“A Bed of Red Flowers: In Search of My Afghanistan,” Nelofer Pazira

Posted May 28th, 2007 by Antonia Malchik

In her travel/memoir A Bed of Red Flowers, Pazira, a filmaker and journalist based in Toronto, shows an Afghanistan that most Western readers would find unrecognizable. Born in 1973, Pazira grew up largely in Kabul, and her family escaped first to Pakistan in 1989, then as refugees to Canada, toward the end of the Soviet occupation of her home country.

This is an important book, not for its literary quality, but for the delicacy with which it shows the force of two competing outside powers pulling a country to pieces. The Soviets tugged at one end of the rope, and the American-backed mujahidin at the other. Between them, they pulled a knot so tight that they left a country full of innocent people gasping for space to think, to breathe, to live. As the Soviets pushed themselves into Afghanistan, the other side took further refuge in more extreme religion, to mark themselves as truly holy warriors, and it was they whom the Americans supported almost unconditionally. In 2001, the U.S. government pointed to the Taliban as evil enemies, but neglected to mention that it was the American government that armed these people, put them in power, and then turned a blind eye to their extreme religious oppression and moral corruption.

The most engaging narratives involve Pazira’s childhood. As she grows up and becomes a refugee, she weaves these tales in with her secret return to Afghanistan as an adult, searching for her girlhood friend whose letters had stopped arriving. She later co-performed and co-produced the movie Kandahar, loosely based on this failed search for her friend Diana.

The book starts out slowly enough (despite the tale of the child Pazira visiting her father in prison), exacerbated by the journalistic distance that Pazira excels at, that I had serious doubts about whether it was going to be any good or not. Too many factual paragraphs about who was in charge and how they came to be there, too little narrative that kept my imagination with her. But I kept reading because I thought it would at least be educational, given my never-quenched interest in the Middle East. Luckily, Pazira finally allows her world to unfold its own drama, and the book, rather than keeping up a tedious tone, suddenly opened out into a real story — a childhood of love, fear, anger, repression, countrywide violence and war, and a simmering resentment against Afghanistan’s occupiers, Soviet soldiers.

Pazira grew up hating the Soviet Union and anything to do with Russia. On a personal note, I found her experiences the tiniest bit eerie. While my schoolmates in Montana speculated on the spying capabilities of my father’s thick Russian accent and my parents discussed the ‘Cold War’ only in terms of its stupidity, Pazira watched Soviet tanks rumble through her streets and Soviet planes fly overhead. The sight of them nurtured an understandable loathing, anger, and patriotism in her heart. From before she was ten years old, she had learned to love the mujahidin, the brave men who were fighting for her country’s freedom from the hated occupiers. When she got older, she joined an underground resistance movement that supported the holy soldiers, fighting for liberation.

What’s important about the book is not just the historical detail of the proxy war fought between the United States and the Soviet Union on the land of this tiny, poor country, but the striking picture of modern Afghani life before the Taliban came to power. We in the West are used to knowing only what we see on television. So after the U.S. attacked Afghanistan in 2001, we were shown pictures of women in burkas and told they had no access to education or health care. What we weren’t told is that, only ten years ago, before the U.S.-backed mujahidin came to power, women dressed ‘normally’ (including mini-skirts and make-up), and went to school just like the boys did. Pazira grew up in a modern Afghan culture that knew little of these ultra-repressive quasi-religious practices.

But she did grow up knowing the fear of attack and the rage of an occupied land. A point came when it was almost certain that Pazira’s father and some other relatives would be arrested for suspicious activity, or perhaps suspicious thought. Her father, who had many times said he would never abandon his country, finally, in weariness, agreed to her mother’s begging that they leave. So they did, traveling with a smuggler to a refugee camp in Pakistan.

And it was here that Pazira’s illusions about her heroes the mujahidin were crushed. Her very first day in refugee lodging, she peeked out a garden gate and was shot at — not to injure, but to warn. “Never, ever go outside,” said her frightened hostess. “If they see you without your hair covered, or without a man, they’ll shoot at you.” Pazira was enraged. In Kabul, she had gone to school, studied — rebelled against memorizing Marx and learning Russian, sure, but her education was never limited because she was a woman — and she had dressed as she pleased. Most important, she had believed in the holy war, the mujahidin, the people who, like her, loved her land and fought for it. And she found, in the end, that not only were they narrow, cruel people, but that they considered her a second-class citizen, hardly a person at all.

When she was growing up, says Pazira, “I was fascinated by the word ‘mujahidin.’ Because they were fighting the Russians, I supported them all, unconditionally. Now it appears that, like so many of my friends and classmates, I was staring at a looking glass. The mujahidin I believed in are no longer a reality. I’m beginning to see a different face of jihad.”

Pazira learned about bickering warlords, about the U.S. backing and arming of some of the worst, most inhumane men fighting the Soviets. It was these people who later took over her country. After fleeing to Canada, she received infrequent letters from a friend still in Kabul. Even before the Taliban came to power, women were forced out of schools and hospitals, under severe head coverings, and into their homes. The warlords fought among one another and, just like the Soviets, killed the innocent people in between.

There are no easy answers in this book, except perhaps one. A friend of Pazira’s, an older man, points out that, while historians try to make war a story of strategy, of battles won and battles lost, those facts are simply the window dressing, something to make sense of war. What war actually is, is destruction, despair, death, and the anger of those caught between — a story of lives lost and destroyed, of a land ripped apart.

(This review refers to the paperback edition released in 2006 in the U.S. It is still in print, but Amazon.com and Amazon.co.uk have very few copies — Amazon.ca is a better source, or, as I always do, you can find anything you want worldwide at AbeBooks.)

2 Responses to ““A Bed of Red Flowers: In Search of My Afghanistan,” Nelofer Pazira”

  1. Steve Davey Says:

    This book sounds really interesting. Too often we in the West look at the people of this region as less important than our own rising casualty tolls. Books like this give a human face to the masses of long suffering people and also the impact of our foreign policies over the years. If you can’t track down this book though, then try the Kite Runner - which also gives some insight into the long problems of Afganistan.

    S

  2. Antonia Says:

    Too true. Although I thought I knew the basic facts of America’s role in shaping the Taliban, this book really opened my eyes to the bigger story.

    Also, having recently edited a textbook chapter on the battles of the American Civil War, my thoughts about the problems with “history education” (which might be called “war education”) were clarified far more eloquently than I put them myself.

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