![At the 12th Century Minaret of Jam with my driver Sher Aga [middle] and fixer-cum-translator Obaid [extreme left].](https://ramaarya.blog/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/afghanistan-minaret-of-jam-selfie.jpg)
At the 12th Century Minaret of Jam with my driver Sher Aga [middle] and fixer-cum-translator Obaid [extreme left].
“Why are you in this western tour group? Why are you with them?”
I faced this question at almost every checkpoint during the few days I travelled in Afghanistan as part of a group. [For the rest of my 18 day travels in the country, I travelled alone and on my own.] A Taliban soldier on the 5th day was more explicit. “This is your country! You don’t need to be with them to see Afghanistan.”
– – –
This travel guide to Afghanistan is specifically meant for Indians. Like Indians in colour and passport. It does not, and cannot, apply to people of other colours and nations or an Indian with a western passport. 🙂
Let me put it in context first.
According to Indian textbooks, Afghanistan was once a part of India. According to Afghan textbooks, India was once a part of Afghanistan. Sorry, not India, but ‘Hindustan.’ Afghans, like the rest in Central Asia, still refer to India by its Silk Road-era name given to the sub-continent by the Persians.
Afghan fine-dining restaurant menus have Hyderabadi Biryani and Aloo Gobi listed under ‘Afghan Dishes,’ while Afghan women wear nose rings and bindis and are adamant it is an Afghan thing. We Indians, of course, believe it is all intrinsically ours, and just smile about it in smug complacency. You get the drift.
Both countries have shared personalities and dynasties across a millennium. For one thousand years it was the likes of Mahmud of Ghazni, Muhammad Ghori, the Khilji Dynasty, Lodi Dynasty, Mughal Emperor Babur, and Sher Shah Sur. Today, it is a chunk of Bollywood. Yes, Salman Khan, Shah Rukh Khan, Aamir Khan and Celina Jaitley, yesteryear heroes Feroz Khan and Sanjay Khan, and bad guy Kader Khan all have Afghan blood in them. And these are just a few in a long list. Continue reading →