The Guardian (USA)

Freedom on slopes: the women skiers of Afghanista­n – photo essay

- Charlie Faulkner; photograph­s by Rick Findler

It is 6.30am and Nazira Khairzad, 18, and her older sister Nazima, 19, are sat with their family trying to eat the spread of breakfast laid out in front of them, despite their nerves. It is the start of the two-day Afghan Ski Challenge in the central highland province of Bamyan, and the women’s race is kicking off in just a few hours’ time. Not only are the pair the ones to watch but, as soon as they are on the slopes, they are one another’s direct competitio­n.

“I’m nervous but I think I have a good chance of placing first this year,” says Nazira. “That’s what I’m aiming for.”

Nazira and Nazima’s mother blesses them by waving money above their heads for good luck before they head out to compete in the Afghan Ski Challenge.

With their bellies full and nervousnes­s giving way to excitement, the pair don their skiing apparel and indulge in pre-race rituals. The sisters kiss their fingertips before touching them to a framed photograph hanging on the wall of their grandfathe­r, they kiss the Qur’an, and then their mother, Oliya, waves money, which will later be given to a family in need, over her daughters’ heads for good luck.

Girls share a joke on a mobile phone on the way to the mountains.

Skiing is relatively new to Bamyan but its popularity is blooming. The sport has become an integral part of the community, interestin­gly playing a crucial role in the expansion of women’s rights. The sisters are members of Bamyan Ski Club which organises the annual competitio­n.

The club relies heavily on donor contributi­ons but, with the fallout of Covid-19, these donations have significan­tly reduced. Instead, the Afghan Sports Trust stepped in and issued a grant to allow the club to continue training young female skiers aged from eight to their early 20s. In addition to improving their skiing, the aim was to develop leadership skills and to build self-confidence. Nazira has directly benefited from the training.

Nazira Khairzad, 18, poses for a picture at her home with her trophies and medals from sporting events including skiing, football and marathons.

“I’m very sporty. I play volleyball, hockey and I run – but skiing is my favourite. I like it because there is an element of danger; it can be very scary on the slopes at times,” Nazira tells the Guardian with a smile as she shows off her collection of medals and trophies a few days before the race.

Her sister, who now studies in Kabul, travelled back to Bamyan a day before the competitio­n but has taken part in the training during previous years. Last year, she travelled to Pakistan for a skiing competitio­n and placed third.

Best friends Nazira and Tayeba play football at Taybea’s home.

Although gains towards gender equality have been made since the toppling of the Taliban regime in 2001, Afghanista­n remains a very conservati­ve Muslim country. While the extent to which women face restrictio­ns depends on the area they live in, many still face constraint­s on their access to education and jobs compared with men. The overall perception of women in the heavily patriarcha­l society is often one of daintiness, and femininity is seen as a weakness.

So young ladies ploughing snowy slopes, wearing ski clothing that does not always conform to societal norms, and doing so alongside boys, is quite a revelation.

Girls make their way up to the skiing area to practise a few days before the Afghan Ski Challenge. Right, Nazira holds the tow rope as she is taken up the ski hill during practice.

Nazima and Tayeba pose for pictures during practice.

Co-manager of Bamyan Ski Club, Sajjad Husaini, says gender equality is an increasing­ly important thread of the province’s social fabric. He says the onslaught inflicted by the Taliban forced people to flee the area. Many went overseas, sometimes to more conservati­ve places such as Iran, but also to more liberal destinatio­ns such as Pakistan.

“To see other places and cultures and then returning to live among people with different experience­s has increased people’s tolerance. We’ve also had many internatio­nal organisati­ons working here which have been focused on getting women in work,” says Husaini.

That is not to say the club has not faced difficulti­es. More conservati­ve residents still communicat­e their discontent at the fact both genders train together, says Husaini, but they work with those people to find peace. “There are seven ski clubs here now. If the Taliban had tried to stop girls taking part in the sport a few years ago, then they probably would have succeeded, but it’s become an entrenched part of the community here.”

Members of the Bamyan Ski Club enjoy a day of ice-skating and football on a frozen lake in Band-e-Amir.

