Nowruz

2022 - 3 - 21

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Image courtesy of "WBFO"

WNY's Afghani community celebrates Nowruz, although banned in ... (WBFO)

Monday is Nowruz, the Afghanistan new year. Sunday, several hundred recent Afghan immigrants from across Upstate New York gathered at the Dnipro Ukrainian ...

"We know that some places like Buffalo State and Canisius have offered their dorms for the Afghani people for coming over here and, yeah, for now it's just temporary until we find them a permanent house." That is the main common question everybody asks and we tell them that we are doing our best to find a place for them to live or stay," he said. "Just about everything that is happening Ukraine and Afghanistan, we share similar pain and we all have similarities that are connecting us together today," Safary said.

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Image courtesy of "Reuters"

Afghans mark Nowruz under Taliban with muted celebrations (Reuters)

Afghans celebrated Nowruz, the Persian New Year, on Monday but festivities were muted, taking place under Taliban rule for the first time in decades and as ...

Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com Nowruz, celebrated throughout Iran and Central Asia, is usually a colourful celebration in Afghanistan when families gather to prepare festive dishes and welcome the beginning of spring. Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com

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Image courtesy of "MTPR"

Nowruz is banned in Afghanistan, but families continue to celebrate (MTPR)

One woman living in Kabul describes how, despite food shortages and repression, her family is celebrating the Persian new year with what they have.

"We have depleted our savings and reached a point where we try to cook things that need the least amount of groceries and will turn out bigger in amount. "A year ago, I could not have imagined that I would live in a country that would be under the rule of people like the Taliban. It seems surreal, crazy. "Right now, we only have small amounts of almonds and walnuts, and I don't think we can make haft mewa with two things." But the real star of the Nowruz table would be haft mewa — a sweet and savory compote. It's going to be simple; it's going to be small; but it's going to be something. Even though she's a member of what she describes as "the privileged population," Shararah and her family have been affected by food insecurity. "All the people would be going around, enjoying the decorations and lightings, having an ice cream, just being together," she says. She makes a plain rice but makes it colorful with sprinkles of saffron and sugar. The ingredients are not set but typically include a combination of pistachios, almonds, walnuts, cashews, cherries, raisins, currants, apricots, apples or senjed (a small sweet and tangy berry shaped like an olive). They are washed, peeled, mixed together and soaked in water, which some scent with rose or cardamom. But in early March, the Taliban's Ministry of Vice and Virtue confirmed that there will be no official Nowruz celebration this year. Even before the Taliban, Kabul did not have a nightlife and most shops closed by early evening — except on the night before Nowruz. Despite the late hour, Shararah is animated, her face growing increasingly brighter as she describes the once-bustling streets of Mandawi market in Kabul's old district, colorful stalls that she and her sister would navigate one by one.

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Image courtesy of "Aljazeera.com"

'One day to enjoy': Economy woes dampen Afghan Nowruz ... (Aljazeera.com)

Kabul, Afghanistan – Groups of women bustle through the female entrance of Sakhi Shah-e Mardan Shrine in Karte Sakhi in western Kabul, where many Afghans ...

The Taliban rule and the flagging economy have seemingly put a dampener on celebrations this year. As much as 95 percent of the population does not have enough to eat, and 3.5 million children need nutritional support. The country is feeling the economic strain that has built since the Taliban took over the government last August. Afghanistan is still lacking a functioning central banking system to address the crisis. A tray of jelabis, sticky spiral-shaped fried sweets, is displayed on her table. About 55 percent of the poverty-stricken country’s population face extreme hunger, with nearly 9 million a step away from famine. Shagufta’s daughter has been waiting to return to her high school studies. Street vendors at the bazaar sell sweets and ice cream to women pushing children on tricycles. They think we will just disappear. Last year, I had a salary and I was helping other people, giving them bread. “People are buying less gifts because there is just no money to spend. They rush towards the mosque located inside the shrine premises, posing for selfies and TikTok videos, wearing colourful dresses donned with sequins. “The life situation of people at the moment is very bad.

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