Amid turmoil Afghanistan pavilion arrives at Dubais Expo
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) â" When Afghanistanâs president was killed in a Communist coup in 1978 and the country plunged into violent chaos, Mohammed Omer Rahimy bundled up his familyâs treasures and fled to Vienna.
More than 40 years later, amid yet another violent upheaval in his home country, Rahimy found himself frantically loading those same artifacts onto a plane in cotton-stuffed boxes â" this time to the first worldâs fair in the Middle East.
For the 62-year-old Rahimy, it was a mad rush to Dubaiâs Expo. He barely slept. But Rahimy was careful. He chose among the finest bronzes, jades, calligraphy and pottery from the vast Afghan antique collection he had amassed in Austria over the decades, which arrived at the fair earlier this week..
âIt is important for the world to know that even though there is war and we are poor, our history is rich,â Rahimy said. âOur culture is rich.â
The stakes were high, he felt. The historic fair had opened, but Afghanistan was nowhere to be found on the fairgrounds, weeks after the Taliban took over the country with lightning speed. The image of the shuttered Afghan national pavilion - for days a haphazardly furnished office space â" at Dubaiâs Expo splashed across the internet, a grim reminder of the disarray that has marked the Talibanâs return to power.
âIt hurt me so much to see the exhibit closed,â said Rahimy. âI begged the Expo ... please, let me do something good for my people.â
Afghanistanâs previous government had organized the exhibit months before Kabul fell and the deposed President Ashraf Ghani fled to Abu Dhabi, the capital of the United Arab Emirates.
With flights still largely halted in and out of Afghanistan and the country careening into an economic abyss, Rahimy said the pavilion would have remained hauntingly empty had he not stepped in.
An independent antiques dealer who has helped supply Afghanistanâs Expo showcases for years, Rahimy says he paid out of pocket this time to ship his family heirlooms and other artistic artifacts from Vienna to Dubai. The collection includes rusted oil lamps incised with Islamic calligraphy from the 16th century, dazzling lapis lazuli necklaces mined from the countryâs north and massive hand-woven carpets that he said still carry the scent of his mother.
âPeople in Afghanistan have no water, they have no bread. Now is the time I felt we really needed this kind of exhibit,â Rahimy said, describing the economic crisis that has left ordinary Afghans struggling to survive and threatened to unravel whatever remains of Americaâs nation-building ambitions.
Rahimy can opine for hours on Quranic book stands made from jade and the history of Afghanistanâs perfume trade. But he grows quiet when asked about his countless relatives who remain in Kabul under its new Taliban rulers. Only his niece managed to escape, flying to Philadelphia during the final days of the U.S.-led evacuation.
âThey are like everyone else,â he said of relatives who remain in Afghanistan, his voice trailing off.
Rahimy insists the overarching purpose of Afghanistanâs pavilion is to put aside the turmoil dogging the country. But like elsewhere at Dubai's Expo, recent politics still manage to pervade it. Pavilions staffers stamp visitorsâ mock passports with the national emblem of the Afghan government installed after the 2001 U.S.-led invasion, not the Quranic version used by the Taliban during their earlier rule.
The rabab, a traditional Afghan folk instrument, hangs from one wall. Its players, Rahimy said, are too terrified to perform, now confronting an uncertain future amid signs that the Taliban will move to ban nonreligious music.
The wider context also isnât lost on the pavilionâs visitors, after scenes of anguish and unrest transfixed much of the world as Americaâs longest war came to a bitter end.
âThe scenes of people at the airport in Kabul speak louder than anything,â said 36-year-old Chamali Smith from St. Helens, United Kingdom. But scanning the shelves stacked with Afghan saffron and stone, she added: âTheyâve done remarkably well though here, Iâm really happy and proud for them.â
Rahimy is just proud to say that Afghanistan is finally open at Expo. He hopes that the temporary six-month exhibit can provide a more lasting picture of what his nation is and has been.
âRegimes come and go. People get old and die. But the land stays. The mountains stay,â he said. âPeople wear amulets for good luck and they play instruments and they wash their hands in bowls.â
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