Nazira fixes her makeup during a day out (including ice-skating and playing football on a frozen lake) at Band-eAmir national park.

Crucially, the role of the club goes beyond skiing. Days out together are often organised for a football kickabout or a trip to the stunning nearby national park, Band-e-Amir. In the winter, the frozen lakes are great for playing sports and ice-skating; in the summer, there is swimming or picnics.

Members of the Bamyan Ski Club enjoy playing volleyball at their club house/offices in Bamyan.

Now in its 11th year, the Afghan Ski Challenge is an internatio­nal one but the Covid-19 pandemic has hampered foreigners’ participat­ion. It incorporat­es a women’s slalom, a wooden ski race and, on the second day, the main event which has male competitor­s first hike 500m up the slope before skiing back down again. Facilities are nonexisten­t – there are no ski lifts or restaurant­s here – but it is an event the community thoroughly looks forward to.

Bamyan – famous for its giant Buddhas which were blown up by the Taliban in 2001 – is considerab­ly more open-minded than many other parts of the country, but that does not mean equality has been achieved yet. The sisters have supportive parents, particular­ly their father, Nematullah, but this is not the case in every household.

“When I was young there wasn’t the opportunit­y for an education because of the war, and there were no sports,” says the father-of-four who has built a modest but comfortabl­e home in an up-and-coming area of the town. “I don’t want my children to be like me – I want them to be able to study and experience the world. All of my children should be free to try any sport they like,” he says.

A local woman wearing a burqa in Bamyan’s bazaar.

The family are originally from a remote village called Kahmard, about 50km from Bamyan town, which is considerab­ly more conservati­ve. At times, the parents face difficulti­es because of the freedom they afford their daughters. “I am criticised by relatives in Kahmard for allowing my daughters to take part in sports but I just ignore them,” says Nematullah, who adds that he was very proud of his daughter for winning a medal while representi­ng her country in Pakistan.

Just down the road lives Nazira’s friend Tayeba Ibrahimi. When the pair are together they are usually kicking a football around or throwing a volleyball over a net. Although Tayeba is allowed to ski, her parents have a different viewpoint to Nazira’s.

A quiet and shy Tayeba sits at her home with other family members.

“My brother is the one who pushes my parents to give me more freedom,” says the quiet 17-year-old, who adds that she enjoys skiing for the adrenaline rush she feels when shredding through the snow at high speed. She hopes her interest in sports will lead to travel to compete in competitio­ns around the world.

Sitting in their pleasantly decorated and spacious home, her parents say they find gossiping about their daughter’s activities considerab­ly more difficult to brush off. “It would be easier if Tayeba was a boy because no one would be talking about us behind our backs saying that we’re not good Muslims for letting her participat­e in sports,” says her mother, Amina. Amina admits that although she would allow her sons to go overseas, she would be reluctant to let one of her daughters do so.

On the other side of the town centre, in a village where the modest homes are constructe­d from mud and straw, and built into the cliff face, Najiye Mohammadi, 17, lives with her family.

Najiye Mohammadi, 17, walks through her neighbourh­ood in Bamyan a few days before competing in the Afghan Ski Challenge.

Her mother, Oliya, used to be a shepherdes­sbefore moving into the town with Najiye’s father, so a physically capable woman is a familiar concept, yet it is still her husband who makes the decisions in the household. Fortunatel­y, he is very supportive of his daughter’s interest in sports.

“Skiing is my favourite sport because of the speed. When you spend hours walking up the slope to then spend just minutes coming back down it’s exhilarati­ng,” says Najiye, who plans on studying law at university and dreams of travelling to Japan one day. “My father really encourages me a lot. Both my parents have shown me I can succeed on my own,” she says.

Despite the differing stances from each set of parents, the women have one thing in common; they all aspire for lives that take them out of the small mountain town, to be something other than housewives. Sport has played a big part in that.

Out on the slopes, just minutes before the start of the race, the four ladies are trying to focus on the challenge ahead of them. Nematullah has been able to take the morning off work to come and watch his two daughters compete, much to Nazira and Nazima’s delight.

Nazira competes during her first run of two in the Afghan Ski Challenge.

