Scottish Daily Mail

Love in a hot (and dangerous) climate

JANE SHILLING

- By Heidi Kingstone

SAMUEL JOHNSON once wrote that ‘every man thinks meanly of himself for not having been a soldier’. Perhaps the modern female equivalent of that dream of military heroism is the job of foreign correspond­ent in a war zone, which has a certain gritty glamour.

Canadian journalist Heidi Kingstone has reported from an impressive­ly long list of global trouble spots, including Sierra Leone, Darfur, Israel-Palestine and Iraq.

From 2007 until 2011, she lived in Afghanista­n, embedding herself in local culture and writing about everything from shopping in Kabul to the 2010 Badakhshan massacre, in which ten foreign aid workers were murdered.

Kingstone’s preparatio­ns for her stay in Kabul included ‘stockpilin­g lots of beauty products to combat the unforgivin­g climate’. When she arrived, on a bitter February day, her impression was ‘of a city covered in mud . . . like being transporte­d back to the Stone Age’.

In 2007, ISAF, the NATO-led mission to bring peace and security to Afghanista­n, had been in place for six years, attracting stupendous quantities of foreign cash, as well as Western journalist­s, diplomats, aid workers, mercenarie­s and other oddballs in search of excitement, a purpose or some missing part of themselves.

Kingstone seems to have felt instantly at home in this motley company.

Plenty of Western commentato­rs have tried, with varying degrees of success, to give a cogent account of Afghanista­n’s violent history and tormented present. But Kingstone’s interest is in the particular, rather than the analytical.

Her book is a series of c ol ourful postcards, detailing her encounters with the place and its remarkable characters.

It wasn’t just the Afghan people who i ntrigued Kingstone. She was equally fascinated by the Western men she met, including a gun-running former American army officer, who asked if he might leave something at her house, only to deposit two rocketprop­elled grenades in her front garden.

The prospect of imminent danger notoriousl­y leads people to fall in love — and Kingstone was far from immune.

Nathaniel was not an obvious candidate for a passionate affair: a fundamenta­list Christian with a ‘wholesome spouse’ and three young children, he wooed her with a lapis lazuli necklace.

‘This intertwini­ng is the very thing I wanted to avoid,’ Kingstone protests. But too late! ‘The intellectu­al has given way to the emotional and the primeval.’ Inevitably, they ended up having ‘really, really bad sex’.

A second lover, Paul, seemed an even worse prospect. A death-obsessed sniper, he took her to the U.S. on a romantic road trip down Route 66, only to spend several days on a course dedicated to improving his shooting skills. ‘I know he is not the man for me,’ Kingstone reflected.

In the end, Afghanista­n wasn’t the place for her, either. ‘As much as I loved my time in Afghanista­n . . . I knew I had to leave,’ she writes.

Like so many others who arrived in Afghanista­n wanting to make a difference, Kingstone left disappoint­ed, but indelibly changed by her experience, ‘always missing it, never feeling as alive as when [I was] there’.

One friend left two rocket propelled grenades in her front garden

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