The soul of Kabul’: Taliban paint over murals with victory slogans
The Taliban have started replacing murals on
Kabul’s streets with paintings of their flags and Islamic slogans as the new
rulers continued to reimpose their austere vision on Afghanistan.
The murals addressed everything from the
killing of George Floyd in the US and the drowning of Afghan refugees in Iran,
to the signing of the US-Taliban agreement towards peace and murder of a
Japanese aid worker.
“Artlords”, a group of creatives, painted the murals on walls and blast barriers, spending eight years transforming swathes of Kabul until the Taliban marched in.
One mural in central Kabul was dedicated to
a Japanese doctor and aid worker who was killed in 2019.
His portrait has been replaced by a slogan
congratulating the nation for their “victory”, referring to the Taliban
takeover of the country.
Omaid Sharifi, the art group’s co-founder,
said that even though the mural on the concrete wall had been painted over, the
memories of Tetsu Nakamura would not be erased.
“All of the murals are an extension of me,
extension of Artlords and extension of the artists who worked on them,” Sharifi
told the Guardian. “Some of these murals were the soul of Kabul. They gave
beauty to the city and kindness to the people of Kabul who were suffering.”
Artlords’ members braved death threats and
were branded infidels by Islamist extremists but remained unrepentant and kept
painting.
On the morning of 15 August, with the
Taliban at the gates of Kabul, Sharifi and five of his colleagues went to work
on a mural outside a government building.
“Whenever I see one of them destroyed, I
feel like a part of me is getting destroyed and punished as well,” he said.
“These murals not only belong to me or the Artlords, they belong to the people
of Afghanistan because for each of them we invited 50 to 200 people to paint
them.
“These are about the wishes, demands and the
asks of Afghan people. It was their voice on these walls. These murals were
against corruption and were pushing for transparency.”
Sharifi believes the Taliban are trying to
silence people by destroying the murals with their comments on social issues.
Our aim was to promote critical thinking
and put pressure on the government to accept people’s demands,” Sharifi said.
“Taliban was and is an armed movement that only understands guns, violence,
beating, beheading, suicide vests and bombs. There is no vocabulary about art
in the Taliban’s dictionary. They even cannot imagine art. I think they don’t
understand it, that’s why they are destroying it.”
Among the other erased murals was one
showing the US special envoy Zalmay Khalilzad and the Taliban co-founder Abdul
Ghani Baradar shaking hands after signing the 2020 deal to withdraw US troops
from Afghanistan.