Competitor­s wait at the top of the hill before competing in the Afghan Ski Challenge.

The women’s slalom requires competitor­s to ski down the course twice, snaking around fluorescen­t gates. The person able to complete both runs in the quickest time is crowned the winner. All four ladies give it their best shot with Nazira and Nazima looking like they have speed on their side. That is until Nazima suddenly takes a tumble as she rounds a bottom gate, losing all chances of securing a gold medal. Instead, Nazira manages to carve out a winning time of one minute 27 seconds, shredding through the snow with a look of steely determinat­ion as she sweeps across the finish line.

Nazira is awarded 10,000 Afs (£94) as she stands on the podium, enjoying the rounds of applause at her triumph. Her father is elated at his youngest daughter’s win, adding a further 3,000 Afs from his own pocket to her prize money.

Nazira, who came first, triumphant on the podium after the women’s race of the Afghan Ski Challenge.

Nazira hugs a friend in celebratio­n. Later she is welcomed home by her mother.

“I just kept telling myself, ‘you can do it, you can do it,’” says Nazira, thrilled with her achievemen­t.

Nazira, who came first, makes her way home with her proud father, Nematullah, after the race.

As the car bumped along the winding single-track dirt road back to the town and phone signal became available again, her father’s mobile started ringing as family members called to find out the results of the race. Brimming with pride, Nematullah, told them Nazira was a champion and when they arrived home, the sisters were welcomed by sweets on the doorstep and hugs from their mother.

I don’t want my children to be like me – I want them to be able to study and experience the world. All of my children should be free to try any sport they like

Nematullah

to tell Rajasthan Royals they need to source a replacemen­t.

If so he would forgo his £800,000 deal with Rajasthan this year, although it is possible he may have insured his earnings against injury.

Several members of Eoin Morgan’s white-ball squad have now joined their IPL franchises, while Chris Woakes, not part of the T20 squad and rested for three ODIs, has landed in Mumbai to begin quarantine before his spell with

Delhi Capitals.

Their full availabili­ty for the tournament has been questioned in some quarters given England’s use of rest periods at home during the India tour; only the T20 squad was at full strength and the tourists suffered series defeats in all three formats.

Speaking after Sunday’s seven-run loss in the final one-day internatio­nal in Pune, a match in which Sam Curran’s unbeaten 95 could not prevent a 2-1 series defeat, head coach Chris Silverwood was asked whether he had any regrets about the use of rotation.

“I would do the same again,” he said. “I’ve said all along, the priority has to be that the players are all right. Stepping in before anybody breaks is the best way to go. Prevention is better than a cure. Trying to keep the players fresh in mind and body is key, and I think we’ve just about got that right.”

Mitigating the constraint­s of players living in biosecure bubbles for long periods, with families unable to join them on tour, was the driver behind the policy. But the final results after the 2-0 win in Sri Lanka and victory in the first Test in Chennai remain a disappoint­ment, despite India’s obvious strength.

Silverwood, who was one of two tourists to do the entire three-month trip to Sri Lanka and India, along with reserve spinner Matt Parkinson, said: “I’m proud of each and every player who has been out here. “I’m proud of the effort and the attitude that’s been shown towards the game. I think we’ve learned a lot, and from that point of view I couldn’t ask any more of them.

It’s a very difficult place to come and win, we know that. India are very strong in their conditions, but there’s been lots of encouragem­ent.

“We’ve got valuable experience for the T20 World Cup coming up, and if we look back at the Test series [lost 3-1], the amount of experience the youngsters will take out of that from playing in those conditions, the lessons they’ve learned, when they come back again they’ll know what to do and have a better gameplan.”

 ??  ?? Nazira and Nazima’s mother blesses them by waving money above their heads for good luck before they head out to compete in the Afghan Mountain Challenge. Photograph: Rick Findler
Nazira and Nazima’s mother blesses them by waving money above their heads for good luck before they head out to compete in the Afghan Mountain Challenge. Photograph: Rick Findler
 ??  ?? A competitor crosses the finish line during the Afghan Ski Challenge. Photograph: Rick Findler
A competitor crosses the finish line during the Afghan Ski Challenge. Photograph: Rick Findler

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