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- <text id=90TT1560>
- <title>
- June 18, 1990: Afghanistan:When Allah Beckons
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- June 18, 1990 Child Warriors
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 32
- COVER STORIES
- AFGHANISTAN
- When Allah Beckons
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Alessandra Stanley
- </p>
- <p> Mohammad Anwar, 13, has fought in seven battles, and during
- the last one, an assault on a government garrison outside the
- village of Dara Noor, he killed at close range for the first
- time. He had followed the fighters through mined fields,
- running like crazy, and was in the first wave that captured the
- enemy post. He and a friend came upon three soldiers scrambling
- down a hill. His friend shot one. Mohammad Anwar shot the other
- two, thumping the bodies with his rifle butt to make sure they
- were dead, then calmly removing a revolver from the first
- corpse.
- </p>
- <p> Asked what he thinks about killing, Mohammad Anwar looks
- puzzled. "I was happy because I killed them," he says. During
- the attack, Mohammad Anwar's older brother and some other
- mujahedin seized four soldiers. They bound the prisoners'
- hands, blindfolded them and marched them to Dara Noor. After
- the mullah arrived, they lined up the captives and shot them.
- Mohammad Anwar and his friend watched. How did he feel about
- that? He lifts an eyebrow and this time answers deliberately,
- as if talking to a slow-witted child. "I was happy," he says.
- </p>
- <p> A goatherd's son, Mohammad Anwar has been fighting since he
- was ten. He has never been to school and insists that he is
- glad not to have to go. With his olive-brown eyes and brown
- curls peeping out from under his wool cap, he looks like any
- of the thousands of Afghan boys who loiter, energetic and
- restless, in Pakistani refugee camps. But there is something
- different about him. It is not in his face, which is babyish,
- or his hands, callused and blackened. It is the look behind his
- eyes, the dulled expression of a seasoned grunt.
- </p>
- <p> In a jihad, or holy war, there are no age guidelines for
- combat. If a commander decides a boy is ready, then he fights.
- Fathers take their sons with them to the front. Orphaned boys
- go with their brothers or uncles. Mothers who demur are
- ignored. Forcing boys into battle is rare, since nearly all of
- them volunteer. It is what their ancestors have done for
- centuries, it is expected of them, and it is not to be
- questioned. "I was happy."
- </p>
- <p> Islam Dara is a small mujahedin supply base nestled in
- jagged rocks beneath a circle of mountains, a desert oasis fed
- by a cold thin stream. Except for the sound of aerial bombing
- that burns red rings of brush fire above the enclave, Islam
- Dara seems sheltered. A few canvas tents are pitched amid
- boulders and mounds of ammunition: RPG-7s, launchers, bazookas.
- With its cool caves and grassy marshes harboring frogs, Islam
- Dara is a boy's paradise out of Kipling. But the dozen or so
- boys who stay there are living an idyll of war.
- </p>
- <p> At the slightest sound, the sentries--rifle-carrying boys
- in gray or brown robes--emerge from behind rocks. Under the
- direction of a handful of older soldiers, they work in the
- camp, fetching water, cleaning guns, tending the pack mules.
- Each night two or three of them slip into the desert alongside
- mules laden with water, food and ammunition and cross past the
- enemy to the forward posts three hours away. Each boy has his
- own AK-47, the only valuable object any of them has ever owned.
- </p>
- <p> Sahin Shah, 10, a mujahedin with a pretty face and mountain
- flowers tucked into the brim of his cap, is offended by the
- notion that life in Islam Dara could be fun. His back stiffens,
- and he retorts with a frown, "We came here to fight. We don't
- want to play." As if to prove his point, he yanks the flowers
- from his cap and strips apart his Kalashnikov. When he cleans
- it, his motions are slow, loving. Like most of the others, he
- comes from a small mountain village. His father was killed in
- combat two years earlier. He says he has been in a battle twice
- but isn't afraid of dying. He is fighting the jihad, and in
- jihad, there are no unhappy endings. "Either we kill them," he
- says, as if reciting a proverb, "or they martyr us."
- </p>
- <p> His best friend, Akbar, also 10, watches Sahin Shah take his
- rifle apart, then decides to race him and quickly strips his
- own. Sahin Shah wins. Akbar has a smart-aleck face, a raspy
- voice, and wears a dirty plaid waistcoat over his robes, a
- good-luck gift from his father. Unlike many of the boys'
- fathers, Akbar's is still alive, but he is based at a nearby
- camp. A week earlier Akbar's father went to visit his wife and
- five younger children in a refugee camp in Pakistan. He wanted
- Akbar to go with him, but the son refused. "If I went there,"
- he explains, "then my friends would be alone."
- </p>
- <p> Akbar has been shot at and has returned fire at the enemy,
- but he is not sure if he has killed. Hesitantly, he explains
- what battle is like. Mostly it is noisy and inconclusive. "I
- fired," he says. "But I don't know if I hit anybody."
