Kabul, Jan 10 : Afghanistan has
suffered from foreign meddling since its inception. But while Pakistan’s role
has been widely discussed -- most Afghans will point to concrete examples --
Iran’s involvement is more subtle.
Iranian influence is all
encompassing--the Islamic government funds Afghan Shiite sects and politicians,
has invested in building roads and providing fuel and transport, and is fighting
hard against the Afghan opium trade that supplies millions of addicts. But
Iran’s lasting power on Afghanistan is cultural as well as political,
broadcasting state radio and television programs inside Afghanistan.
Yet
the country’s biggest cultural influence is not imposed by the Iranian
government.
The more than one million repatriating Afghan refugees from
Iran – tens of thousands have been deported –bring the dialect, food, music, and
clothes particular to Iran.
Some of the Afghans repatriates are migrant
workers, similar to Mexicans in the U.S., some are construction workers who
became addicted to drugs in Iran, others were able to get an education and
acquire job skills, and most have lived there for over three decades.
Yet
Iran will not grant them legal status; they do not have a right to a higher
education, to own property, or to work. Most voluntarily return to Afghanistan
because there are more opportunities in their home country. These Afghans are
changing Afghanistan’s identity to be more Iranian – for better or
worse.
My family escaped the Soviet invasion in 1982 and settled in the
U.S.
I first returned to Afghanistan in 2000 when the Taliban reigned,
but it was after the group’s ouster that I witnessed the cultural changes
brought on by immigration.
I was traveling through Afghanistan
researching the drug trade for my book "Opium Nation" from 2002 to 2007, and my
first confrontation with Iran’s cultural impact was language.
Iran and
Afghanistan both speak Farsi, but the Afghan dialect is called “Dari.” I’m
fluent in Dari but I no longer understood what many of the families in my
hometown, Herat are saying.
Common words, idioms, and even Iran’s use of
French terms have invaded Afghan speech. The Herati folk songs I recalled
hearing in shops as a child were replaced by Iranian pop produced in Los
Angeles. The young Afghan activists and artists read Iranian websites and
books.
These changes have given rise to tension between the Afghans who
never left home and the Afghan returnees.
The skilled repatriates are
resented for getting better jobs with aid companies and the Afghan
government.
Conservatives view the Afghan women who grew up in Iran with
disdain because they appear more liberal and courageous--they sing on TV,
they’re news broadcasters, business owners, and government workers. They voice
their opinions loudly in a male dominated country.
The Hazara ethnic
group in Afghanistan who were historically the poorest of minorities return
richer, more literate, and united. They have made unprecedented advances in
Afghanistan, including in the arts and in the government.
These returnees
are called “Afghan-e badal,” or counterfeit Afghans. Few of them have political
connections to Iran, but their time living in the Islamic Republic taints themin
the eyes of the Afghans who didn’t leave as culturally inauthentic and
politically suspect.
Several Afghans at NGOs I met told me that their
returnee colleagues had clandestine connections to Iran. When I asked for
tangible evidence, one of them told me. “I just know by that accent they use.
They’re sellouts.”
While I’m not fully comfortable with this cultural
invasion, I understand that Iran advanced while Afghanistan struggled to survive
in the last three decades.
Culture is fluid and both countries share a
common history. After all, my own husband is one of these Afghan returnees and
he’s a true patriot.
Repatriating Afghans have enough of a hard time
readjusting to their battered country – ostracizing them is simply
cruel.
However, Afghan bitterness toward the Iranian government is
justifiable. The Islamic Republic backs religious divisions inside Afghanistan,
using Afghan Shiites as pawns.
Shiite Afghans, who come from other ethnic
groups as well, are encouraged to watch Iranian clerics give fiery speeches
against Sunni Afghans. Iran built the road from Herat City to its border, one of
the finest rebuilt highways, but the signs alongside the road bear Koranic
verses picked by Iran‘s government.
My homeland is geographically
determined as a buffer zone where empires and nations have fought their battles
using Afghans as their pawns.
Extremist Sunni groups cross the Pakistani
border to kill Afghan Shiite children and women. The carnage last month in Kabul
at a Shiite mosque killed eighty people and was a new height in religious
sectarian violence for Afghanistan. It won’t be long before Iran recruits a
group to bomb a Sunni mosque.
Iran and Pakistan were not such deadly
influences on Afghanistan before the revolutions and wars inside these
countries.
A harmonious cultural exchange was common among these
neighbors. Pakistani couples took their honeymoon in Kabul while Iranian singers
traveled to give concerts in Kabul in the 1960s.
Before the Soviet
invasion, my mother, a Sunni, joined her Shiite friends to commemorate the death
of Prophet Mohammed’s grandsons during the month of Muharram.
One of my
uncles married a Shiite woman, and while throughout history tensions existed
between the two sects, the result was not as violent.
I can take pop
music and the Iranian Farsi drawl, but Iran’s sponsorship of sectarian violence
must be stopped -- by the U.S. and other foreign powers invested in Afghanistan
-- but mostly, by Afghans themselves who must unite to stand up to their
neighbors.
Ends
SA/EN
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