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The late Ahmad Shah Massoud, the Lion
of Panjsher, who fought against the Soviet and Taliban armies,
remains a cult figure in many parts of Afghanistan.
In September 2001, when I visited Massoud's
temporary mausoleum on the top of a mountain overlooking his
beloved Panjsher Valley, the place attracted numerous mujahed
fighters who came there to pray and remember their slain leader
before they left for the front to fight the Taliban enemies.
Massoud, an ethnic Tajik, was assassinated
in Khwaja Bahaudin by supposedly Arab terrorists who pretended
to be journalists keen on interviewing Afghanistan's most charismatic
opposition leader who looked remarkably like Bob Dylan. The assassins set off their bomb
during the interview that they were finally granted. The fact
that Massoud was killed by "journalists" was a great
obstacle to the work of international reporters in Afghanistan.
People looked at all journalists with suspicion as if we all
were after their leaders or were in some way responsible for
Massoud's death. Needless to say that Arab journalists were not
allowed to come to Afghanistan, unless they were able to present
Russian or other passports, which often was the case. Afghan
authorities did not allow ethnic Chechens - and legitimate journalists
- from Russia to visit their country either, because there were
many Chechen fighters among the Taliban. But the most hated nation
was Pakistan because of its real or alleged support for the Taliban.
With the number of journalists swelling by the day, tensions
were high sometimes, so high in fact, that the chief mullah of
Taloqan in Takhar Province devoted a large part of his Friday
sermon to khabarnigar, or journalists, in the middle of
November 2001 during the battle for Kunduz. The mullah said not
all journalists were terrorists (thanks!) and local people should
help them in their work to show the world the truth about the
war. His appeal, of course, did not stop robbers from taking
the life of one of our colleagues.
Massoud, a
wealthy man who sold gemstones produced in his own quarries to
buy weapons for his militia, was respected by other warlords
and ordinary people alike. Ustad Ata, commander of the Tajik
militia in Mazar-e-Sharif, as well as other "generals"
of numerous self-styled armies invariably had Massoud portraits
in their offices and wore the wool pakul hat that came
to be associated with the style embraced by the Lion of Panjsher.
Following Massoud's death, the people's admiration for him continued
to grow. Drivers posted huge Massoud portraits on their windshields:
it remains a mystery to me how they managed to drive without
seeing the road in front of them. Black flags and Massoud posters
were placed on tanks as they were prepared for an attack on the
Taliban. In fact, when we first flew into Afghanistan in September
2001, our helicopter had a huge box with various Massoud posters
printed in Tajikistan. The love for Massoud also inspired carpet-makers
to produce rugs with his images. Street vendors in Mazar-e-Sharif
would ask about a hundred dollars for a small hand-made carpet
with the praying leader.
To say this love is universal is not true,
of course. Apart from Massoud's rivals and their supporters from
other clans and ethnic groups, even some Tajiks blamed him for
the drawn-out civil conflict in the country and for numerous
war crimes. And one Afghan man bluntly answered my question about
Massoud with another question, "How can you love a man who
didn't build a single bridge or house, but destroyed hundreds
of them?" But this attitude is an exception.
Ahmad Shah Massoud was the
first Afghan leader to have signed a petition calling for the
emancipation of women. Northern Afghanistan, October 2001.
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