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Trip to Mafia Island booked. Can't wait to swim with whale sharks.
The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees administers camps sheltering a vast population of displaced people. These largest camps together house nearly two million people.
Saada is a resilient woman. She lost seven of her ten children at a young age, her husband thirteen years ago and now, her country. She was reluctant to leave at first. Even when the bombing started in her home region, she just continued with her daily routine: "I was sitting outside, sorting the olives and the plane was above me. They called and yelled from the house for me to come inside, but I told them 'why? The plane doesn't want anything from me; I am not going to fight it with olives!'"
Artists working with their surroundings, via demilked.com
Credits: Natalia Rak, Oak Oak, (pictures 2, 3, 4, 5) Banksy, Mentalgassi, Anonymous, Sandrine Boulet, Nuxuno XÀn,
A Congolese orphan who grew up in Gihembe Refugee Camp becomes the first refugee front desk manager at a hotel in northern Rwanda.
One of the friendliest hotel managers in the world...for sure!
She remembers the moment. The photographer took her picture. She remembers her anger. The man was a stranger. She had never been photographed before. Until they met again 17 years later, she had not been photographed since.
The photographer remembers the moment too. The light was soft. The refugee camp in Pakistan was a sea of tents. Inside the school tent he noticed her first. Sensing her shyness, he approached her last. She told him he could take her picture. âI didnât think the photograph of the girl would be different from anything else I shot that day,â he recalls of that morning in 1984 spent documenting the ordeal of Afghanistanâs refugees.
The portrait by Steve McCurry turned out to be one of those images that sears the heart, and in June 1985 it ran on the cover of this magazine. Her eyes are sea green. They are haunted and haunting, and in them you can read the tragedy of a land drained by war. She became known around National Geographic as the âAfghan girl,â and for 17 years no one knew her name.
In January a team from National Geographic Television & Filmâs EXPLORER brought McCurry to Pakistan to search for the girl with green eyes. They showed her picture around Nasir Bagh, the still standing refugee camp near Peshawar where the photograph had been made. A teacher from the school claimed to know her name. A young woman named Alam Bibi was located in a village nearby, but McCurry decided it wasnât her.
No, said a man who got wind of the search. He knew the girl in the picture. They had lived at the camp together as children. She had returned to Afghanistan years ago, he said, and now lived in the mountains near Tora Bora. He would go get her.
It took three days for her to arrive. Her village is a six-hour drive and three-hour hike across a border that swallows lives. When McCurry saw her walk into the room, he thought to himself: This is her.
Names have power, so let us speak of hers. Her name is Sharbat Gula, and she is Pashtun, that most warlike of Afghan tribes. It is said of the Pashtun that they are only at peace when they are at war, and her eyesâthen and nowâburn with ferocity. She is 28, perhaps 29, or even 30. No one, not even she, knows for sure. Stories shift like sand in a place where no records exist.
Time and hardship have erased her youth. Her skin looks like leather. The geometry of her jaw has softened. The eyes still glare; that has not softened. âSheâs had a hard life,â said McCurry. âSo many here share her story.â Consider the numbers. Twenty-three years of war, 1.5 million killed, 3.5 million refugees: This is the story of Afghanistan in the past quarter century.
Now, consider this photograph of a young girl with sea green eyes. Her eyes challenge ours. Most of all, they disturb. We cannot turn away.
âThere is not one family that has not eaten the bitterness of war,â a young Afghan merchant said in the 1985 National Geographic story that appeared with Sharbatâs photograph on the cover. She was a child when her country was caught in the jaws of the Soviet invasion. A carpet of destruction smothered countless villages like hers. She was perhaps six when Soviet bombing killed her parents. By day the sky bled terror. At night the dead were buried. And always, the sound of planes, stabbing her with dread.
âWe left Afghanistan because of the fighting,â said her brother, Kashar Khan, filling in the narrative of her life. He is a straight line of a man with a raptor face and piercing eyes. âThe Russians were everywhere. They were killing people. We had no choice.â
Shepherded by their grandmother, he and his four sisters walked to Pakistan. For a week they moved through mountains covered in snow, begging for blankets to keep warm.
âYou never knew when the planes would come,â he recalled. âWe hid in caves.â
The journey that began with the loss of their parents and a trek across mountains by foot ended in a refugee camp tent living with strangers.
âRural people like Sharbat find it difficult to live in the cramped surroundings of a refugee camp,â explained Rahimullah Yusufzai, a respected Pakistani journalist who acted as interpreter for McCurry and the television crew. âThere is no privacy. You live at the mercy of other people.â More than that, you live at the mercy of the politics of other countries. âThe Russian invasion destroyed our lives,â her brother said.
It is the ongoing tragedy of Afghanistan. Invasion. Resistance. Invasion. Will it ever end? âEach change of government brings hope,â said Yusufzai. âEach time, the Afghan people have found themselves betrayed by their leaders and by outsiders professing to be their friends and saviors.â
In the mid-1990s, during a lull in the fighting, Sharbat Gula went home to her village in the foothills of mountains veiled by snow. To live in this earthen-colored village at the end of a thread of path means to scratch out an existence, nothing more. There are terraces planted with corn, wheat, and rice, some walnut trees, a stream that spills down the mountain (except in times of drought), but no school, clinic, roads, or running water.
