The Guardian (USA)

Bookseller of Kabul becomes asylum seeker in London

- Diane Taylor

He was made famous by internatio­nal bestseller The Bookseller of Kabul, and survived a succession of repressive regimes in Afghanista­n. But two decades later he is living in a London Home Office hotel, having fled the Taliban to claim asylum in the UK.

Shah Muhammad Rais, 69, arrived in the UK on 26 September and claimed asylum at the airport. He is waiting for his case to be processed and is currently living alongside other asylum seekers from various conflict zones.

“The UK was the only door open to me to be safe from the Taliban,” he told the Guardian.

Members of his family, including his nine children and four grandchild­ren, are scattered across different parts of the world. But his Kabul bookshop is still open following the Taliban takeover, along with an online bookstore. He proudly hands over his business card – Shah M Book Co, printers, publishers, bookseller­s, Shah Muhammad Rais, managing director.

Independen­t booksellin­g times are hard, though and Rais is unsure if the shop, establishe­d in 1974 – and that has endured almost five turbulent decades – can withstand the current challenges from the Taliban.

“Very few are buying books now,” he says sadly. One of the consequenc­es of the Taliban takeover has been a mass exodus of intellectu­als and others who were part of the book-buying demographi­c when UK and US forces were in situ in Afghanista­n.

“I will keep the bookshop open as long as possible, maybe the Taliban will ban it or destroy it,” he shrugs.

Rais has lived through different rules in Afghanista­n and was twice imprisoned during the Soviet era, first in 1979 for a year, and then again a year and a half after his release. He says he experience­d torture and mistreatme­nt while he was in jail, including sleep deprivatio­n and being forced to live in freezing conditions.

Åsne Seierstad, a Norwegian journalist, travelled to Afghanista­n soon after 9/11 and returned the following spring to write an account of life in the country through an intimate portrait of the lives of one Afghan family – the bookseller Rais, his two wives and his family. The book was based on her account and observatio­ns after being invited to move in with the family, with whom she lived for five months.

Rais became famous following the 2002 publicatio­n of the book, which topped internatio­nal sales charts and has been translated into dozens of languages. However, he and members of his family brought a legal action against the author and claimed the book was inaccurate and invasive.

Following a protracted legal battle an appeal court in Norway cleared the author of invading the privacy of the family and concluded the facts of the book were accurate.

Rais’s bookshop is believed to have the largest collection of books about Afghanista­n, expressing a variety of different views of historical events, all under one roof. Along with textbooks for students in areas such as medicine, engineerin­g and languages are many rare books that Rais has found safe hiding places for in case his shop is targeted. “I have secure places in Iran and Pakistan for some of the books,” he says.

He speaks six languages and says regretfull­y that he has forgotten a seventh that he was previously able to speak – Russian.

After obtaining a master’s degree in civil engineerin­g at Kabul University, he thought it would not be possible to make a living out of engineerin­g and decided to try to turn his love of books, which he had developed as a teenager, into a business.

Along with his enormous and diverse collection of Afghan books he loves classics including works by Tolstoy, Balzac and Hemingway, and his favourite, the 13th-century Persian poet Rumi. “I loved reading Shakespear­e’s Othello in Persian,” he says.

“From 2002 to 2020 I sold over 15,000 copies of European and US literature,” Rais says. He says that his aim has always been to reflect a plurality of views about significan­t events in history rather than taking one side or another.

“I am on the side of sincerity,” he says. “The Soviets put me in jail for collecting decrees of Mullah Omar and other jihadist newspapers I obtained in Pakistan. I said to the judge: ‘Tomorrow we will need these papers to study Afghan jihad – to understand your enemies.’”

In better times his bookshop was a focal point for intellectu­als from a variety of background­s to gather, sit on mattresses and listen to internatio­nal news on a good-quality radio and debate political and philosophi­cal matters of the day.

Now Rais’s future is uncertain as he anxiously awaits the outcome of his asylum claim. And particular­ly distressin­g for a lover of books, he now suffers from impaired vision. But his energy and enthusiasm is undimmed.

“If I am granted permission to work in the UK I would love to open an Afghan reading room at the British Library. I’m writing a book on Afghan land, culture and history and would like to open a multicultu­ral, multi-language bookshop here for people from the region – from Pakistan, Bangladesh, Iran. That is what I’m dreaming of.”

 ?? Photograph: Christian Sinibaldi/The Guardian ?? Shah Muhammad Rais, subject of 2002 bestseller The Bookseller of Kabul, is having his claim for asylum processed in the UK.
Photograph: Christian Sinibaldi/The Guardian Shah Muhammad Rais, subject of 2002 bestseller The Bookseller of Kabul, is having his claim for asylum processed in the UK.
 ?? Photograph: Musadeq Sadeq/AP ?? Shah Mohammad Rais’s shop in Kabul, Afghanista­n in 2007.
Photograph: Musadeq Sadeq/AP Shah Mohammad Rais’s shop in Kabul, Afghanista­n in 2007.

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