He had previously walked in Iran, Pakistan and Nepal and
considered this outing ‘adventure’ to connect his walk in Iran with that in
Pakistan. He was advised by several that he was going to his grave. The Taliban
had left Herat a mere six weeks before he arrived, and there were still plenty
of sympathisers lurking in the hinterland. Indeed, ‘twelve foreign war
reporters had been killed in Afghanistan in the previous two months’ (p59)
Stewart seemed reasonably well equipped as he speaks some French,
Persian (Dari), and Indonesian. He has also studied Latin, Greek, Russian,
Chinese, Serbo-Croat, Urdu, and Nepali languages, though he reckons the last
three are ‘very rusty’.
He had to trudge through snow a lot of the way, over
inhospitable terrain, from small village to small village, following the Hari
Rud River. He met a fascinating assortment of people. Some days he would
subsist solely on bread and rice, and attempted to sterilise drinking water with
chlorine tablets. The journey took him 36 days, and while reading this I felt I was there much of the time!
He came across the Minaret of Jam,
re-discovered in its isolated place in 1943.
Now a UNESCO World Heritage site, it stands 65m (213ft) and its provenance is a mystery, though it is believed to date from at least the 1100s. Illegal digging that began in 2002, while Stewart passed through, has uncovered a great deal of archaeological remains, suggesting perhaps here lay the lost city of the Turquoise Mountain, which was razed by Genghis.
Minaret of Jam - Wikipedia commons
Now a UNESCO World Heritage site, it stands 65m (213ft) and its provenance is a mystery, though it is believed to date from at least the 1100s. Illegal digging that began in 2002, while Stewart passed through, has uncovered a great deal of archaeological remains, suggesting perhaps here lay the lost city of the Turquoise Mountain, which was razed by Genghis.
‘Genghis obliterated the other great cities of the eastern
Islamic world, massacring their scholars and artisans, turning the irrigated
lands of central Asia into a waterless wilderness and dealing a blow to the
Muslim world from which it barely recovered.’ (p174)
On page 143 he is introduced to Babur the dog; in fact he
named the animal, in honour of Babur in whose footsteps he now trod. Babur had
golden fur, black brindle and white round the muzzle, and was a mastiff, its
ears and tail having been lopped off for fighting. It had very few teeth and
weighed about ten stone. The village mastiffs were bred to fight and guard
against wolves, dogs and other humans. Thereafter, he accompanied Rory for almost
all of 700km to Kabul.
Throughout, his prose is descriptive and often eloquent: ‘The
snow lay heavy on the thin black branches of apple and mulberry trees and
formed a thick crust on the drystone walls…The crust glittered with shards of
light as though fragments of glass had been scattered over the powder.’
He points out that there were a very large number of faiths
in medieval Muslim Asia. ‘In the mountains of western Iran and Iraq there are
still Yezidis, whose syncretic faith combines Islam, Zoroastrianism and
Christianity and centres around the worship of a fallen angel in the form of a
peacock.’ (footnote, p178) And now, some
ten years after this was written, these same Yazidis have been persecuted,
massacred and driven from their homes by the deranged adherents of the so-called
IS.
He did not carry a detailed map as he didn’t want to be thought
a spy. Instead, he obtained letters of introduction from one village head to
the next on the route. ‘Day One: Commandant Maududi in Badgah, Day Two: Abdul
Rauf Ghafuri in Daulatyar, Day Three and so on…’ He’d recited this regularly, a
song-of-the-places-in-between as a
map, using the list as credentials. ‘Almost everyone recognised the names…’
Another fine description: ‘By the Hari Rud were tall stands
of bushes that resembled dogwood. Their branches were orange and yellow and
they rose like stands of flame out of the river ice. Silver trunked willows,
too, with dark brown buds and a few pale gold leaves that clattered like cicada
wings in the freezing wind. As the snow melted in the sun, the Hari Rud became
at first a clean turquoise ice sheet and then a torrent of black-blue water…’
(p224)
There were moments of suspense, when he was accosted by
gruff men carrying weapons, wanting to know why he was walking. And there’s
humour as well – his first encounter with the dog Babur, and this: ‘They had
wrapped their black turbans under their chins and over their ears, framing
faces that were lined, tanned and bearded. Villagers don’t wash in the winter.
There was a strong smell.’ (p227)
Many of the places he stayed were war-damaged, the people poor.
Yet he received the generosity of some feudal chief, and was always glad of the
protein to help him through the journey’s ordeal. He understood that meat was
very precious and not for a dog… (p229) ‘Everyone was hungry and carried a gun
and this was not beneficial for the wildlife.’ (p229) The privation of some is
hard to imagine. A chief’s wife stated: ‘I was born in this village. I am the
fifth and only surviving wife and I have never been more than an hour’s journey
by foot from this village in the forty years that I have been alive.’ (p241)
In his acknowledgement at the front of the book, he
expresses his gratitude to the many individuals who helped him, who in fact
saved his life, and the book teems with them: ‘… every feudal chief seemed to
see it as his obligation to provide me with an escort to the next chief, so
that I was being passed like a parcel down the line. These men were willing to
walk a full day through the snow to accompany me and then a full day back in
the other direction. I always insisted they took some money, but they were clear
that they were doing it for me as a traveller and it was sometimes difficult to
persuade them to accept.’ (230)
He does not shun away from the terrible toll suffered by the
population: ‘Yakawlang had been one of the largest towns in Hazarajat with a
literate and politically engaged population. The Taliban attacked the town in 1998 and
executed 400 men against the clinic wall. Since then 75% of the population of
Yakawlang had either died or fled.’ (p247)
Magical prose again, this time at sunset: ‘… a chain of
frozen lakes. The waterfall had frozen into bloated stalactites, steaked with
intense copper oxide green and turquoise blue and sulphur yellow, and creamy
with snow where they struck the water. The low sun sank into the straight cleft
of the cliff behind me. The coloured alchemy of the ice drained into twilight.’
(p252)
There are poignant moments too, notably when an impromptu musical
session is started up in the village: ‘… had not been able to hear music
performed in public during the four years of the Taliban regime.’ Eloquent, the
sadness of the tune and tone and in the expression of the listeners, ‘and so
too was the beauty shared between us.’ (p275)
A superb book from a remarkable man.
*
The Turquoise Mountain Foundation, founded in 2006, is a
non-profit, non-governmental organization specializing in urban regeneration,
business development, and education in traditional arts and architecture. It
provides jobs, skills, and a renewed sense of national pride to Afghan women
and men. Rory Stewart was the Executive Chairman until shortly after his
election to the UK Parliament in May 2010. The Wikipedia page lists considerable
good work that has been done to date (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turquoise_Mountain_Foundation).
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