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Asia Pacific|In These Corners of Kabul, Western Influences Live On

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Afghanistan Dispatch


IN THESE CORNERS OF KABUL, WESTERN INFLUENCES LIVE ON

While the Taliban have erased most obvious vestiges of the U.S. nation-building
effort in Afghanistan, the cultural legacy of two decades of American occupation
has been harder to stamp out.

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At a snooker club in Kabul, Afghanistan, in April.


By Christina Goldbaum

Photographs by Jim Huylebroek

Reporting from Kabul, Afghanistan

June 29, 2023, 5:01 a.m. ET

There’s a glimmer of the old Kabul hiding in the new one — if you know where to
look.

It’s there in the crowded snooker halls where young men in jeans hover around
velvet tables and yell “nice shot” in English. It lives on in the dark rooms of
video game dens where teenage boys lounge on couches playing “Call of Duty” and
“FIFA,” posters of famous footballers plastered on the walls. It’s in coffee
shops where women sip on cappuccinos, their robe-like abayas concealing skinny
jeans, as a Taylor Swift tune softly radiates from the speakers.

Since the Taliban toppled the Western-backed government nearly two years ago,
the group has erased most obvious vestiges of the American nation-building
project in Afghanistan. High school and university classrooms have been emptied
of women. Religious scholars and strict interpretations of Shariah law replaced
judges and state penal codes. Parliament was dissolved, any semblance of
representative politics gone with it.

But harder to stamp out has been the cultural legacy left after two decades of
U.S. occupation, those far subtler ways in which Western and Afghan cultures
collided in major cities and came to shape urban life along with the generation
of young people who came of age within it.



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“It completely changed in those 20 years,” said Ahmad Khalid, 37, sitting in a
steakhouse in downtown Kabul. “There are more schools, every brand of clothing
and shoes is here, sports academies, we have all the new technology — we got
connected to the world.”


Image

Since 2001, Kabul’s population has nearly doubled, reaching around five million
people today — or about half of the country’s entire urban population.


The enduring Western influence is most striking in the capital. Before the
U.S.-led war began in 2001, Kabul was a city in shambles, littered with rubble
after years of fighting during the civil war and later between resistance forces
and the Taliban’s first government. But after the American invasion, it became a
hub of international attention.

Thousands of foreign aid workers, soldiers and contractors flooded in, and
high-rise buildings and cell towers sprouted up. New restaurants and malls
catering to nouveau riche Afghans riding the economic boom appeared. Since 2001,
the city’s population has nearly doubled, reaching around five million people
today — or about half of the country’s entire urban population.


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   population of critical resources and support and ushering in a new era of
   diminished hopes.
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   mountains shadowing the capital, Afghans are having to learn how to survive
   on less food.

There are pizza shops, burger joints and bodybuilding gyms in every
neighborhood. Outdoor vendors sell secondhand T-shirts adorned with “I <3 NY” in
large block letters. Tattoos — considered forbidden in Islam — of stars and
moons and mothers’ names are etched on young men’s arms. Street children yell
English expletives with gusto.

For members of the young, urban generation, the restaurants and bookstores have
become cherished corners of the city. There, they can step through a door and
escape the sometimes-dismal reality of a country now being remade by a
government that often feels more foreign to them than the Western-backed
administration did.



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Image

For the young, urban generation, the restaurants, game halls and bookstores have
become cherished corners of the city.


One recent afternoon in western Kabul, a popular cafe buzzed with the screeches
of an espresso machine. Acoustic tunes echoed across the room while men and
women mingled among potted plants and a bookshelf of English and Persian
language literature — ignoring verbal edicts barring music and
gender-segregation requirements.



One man in his 20s in a white T-shirt stared at a laptop screen, his fingers
tapping along with the music playing in his headphones. Nearby, two teenage
girls in crimson lipstick and thick eyeliner took selfies on their iPhones.

At another table, Taiba, 19, beckoned for the waiter to bring tea while her
friend Farhat, 19, flipped through the pages of “The Forty Rules of Love” by
Elif Shafak, her white head scarf pushed back so it only covered her shoulders.
The girls usually meet up for coffee here once or twice a month — as often as
they can afford. It’s a world unto itself, one of the few public spaces left
where they are permitted entry and where their very existence does not feel
threatened, they explained.


Image

A restaurant in Kabul.


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“I love the smell, the books, the music they play,” Taiba said. “Although,” she
added with a wry smile, “I don’t like pop music anymore since I became a good
Muslim in the past two years.” The girls looked at each other and burst out
laughing. “Only joking,” she quipped.

It can be a jarring juxtaposition: a city where girls are barred from school
above the sixth grade but are allowed to read English-language books in cafes;
where male public servants are required to grow out their beards while teenage
boys rock stylish fade hairstyles and sweatshirts featuring American sports
franchises.

That dissonance is partly explained by Taliban officials’ competing visions for
the country. The government’s top leadership — who rarely leave their southern
heartland in Kandahar — believe in a strict interpretation of Islam and have
enacted laws reflecting that. More moderate officials in Kabul — who have
interacted more frequently with foreign diplomats and traveled outside the
region — have pushed less restrictive policies and let certain norms slide in
the city that would not likely survive in Kandahar.


Image

A bookstore in Kabul.


Still, top officials across the board approach foreigners in the country with
suspicion. The few foreign journalists permitted visas are closely monitored by
intelligence officials. The government has accused some Western travelers of
espionage. Officials, skeptical of what is being taught in schools supported by
nonprofits, are currently debating banning foreign aid groups from working in
education.



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For businesses trying to navigate Afghanistan’s new reality, the red line of
what is and is not permitted is often murky. One popular burger joint in
downtown Kabul still plays Iranian music and American pop because, while music
has been banned in other public places, officials have not explicitly barred it
in restaurants, the waiters say. Still, the staff carefully monitor the security
camera feeds and slam off the stereo whenever they see a Talib about to enter
the restaurant.

In a video game center across the city, dozens of boys sprawled out on faux
leather couches while maneuvering PlayStation consoles and staring at 50-inch
television screens. As customers arrived, the owner, Mohsin Ahmadi, 35, pointed
them to a table in the center of the dark room with a notebook illuminated by a
neon green light. The boys scribbled their names and the time — they were
charged 50 cents each hour they played — before scoping out an empty couch and
controller.


Image

There are pizza shops, burger joints and bodybuilding gyms in every
neighborhood.


“These zombies keep trying to kill me,” muttered Qasim Karimi, 18, who was
perched on the arm of a couch next to three friends. On the television in front
of him, a virtual squad of soldiers sprinted through smoldering buildings, the
“pah-pah-pah” of gunfire howling through the speakers.

“We’ve experienced so much war it became our culture,” Mr. Karimi explained,
eyes glued to the screen. “I love fighting,” he joked.



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The boys came here every afternoon — it was one of the few outlets they had
left, they said. With the nation’s economic decline, many of the cafes they once
frequented closed. The government banned their favorite hookah bars. Even the
future of the game zone was unclear: Police officials recently barred boys under
10 from entering — prompting concerns that the authorities might eventually
outlaw the gaming centers entirely.

“I fear that could happen,” said Mr. Ahmadi, the owner. “But we need these
places, they are the only places where people feel at ease now.”


Image

Old Kabul lives on in the dark rooms of video game dens where teenage boys
lounge on couches playing “Call of Duty” and “FIFA.”


Safiullah Padshah contributed reporting from Kabul, Afghanistan.



Christina Goldbaum is a correspondent in the Kabul, Afghanistan, bureau.
@cegoldbaum

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