Here is the bare outline of her day. She rises before sunrise and prays. She fetches water from the stream. She cooks, cleans, does laundry. She cares for her children; they are the center of her life. Robina is 13. Zahida is three. Alia, the baby, is one. A fourth daughter died in infancy. Sharbat has never known a happy day, her brother says, except perhaps the day of her marriage.
Her husband, Rahmat Gul, is slight in build, with a smile like the gleam of a lantern at dusk. She remembers being married at 13. No, he says, she was 16. The match was arranged.
He lives in Peshawar (there are few jobs in Afghanistan) and works in a bakery. He bears the burden of medical bills; the dollar a day he earns vanishes like smoke. Her asthma, which cannot tolerate the heat and pollution of Peshawar in summer, limits her time in the city and with her husband to the winter. The rest of the year she lives in the mountains.
At the age of 13, Yusufzai, the journalist, explained, she would have gone into purdah, the secluded existence followed by many Islamic women once they reach puberty.
âWomen vanish from the public eye,â he said. In the street she wears a plum-colored burka, which walls her off from the world and from the eyes of any man other than her husband. âIt is a beautiful thing to wear, not a curse,â she says.
Faced by questions, she retreats into the black shawl wrapped around her face, as if by doing so she might will herself to evaporate. The eyes flash anger. It is not her custom to subject herself to the questions of strangers.
Had she ever felt safe?
âNo. But life under the Taliban was better. At least there was peace and order.â
Had she ever seen the photograph of herself as a girl?
âNo.â
She can write her name, but cannot read. She harbors the hope of education for her children. âI want my daughters to have skills,â she said. âI wanted to finish school but could not. I was sorry when I had to leave.â
Education, it is said, is the light in the eye. There is no such light for her. It is possibly too late for her 13-year-old daughter as well, Sharbat Gula said. The two younger daughters still have a chance.
The reunion between the woman with green eyes and the photographer was quiet. On the subject of married women, cultural tradition is strict. She must not lookâand certainly must not smileâat a man who is not her husband. She did not smile at McCurry. Her expression, he said, was flat. She cannot understand how her picture has touched so many. She does not know the power of those eyes.
Such knife-thin odds. That she would be alive. That she could be found. That she could endure such loss. Surely, in the face of such bitterness the spirit could atrophy. How, she was asked, had she survived?
The answer came wrapped in unshakable certitude.
âIt was,â said Sharbat Gula, âthe will of God.â
By Cathy Newman Photograph by Steve McCurry.
Lupita Nyongâo lands her first ever Vogue magazine cover.
Whilst not a throwback post, this is still history in the making. Sheâs won multiple awards, is the new face of beauty brand Lancome, has acquired the rights to produce Chimamanda Adichieâs âAmericanahâ, bringing it to celluloid, is starring in the latest Star Wars flick and now, sheâs on the cover of American Vogue.
If you, like us, follow her on instagram you probably noticed that she was recently in Morocco. Whilst we know she was taking a vacation, we also now know that Nyongâo was hard at work shooting for her spread in Vogue, photographed by Mikael Jansson.
Donât quote us on this but we think sheâs the first ever Kenyan actress to land this cover and one of the few African women to do so, aside from Iman and Alek Wek.
Read about her interview with Vogue, to appear in the July issue.
All the tools you need to set up a refugee rights organization or program, manage its growth, mitigate risks and overcome challenges.
The Refugee Project by Hyperakt and Ekene Ijeoma, visualizes UNHCR refugee data and UN population data to tell the stories of refugee movements from 1975 to 2012.
We the ones who long for other seas We the ones who dream of other forests We the ones who sense other gods We are others here We are others there We are others. We who see other seas We who worship other gods We who live in other forests We are alone here We are alone there We are loneliness. We who breathe other airs We who intone other songs We who invoke other gods We live dead here We die alive there We are dead. Loneliness! You are ambushed in death. Life! You are ambushed in loneliness. Death! You are ambushed in life. We are ambushed. Letâs cut down those forests Letâs look for new seas Letâs invent our gods Letâs intone new songs We are.
âWeâ, a poem by Afro-Costa Rican writer Eulalia Bernard.
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Photo Credit: Amanda Mullikin
Nothing is official in Rwanda without the proper stamp.
A haiku from the article: An Inconvenient Diet
Thai Cry Sky Fly
Last night I dreamt I was on a really cool airplane. It had big open spaces and you could walk around and sit at bar tables while you were flying, but when it came time to get off the flight, I couldnât find my luggage. I looked everywhere. My family got off, but I talked the flight attendants into letting me stay on the plane while they were boarding so I could keep looking. Then all of the sudden, I realize that we were taking off again and the flight was headed to ThailandâŠnine hours away. I was stuck on that stupid plane for nine hours just so I could then go back another nine hours because I couldnât find my carry-on. That was a horrible feeling. I remember thinking that this was the worst trip to Thailand that I had ever taken. And when I got to Thailand it sucked. Not at all how I remember Thailand to be.Â
There are some exception circumstances where you might want to forget about the "don't book too early" warning and book your flight much earlier than 54 days in advance.
The magic number for Africa....166 days (5.5 months). Who really knows their travel plans 5.5 months in advance????
Good Morning Kigali!
Conundrums
If dudes are expected to have a lot of sex
But ladies are expected to stay virgins until marriage
But homosexuality is bad
Iâm really confused who dudes are supposed to be having all that sex with
Guys I got it
Society is literally telling dudes to go fuck themselves