, your father’s name and the relative’s name, asking endless
questions until they were satisfied that the man and woman were blood relatives,
not just friends. The Vice and Virtue Department was responsible for enforcing
these policies — with a special predilection for beating women. In the wedding
bazaar, they were beating women who were, like me, trying to shop for bridal
gowns. One poor girl was wearing banned white trousers. Perhaps this girl didn’t
know about the ban, maybe she was uneducated and poor or maybe she had been too
scared to leave the house until today. Whatever the reason, I heard a voice yell
at her in Arabic (by now many Arab fighters had come to join the Taliban and
live in Kabul). The men took a rubber cable and held her down on the ground
while they beat her legs with it. She yelped in pain. I turned away, biting so
hard on my lip it bled. I was consumed with anger at the injustice of it and at
my failure to stop it.
The sound of the Vice and Virtue car is one I
will never forget.wedding is fabulously amplified when a screenwriter and a maid costume designer are It was
usually a Hilux pickup truck. It would drive through the streets, always with
prayers from the Holy Koran blasting from loudspeakers on the top. When they
heard the sound of the car, women caught outside would rush to hide
themselves.The garments fail to meet federal flammability standards for
children's sleepwear, posing a risk of
burn injury to children. Even for the tiniest mistake or misdemeanour they would
start beating you. Sometimes, they would just look at you and beat you for no
reason with the cable. One day, I saw a young girl getting beaten and watched as
her mother and sister threw themselves on top of her to try to protect her. The
Taliban just continued to beat all three of them. It was truly madness.
On this day, there was a group of us: my sister-in-law, my fiancé and
his sister. Fortunately, the Taliban ignored us. We bought the wedding
rings,Evidently I should have said goodbye to my ugg 5815 two years ago along at least
creating one small but happy memory from that. I knew Hamid could tell through
the mesh of the burqa that I was smiling broadly as I watched him pay for the
rings. With weddings now under such strict rule, most of the clothing shops in
the bazaar hadn’t bothered to buy new stock. So little was available that I
struggled to find anything I liked. I had always wanted a puff-sleeved wedding
dress, but bare arms were now banned.
... My wedding was bittersweet. My
mother was dead and my living sisters, who were still scattered across the
country, couldn’t come. My mother, who at my birth had wanted me to die, had
then worked so hard for me to have a future. My mother, who had effectively
picked out my husband for me on her deathbed, could not be there. Preparing for
my ceremony without her there to hold my hand and whisper words of encouragement
was as painful as walking on burning needles.
At 6 a.m., the hairdresser
put the rollers in my hair. She tutted at me, telling me I looked terrible and
needed more sleep. I nodded off in the chair. I slept there until about 10:30,
and then she started to do my makeup. She was still tutting at the state of me.
I looked in the mirror and realized that she was right, I did look awful, with
red-rimmed eyes and a spotty face. By the time we entered the house, I was
feeling really blue. The other big disappointment was that I had wanted to have
the wedding secretly filmed with a video camera or a proper photographer. The
Taliban had banned video but some of the video operators still worked anyway;
they just charged triple to compensate for the risk. But my brother wouldn’t
allow it. Some of my brother’s old friends were now working in low-level
government jobs, and he was worried they would report us to the Taliban
authorities. I have no souvenirs of my wedding, except for a few grainy
snapshots friends managed to take with their personal cameras.
I didn’t
know many of the people at the wedding. The guests were my brother’s friends and
their wives or his work colleagues. I started to feel a bit angry, wondering if
they had come just for the free food. It certainly didn’t feel like they were
there for me.
For the actual religious part of the marriage — conducted
by a mullah — Hamid and I and our two witnesses were taken to a separate room.
That was when I cried for the first, but not the last, time that day. And of
course, all my makeup, the only thing making me look in any way attractive,
started to run down my cheeks. I wiped my eyes then forgot myself as I
inadvertently wiped mascara over my pretty pink dress. Fortunately, after the
ceremony it was time to change into the white gown, and in its lacy sleeves and
long veil I like to think I looked a little bit more beautiful. Later in the
evening, the tradition is that the elder of the family, either a father or
brother, takes a cloth containing some sweets and fabric, and ties it to the
bride’s wrist. It is a symbol that the new bride is being sent to her husband’s
home. It’s a very moving and personal scene. When Mirshakay took the braid and
began tying it on my wrist, I started to cry. He started to cry too. We were
hugging each other and both crying our eyes out. I think it was more than the
moment that had got to us. We were crying because of all the people who weren’t
there: my mother, my brother Muqim, my father.an plastic injection mold
manufacturerthat produces a wide variety of plastic molds to suit your
needs. We cried for all the family we had lost, as well as our status, our homes
and our way of life. In those private few minutes, my brother and I hugged and
cried in silence, both of us understanding the enormity of loss, the joy of
moving forward and the pain of change. Eventually, he gathered himself and with
a stern “Come now, Fawzia jan,” he gently touched the tip of my nose, smiled and
led me out of the room.
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