Berliner Boersenzeitung - Afghan resistance museum gets revamp under Taliban rule

EUR -
AED 4.315155
AFN 74.615627
ALL 95.702943
AMD 435.66376
ANG 2.1031
AOA 1078.642333
ARS 1633.239736
AUD 1.63275
AWG 2.114986
AZN 2.000534
BAM 1.961881
BBD 2.367069
BDT 144.201112
BGN 1.960007
BHD 0.443706
BIF 3495.602021
BMD 1.174992
BND 1.499168
BOB 8.12076
BRL 5.822443
BSD 1.175258
BTN 111.485395
BWP 15.971665
BYN 3.316449
BYR 23029.848609
BZD 2.363648
CAD 1.594217
CDF 2725.981936
CHF 0.917193
CLF 0.026898
CLP 1058.632906
CNY 8.023024
CNH 8.029862
COP 4296.512006
CRC 534.310841
CUC 1.174992
CUP 31.137295
CVE 111.033841
CZK 24.383324
DJF 208.819409
DKK 7.471964
DOP 69.811633
DZD 155.558466
EGP 62.894159
ERN 17.624884
ETB 184.474221
FJD 2.575697
FKP 0.865243
GBP 0.862803
GEL 3.154848
GGP 0.865243
GHS 13.154088
GIP 0.865243
GMD 86.356964
GNF 10313.498147
GTQ 8.978711
GYD 245.869941
HKD 9.205694
HNL 31.278571
HRK 7.534755
HTG 153.952951
HUF 364.475587
IDR 20357.916173
ILS 3.465023
IMP 0.865243
INR 111.524686
IQD 1539.239882
IRR 1545114.842731
ISK 143.760542
JEP 0.865243
JMD 184.150836
JOD 0.833055
JPY 184.037281
KES 151.785348
KGS 102.718416
KHR 4714.656772
KMF 493.496994
KPW 1057.494033
KRW 1732.288349
KWD 0.361063
KYD 0.979407
KZT 544.359967
LAK 25823.39354
LBP 105220.558545
LKR 375.611093
LRD 216.02167
LSL 19.575313
LTL 3.469447
LVL 0.710742
LYD 7.467089
MAD 10.849899
MDL 20.249234
MGA 4882.093173
MKD 61.706827
MMK 2467.482566
MNT 4206.906798
MOP 9.483182
MRU 46.988149
MUR 55.26045
MVR 18.159474
MWK 2046.250964
MXN 20.514075
MYR 4.664381
MZN 75.087876
NAD 19.575067
NGN 1615.403314
NIO 43.146129
NOK 10.908276
NPR 178.368055
NZD 1.992946
OMR 0.451663
PAB 1.175228
PEN 4.12152
PGK 5.09955
PHP 72.17449
PKR 327.529081
PLN 4.253619
PYG 7228.113358
QAR 4.281378
RON 5.198874
RSD 117.517746
RUB 87.906315
RWF 1717.838707
SAR 4.406491
SBD 9.457023
SCR 16.138062
SDG 705.580874
SEK 10.848492
SGD 1.495724
SHP 0.87725
SLE 28.934192
SLL 24638.996026
SOS 671.521919
SRD 44.0129
STD 24319.967813
STN 24.909836
SVC 10.283885
SYP 129.870017
SZL 19.57519
THB 38.267734
TJS 11.023569
TMT 4.118348
TND 3.386359
TOP 2.8291
TRY 53.087566
TTD 7.977476
TWD 37.196492
TZS 3060.85471
UAH 51.64013
UGX 4419.131067
USD 1.174992
UYU 46.869876
UZS 14026.464173
VES 574.119326
VND 30968.096425
VUV 139.596507
WST 3.214769
XAF 658.044429
XAG 0.015929
XAU 0.000257
XCD 3.175475
XCG 2.1181
XDR 0.816618
XOF 658.583087
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.41235
ZAR 19.660734
ZMK 10576.337257
ZMW 21.947622
ZWL 378.347033
  • CMSD