- </p>
- <p> The gaunt officer in charge, Mohammad Wali, 30, keeps an eye
- on which boys show promise for battle. Seven of the dozen are,
- to his eyes, ready for combat. The youngest is nine, the oldest
- 13, but Mohammad Wali is content with their abilities. "They
- are the same as the mujahedin--better, because they are not
- afraid." Boys also have more energy than older fighters, but
- they still have to be watched. "Sometimes they behave like
- children," Mohammad Wali says, his eyes narrowing accusingly
- at Sahin Shah, "shooting at stones or teasing the mules." He
- too shrugs off questions about fear or death. In jihad, he says,
- </p>
- <p> Jihad is learned at an early age, absorbed by children at
- home, in the mosque and, for those who can go, in school. There
- are not many schools in mujahedin-held Afghanistan, but the
- remaining few, called madrasas and run by mullahs, have a
- curriculum molded by war. "The madrasa used to be 80% ordinary
- subjects and 20% Islam," says a former Kabul schoolteacher now
- doing refugee work in Peshawar. "Today it is 80% about Islam."
- In the refugee camps in Pakistan, Afghan teachers instruct
- Afghan children, and the course material is almost entirely
- about jihad.
- </p>
- <p> In a dark, windowless classroom in the Nasserbagh refugee
- camp in Peshawar, 25 eighth-graders, heads shaven and
- obediently bowed, listen to their teacher. An algebra problem
- on a blackboard shows that Allah is one. History class is about
- Mohammad and Islam. So is geography. The teacher asks who is
- ready to fight. Every hand shoots up. Six-year-old Ahmad Zia,
- tiny but fierce in a black jacket and cap, rises from the floor
- and, with a pet student's earnest intensity, leads his
- classmates in a well-practiced chant: "I will not let the
- foreigner's foot into my country/ Either I will be martyred or
- I will kill him."
- </p>
- <p> Afterward, he marches up to the teacher, salutes and marches
- back to his place. Ahmad Zia says he wants to go to the front
- in June, and the teacher doesn't smile. The child is not being
- cute. "I want to fight the jihad." Asked to define jihad, he
- replies, "Jihad is to fight Russians."
- </p>
- <p> Never mind that Soviet troops left Afghanistan long ago. The
- mujahedin are now fighting other Afghans and even one another,
- but the curriculum has not kept up. To schoolboys, "Russians"
- remains an indelible synonym for enemy.
- </p>
- <p> It is recess, and the boys head to the courtyard to perform
- a drill. Three of them, carrying Kalashnikovs carved of wood,
- step across imaginary mines, break into an enemy post and
- surround two "Russian" prisoners. The boys act out the taking
- and holding of the prisoners, the blindfolding and the stiff
- parade back to the base. What happens next to the prisoners is
- not acted out.
- </p>
- <p> On the second floor of Kuwait Red Crescent hospital in
- Peshawar, in the farthest bed next to a window, the sprawled
- body takes up only a fragment of the cot. Rahmat Hussain, 10,
- is not the only child on the floor, but he is the most
- seriously injured. Most of the time, the bandaged wound is
- covered by a thin, dirty green blanket. With a tentative smile,
- as if offering a guest a cup of tea, his older brother, Tor
- Kham, volunteers to pull back the blanket.
- </p>
- <p> Tor Kham has been sleeping on the floor next to his
- brother's bed, waiting, watching and helping the nurses clean
- the wound twice a day. It is a task he dreads. Tor Kham and the
- nurse have to tie Rahmat Hussain's wrists to the bedpost with
- strips of gauze to keep him from reaching down while they
- remove the bandages. All the skin has been torn from Rahmat
- Hussain's inner thighs and groin to his stomach, and the pink,
- raw flesh forms a vast inverted horseshoe two inches deep--as if he had mounted a burning saddle that seared deep into his
- body. He was injured during an attack in a village called
- Allishir, in the Khost province. The mujahedin were advancing,
- and the man next to Rahmat Hussain stepped on a mine. The man
- was blown to bits; when the doctors first treated Rahmat
- Hussain, they found a piece of the man's flesh lodged inside
- his wound. His father had died in battle a month before Rahmat
- Hussain was injured.
- </p>
- <p> A cousin, seated on the windowsill, waves a straw whisk
- broom to keep flies away. As they work, the nurse, the brother
- and the cousin remain silent, as do the rest of the men lying
- in nearby beds. Rahmat Hussain moans, "Pain, pain, I feel
- pain." Once or twice, he calls for his mother, but it is a
- muted, passive lament.
- </p>
- <p> It takes more than half an hour to peel off the gauze, dab
- antiseptic on the livid flesh, and replace the bandages. Tor
- Kham, who never says a word, grows paler. When the procedure
- is over, he takes a moment, really no more than a deep breath,
- then places a hand on the boy's lips to silence him. His hand
- falls to the boy's chest and lingers there, an offer of
- consolation. After another nurse arrives and administers
- morphine, the boy drifts to sleep. His brother pulls the
- blanket back over his bandages.
- </p>
- <p> Tor Kham explains that he will go back to jihad once his
- brother recovers. And Rahmat Hussain? He too will want to
- return to the fight, Tor Kham says. Asked how he knows that,
- Tor Kham shakes his head. After a long silence, he looks away
- and says, "There is no jihad for him now. He is in the world
- of pain."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-