Low Graphics Site
White bar
.: Latest News :. .: News in Pictures :.
Dawn e-paper
Daily SectionMarker

Misc SectionMarker

Horoscope Recipes Weekly SectionMarker

Weekly SectionMarker



Pakistan's Internet Magazine
Herald
Dawn GroupMarker

Archive, Search, Feedback & HelpMarker

Weather

FrontPage National International Local Business KSE Forex Sports Editorial Opinion Letters Features Today's Cartoon TV Guide Cowasjee Ayaz Irfan Hussain Review Dawn Magazine Young World Images Dawn Group Subscription To Advertise

DINA
Previous Story DAWN - the Internet Edition Next Story

August 31, 2006 Thursday Sha'aban 6, 1427


The sound of music opens new world to Afghan girls



By Terry Friel


MAZAR-I-SHARIF: The lilt of a girl singing of homecoming blends pleasantly with a cacophony of different melodies from keyboard, guitar and drums in a music school in northern Afghanistan.

The female students, wearing burqas with their faces uncovered, chuckle and joke as they practise in Afghanistan’s first women-only music school, relishing in their new found freedom.

Just a few years ago, music was banned by the Taliban government. Musicians fled the country and women were barred from schools or leaving home without a male relative.

Now, this six-month project at the Nagashand Fine Art Gallery in the city of Mazar-i-Sharif, near the border with Uzbekistan, is teaching 18 girls and women to become music teachers.

The women are taught singing and how to play a range of modern and traditional musical instruments.

“As a child, I liked music — I wanted to prove women can play music,” said 14-year-old Zahra Amiri, the youngest student at the school. “I want to be a musician some day.”

Her sister, 25-year-old Masoma Mazari, heads the project and like Amiri is learning the electric keyboard, or what they simply call ‘the Casio’.

OLD FEARS: But the $9,200 project, backed by the United Nations and local aid groups, still battles to overcome old fears.

“Music has had a very bad history in Afghanistan, so many people are against it,” Amiri said, white platform shoes peeking out under the robes of her black burqa.

“Some families are afraid their girls will turn bad,” she said. “But music is necessary for our soul. It calms our soul.”

All the students, ranging in age from 14 to 30, lived for years in Iran as refugees after their families fled Afghanistan. Afghan women who stayed during the civil war and the Taliban time are still reluctant to join.

“All the girls here are from Iran — they have grown up in a free environment,” Ms Mazari said.

The only student who remained in Afghanistan during the Taliban’s rule quit after just a few weeks due to social pressures.

She had appeared on television in a song contest in Kabul, coming third, but was harassed in Mazar when she returned.

“People here made fun of her. Now she is afraid to come to lessons anymore,” said Amiri.

The influence of returning refugees, especially from the West and countries such as Iran, has helped break down barriers and bring about some change.

Women are making gains. They sit in parliament, head ministries and some are finding jobs outside traditional occupations for women such as teaching and nursing.

But even in major cities, many still wear the burqa in public and in rural areas are subject to strict tradition.

Amiri and Mazari had never seen Afghanistan until they returned two years ago to Mazar-i-Sharif, a dusty city on the hot northern plains known for its hashish, carpets and Hazrat Ali mosque.

Their family, including Mazari’s husband, is supportive of their musical endeavours. But she still thinks it is too soon to allow boys to join the music school.

“It would create problems if boys and girls study together,” Mazari said.

“Some women have been separate for so long during the fighting it is very difficult for them to come to study with males,” she added.

But the two teachers at the school are men.

One, Khalil Bakhtari, 45, fled to the United Arab Emirates after the Taliban took power in 1996.

“I was very depressed when the Taliban came, because we could not teach music,” he said, fiddling with his harmonium. “If the Taliban knew I was a musician, they would have punished me.

“We wanted the Taliban defeated so that we could teach music again,” he said.

Mr Bakhtari and his colleague, Nadair Kharimi, 33, teach about 10 instruments, ranging from the saxophone and electric keyboard to tabla drums and the ancient Afghani robab guitar.

A teacher for 15 years, Bakhtari said he was frequently asked by local women to set up a music school after his return.

But he never had the resources — his harmoniums, for example, cost $300 each in a country where the average annual income is about $200.

Then the United Nations and local charities stepped in to bring music back to Afghani women after years of Taliban rule. “We are free. We can do anything. We can play music again,” he said. —Reuters






Previous Story Top of Page Next Story

Seprater
Contributions
Privacy Policy
© DAWN Group of Newspapers, 2006