    0.1200

    23.25

    +0.52%

  • BCE

    0.1200

    23.9

    +0.5%

  • NGG

    -0.5200

    89.02

    -0.58%

  • RBGPF

    -1.1500

    62.6

    -1.84%

  • CMSC

    0.0000

    22.82

    0%

  • RIO

    0.2500

    100.73

    +0.25%

  • AZN

    -2.3650

    185.005

    -1.28%

  • RYCEF

    0.5000

    16.3

    +3.07%

  • GSK

    -0.5200

    51.79

    -1%

  • JRI

    0.0600

    13.05

    +0.46%

  • BCC

    -0.5800

    78.69

    -0.74%

  • RELX

    0.1400

    36.73

    +0.38%

  • BP

    -0.7300

    46.65

    -1.56%

  • VOD

    0.3000

    16.1

    +1.86%

  • BTI

    0.5400

    59.34

    +0.91%

Afghan resistance museum gets revamp under Taliban rule
Afghan resistance museum gets revamp under Taliban rule / Photo: Wakil KOHSAR - AFP

Afghan resistance museum gets revamp under Taliban rule

An Afghan who fought against Soviet forces still visits a museum celebrating the resistance, but, in keeping with rules by the Taliban authorities, the displays have undergone notable changes recently.

Text size:

Saaduddeen, 67, travels each month to the Jihad Museum, a building of glittering blue and white mosaics over the hills of Herat in western Afghanistan.

More than a million Afghans were killed and millions more were forced into exile during the decade-long Soviet occupation, which ended in 1989.

"The Russians came to Afghanistan with jets, choppers, tanks; it was very violent," said Saaduddeen, who requested his surname not be published for security reasons.

"I was just a young guy, but I wanted to stand for the independence of Afghanistan," he added.

Out of 21 fighters, or mujahideen, in his group, only seven survived.

At the foot of the museum, a stone statue symbolises the departure of the last soldier, ending a conflict which killed 15,000 Soviet troops.

- Figurines with no faces -

Inside the building, a display made by academics at Herat University's art department recalls the suffering of civilians and the struggle for independence.

There are plaster figurines of women throwing stones at pro-Soviet government forces, or tending to wounded fighters, with one passing a rifle to a man.

A teenager draws his slingshot, while fighters holding prayer beads take control of a Soviet tank, and peasants clutching pitchforks face Soviet soldiers.

When the museum opened in 2010, and for many years after, the figurines showed the faces of these women and men.

But today, their mouths, noses and eyes have been removed, with beards and hair left on the men. The heads of animals have also been covered with a layer of plaster.

The Taliban government, which took power for the second time in 2021, has banned depictions of living things under its strict interpretation of Islamic law.

The Ministry for the Propagation of Virtue and Prevention of Vice, the government's morality police, said in 2024 that this rule should be gradually applied nationwide.

It was not clear precisely when the museum changes were made, as staff declined to comment on the issue.

"Now it's less personal, and it touches us less," said Saaduddeen.

But it's better than nothing, he thought: "It's good that the museum exists."

- Heroes' hall disappears -

The garden is still filled with the remnants of war: a Soviet fighter jet, helicopters, tanks, pieces of heavy artillery and military vehicles.

But a gallery originally conceived as a hall of fame has been removed, according to a comparison with pictures taken in the 2010s.

It once displayed large portraits of mujahideen commanders, who later fought against each other in a civil war that resulted in the Taliban taking power in 1996.

Among them was Ahmad Shah Massoud, who fought the Taliban and was killed weeks before the group was ousted from power in 2001.

Families are also absent because, with very rare exceptions, women are not allowed to enter. "It would be better if entire families could come because this is a very important part of our history," a visitor told AFP on condition of anonymity.

One of the museum's most emblematic employees, known as Sheikh Abdullah, also no longer walks its rooms.

He went to Afghanistan as a Soviet officer named Bakhretdin Khakimov and suffered a head wound in 1985, but was treated and saved by the mujahideen.

Upon his death in 2022, the Taliban government's spokesman highlighted Khakimov's life story and offered condolences. He now rests, as he wished, in a flower-adorned grave on the heights above the museum.

(A.Lehmann--BBZ)