From Yahoo/Outside:
“Life Under Afghanistan’s Ban on Women in the Outdoors”
(Afghan girls jump on a trampoline outside Kabul in March,
2023.)
Rima Safi used to walk through different neighborhoods in
Kabul to stay healthy. As a 27-year-old Afghan woman, Safi occasionally felt
unwelcome and unsafe in public parks, but she and her friends still visited
them to relax and exercise. She also took trips to the mountains to feel free
and breathe in the clean air. Open spaces offered a refuge from life in a city
plagued by suicide bombings, targeted killings, and corruption. The greenery
was a pleasant break from the thick smog that hung over her city year round. All
that changed on November 10, 2022, when the Taliban--which seized control of
Afghanistan during the summer of 2021--passed a law banning women from
accessing all public parks. These days, Safi cannot even leave her home for a
recreational walk. "Women are dealing with so much despair that not having
the freedom to go outside for a temporary peace of mind is driving many of us
into depression," she told me.
The restriction is among more than 42 laws enacted by the
Taliban to constrain Afghan women. It is now illegal for a woman to enroll in a
university or any school past sixth grade. They cannot eat in restaurants, work
in government, or even leave their homes without a male guardian. Before the
outright ban, the Taliban had restricted women's access to the outdoors to
specific days of the week. They also had to adhere to strict hijab rules if
they wanted to go outside. Afghanistan's outdoor recreation scene is largely
underdeveloped, but Afghan people do spend time in nature. While there may not
be robust trail networks and government-funded campgrounds, Afghan families
still enjoy cookouts in the mountains and go on day hikes.
Prior to the Taliban's takeover, a small but growing number
of Afghans--including women--had been participating in outdoor sports, such as
cycling, skiing, and even rock climbing. Their visibility on national TV and
social media showcased the sports to younger generations. More importantly,
women's participation in outdoor sports was a highly visible act of women's
freedom in defiance of Afghanistan's male-dominated society. "Just two
years ago, one could see droves of women jogging and riding their bikes on the
streets. Now, there are hardly any women outside, let alone jogging. The
Taliban law has taken our society backwards by centuries" Nasrin Nawa, an
Afghan journalist and advocate of women's cycling, told me.
Although many female outdoor athletes have left Afghanistan,
the ban immediately impacts ordinary women like Safi, who now cannot enjoy a
simple picnic. Prior to the Taliban's takeover, Safi enjoyed summer excursions
with friends and her husband to Paghman, a mountain town 20 miles northwest of
Kabul. Approaching the town, Safi would get excited as the sky "changed to
a clear blue." Kabul, meanwhile, was constantly covered by a layer of dust
and smog. Safi told me that she and friends would rent a sheet metal shed
overlooking the pristine Paghman River, which transfers snow melt from the
surrounding peaks. While her friends built a fire to grill kebab, Safi liked to
walk down to the river with a large watermelon bought from a roadside stand.
She would carefully place it between rocks to keep cool. In the afternoons, the
group would hike in the surrounding peaks, seeing how far up they could go.
Sometimes the friends would race each other--an adrenaline rush Safi said she
misses. "Spending time in nature calmed my mind and made me less stressed.
I had more energy at work and used to be more patient," Safi told me.
When the outdoor ban was announced, Safi and other women were
unsure of whether it only applied to walled-off parks in the cities, or if
mountain recreation spots like Paghman were also included. In recent months,
the Taliban's enforcement has made it clear that any outdoor recreation by
women will not be tolerated. I asked Safi if she had attempted to visit Paghman
since the law. She said stories were circulating of Taliban guards harassing
husbands for bringing their wives and female children to the outdoors--places
that only men are allowed to enjoy nowadays. "I am afraid of sitting in
the car with my friends, let alone going somewhere with them," Safi told
me. Another damaging element of the law is that women are now forbidden from
entering gymnasiums and indoor recreation areas. This has effectively closed
down gyms that catered only to women. Some Afghan women find the indoor
environment of a gym safer and more comfortable than outside, where stares from
men and catcalling are abundant. When Safi was a medical student a few years
ago, she was a regular gym goer. "Exercising is a need for a healthy body,
just like eating is," she told me. "Now as a doctor, I can't even ask
my patients to exercise because that's recommending an illegal activity."
Another young woman, whom I will refer to as Tamana to conceal
her identity, told me there were only ten gyms for women in Kabul, which has a
population of five million, but those gyms accounted for the well-being of a
lot of women. "Many [women] came to my gym on doctor recommendations to
manage chronic conditions like diabetes," she said. From people on the
ground, I also heard accounts of the Taliban turning away elderly women from
walking the hills in the city--outings that helped them maintain their health. The
ban on outdoor recreation has some groups worrying about a mounting mental
health crisis in the country. Even before the Taliban took power, Afghanistan
consistently ranked as the worst country for women, and the most unhappy
country in the world, owing to rampant poverty and insecurity. A 2022 UN article
warned about escalating suicide rates among Afghan women.
(A group of Afghan women in Kabul protest the Talban's ban on
education.)
Women for Afghan Women (WAW), a nonprofit that's dedicated to
protecting and promoting the rights of Afghan women, views the park and gym ban
as the last straw by the Taliban to alienate Afghan women. "These
restrictions not only dehumanize half of Afghanistan's population but also
jeopardize the mental health of millions of women who are forced into
unemployment and economic hardship, isolation, deprivation of education, and
societal humiliation," WAW said in a written statement. WAW repetitively
calls on the international community to "stand in solidarity with Afghan
women and to ensure their basic human rights are respected by the de-facto
authorities." The Taliban has shown little interest in reversing the ban,
forcing women in Afghanistan to either avoid outdoor places entirely or find
creative ways to sidestep the law. For exercise, Safi now walks the half hour
to her work--the Taliban have allowed women in some professions like medicine
and teaching to continue their jobs. But whenever she goes outside, she is
scared of being stopped by Taliban soldiers. "No matter how much I cover
myself, I fear they will find something to pick on," she said. I asked
Safi about the first place she would visit if the bans were lifted tomorrow.
"My birthplace, Dare Noor," she said, referencing the mountainous
district in Eastern Afghanistan, with peaks that tower above 14,000 feet. A
forest of pine and fir trees cover the steep mountainsides. Safi used to go
there with her husband during their marriage engagement. But for now, she is
restricted to the dusty streets of Kabul.
^ The Taliban have only created chaos, fear and death since
they retook Afghanistan nearly 2 years ago. Ordinary Afghans now face a scary
and deadly future and aren’t able to do basic things like be outside. ^
https://www.yahoo.com/lifestyle/life-under-afghanistan-ban-women-151613690.html
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