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A World Apart

by AFP

Rebecca Conway—AFP

Afghanistan’s ‘hill of widows’ is home to women who have lost the financial support of their husbands

The first women settled on this stony slope outside Kabul in the 1990s hoping to escape the stigma those like them are forced to endure. Today it is known as Afghanistan’s ‘hill of widows,’ home to a cluster of women who have eked out independence in a society that shuns and condemns them as immoral.

The rocky summit 15 kilometers southeast of the capital has gradually been swallowed by the city, becoming a distant Kabul suburb. But for its residents, it remains “Zanabad,” the city of women.

The matriarch of Zanabad, Bibi ul-Zuqia, known as “Bibikoh,” died in 2016. Her eldest daughter, 38-year-old Anissa Azimi, has a husband—but in a rare step for married women in conservative Afghanistan, has taken up the matriarchal torch. Their house is one of the first when you arrive in Zanabad by a broken track, at the bottom of a passage barred with a tarp to protect privacy.

“My mother arrived here 15 years ago” with her five children, Anissa says, sitting on carpets and assaulted by a swarm of children. Bibikoh lost a first husband, killed by a rocket, before being remarried to a brother-in-law, who then died from an illness.

She was scratching a living doing laundry for others, but found Kabul rents too expensive. In Zanabad, Anissa says, land was cheap.

The first widows had already begun to lay down their belongings and their grief in the largely deserted suburb to form a tightly-knit community—though no one any longer knows exactly who began it, and when. “They encouraged the others [widows] to join them,” says Anissa. “The main idea was to get a cheap and safe place … a permanent address.”

Soon it became a haven for destitute and desperate women who had lost their husbands.

Bibikoh organized literacy classes, sewing workshops and food distributions with the support of an NGO, says researcher Naheed Esar, who studied the community for several years for the Afghan Analysts Network.

Women are perceived as being owned by their father before becoming their husband’s property. Widows are often rejected as immoral or regarded as burdens: they suffer violence, expulsion, ostracism and sometimes forced remarriage, often with a brother-in-law, as reported by the U.N. Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) in a rare study published in 2014. Alone, they are vulnerable.

A small military post guards the hill. It’s good for protection, Anissa says. The Taliban are not very far down the road. But these women have learned those in authority cannot always be relied upon.

Anissa recalls policemen coming to tear down the houses the women had painstakingly built together in Zanabad. The only way to put them off was with bribes. “They destroyed our house like eight or nine times,” says Anissa, who is now herself a police officer. “The only option at the end was to give them little money.”

It is estimated there are as many as 2.5 million widows in Afghanistan today. Often uneducated and cloistered at home, the women have few options if their husbands die. At best, they receive $150 a year from the government if their husband was killed in fighting. They survive by doing household chores, a little sewing, or by sending their children to beg in the bazaar.

“In Afghanistan, men usually provide financial support for women, so it is hard for women to lose this support,” says women’s ministry spokeswoman Kobra Rezai. A policy providing aid for poor women was approved in 2008 but never ratified, she adds. A few non-governmental programs help the widows find a little autonomy.

In front of the former royal palace in Kabul, the United Nations Development Program (UNDP) created a small gardening cooperative where some 100 particularly poor women learned to work the land. Eighty percent of them are widows. Their destinies have been invariably cruel: Marghooba Jafary, a widow at 35 with four children, had to marry her 13-year-old daughter to a 40-year-old man as she was unable to feed her. He has since abandoned his teen bride.

As Marghooba tells her story to AFP, she bursts into tears. The other women sitting around her—many depressed and unused to having someone listen to their woes—join in.

Sixteen years after the end of the Taliban regime, families are bereaved every day by an intensifying conflict. More than 11,500 civilians were killed in 2016, and at least 800 soldiers and police in three months this winter. Nawzi Fakiri, who says she has been a widow “since Baba Karmal”—the former pro-Soviet president in power from 1979 to 1986—has taken in one displaced mother, Nouria, with her five children.

The family fled Kunduz city in the north after it was assaulted by the Taliban last summer and found a safe place staying with Nawzi in Zanabad. In exchange for their room, Nouria helps care for Nawzi, who is almost blind from her cataracts.

Zanabad has been home to as many as 500 widows. Anissa is trying to keep the list up to date, but as insecurity spirals more and more displaced families are seeking refuge in the outskirts of Kabul. She says: “Everywhere there is war. People are joining us.”

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