By George H. Wittman on 7.11.08 @ 12:07AM
The trip on the narrow mountain trails must be either on foot or astride a horse or donkey.
One doesn't travel in Afghanistan for amusement, in spite of
what the brochures might say. Taking a weekend trip in the
mountains of southeast Paktika province is an exercise in
overcoming a severe case of acrophobia combined with the pain of
walking and riding from dawn to dusk. Oh yes, every now and then
you eat something.
Once you get off the lowland roads and into the mountainous
regions, life and travel becomes very different. To begin with, it
is rare to see the otherwise ubiquitous tonga, that
horse-drawn cart draped with bits of colorful cloth and beads that
is the principal means of transportation for lowland farmers and
traders.
The trip on the narrow mountain trails must be either on foot or
astride a horse or donkey. One sits on a blanket; the rest of the
animal is laden with goods, including crated live chickens.
Transport is far too difficult in the mountains to waste carrying
space with a conventional saddle.
It's quite a trick to sit on a horse with heavy bags slung front
and rear as well as boxes piled on the rump. A short squat donkey
actually gives a sense of greater stability as one follows the
narrow paths high above the valley floor.
There are regular prayer stops every few hours, along with the
ritual ablutions. Unintelligible to foreign ears, the prayers
assume a particular appropriateness as the single file of horses
and men make their way along ancient stone pathways winding
precipitously on the side of the mountain.
In the Pashto-speaking area of Paktika, the usual garb is a flat
hat, sort of a beret, called a pakol and a loose tunic
with baggy trousers, the shawal kameez. To complete the
ensemble there is a light blanket, a patou, to throw on as
one ventures into the cooler elevations or use as a cover at
night.
After several hours of a harrowing climb the trail widens enough
to allow for a rest stop. Small cooking fires miraculously appear
along with a hot meal that includes eggs fried in oil so thick they
float -- a distinctly acquired taste. Flat bread is available to
soak up the grease, if one wishes. Tea washes it all down. After
this it's quickly back up on the horses and donkeys and away up the
trail.
By nightfall, just in time for evening prayer, a fairly flat
area appears that is large enough to contain a raised platform on
which benches are arranged. This structure that is both a dining
space and bedroom is known as a chaikaneh. Scalding, sweet
green tea is served by an elderly "innkeeper." Some of the benches
are actually jute rope cots that provide overnight sleeping
accommodation for a bone-weary traveler.
Dinner, which is apparently included in the price of the "room,"
consists of freshly baked bread, more grease-drowned eggs -- this
time mixed with some unknown vegetables. Of course, more tea rounds
out the repast. The bread was baked by slapping a flat piece of
dough on the outside of a very large inverted metal pot with the
bottom cut out. A fire burned inside. Ben Franklin would have been
proud.
A RUSTIC TEAHOUSE set for seemingly no reason in the vastness of an
Afghan mountain range is not as illogical as it seems. Trails, some
marked, others unmarked, crisscross the mountains and valleys of
the country. Travelers have used these oft times obscure routes for
centuries; a rare island of neutrality amidst endemic conflict has
great value.
In fact, this inn was a sort of local motel for a village
encountered several kilometers down the trail at a lower, more
amenable elevation. Not a large village, just a collection of mud
brick homes and some corrals for horses and donkeys. Yet it was
ringed with a wall.
There might have been a time in the 19th century when redcoats
would have tumbled out of what were mud brick barracks to man the
wall against the wild Pathan, as the British called the Pashtun. A
fight to the death down to the clash of cold steel...
Today a feast is laid out. Beside the usual greasy poached eggs
were slabs of bread and bowls of mulberries and other fruit. Meat
of some sort roasted over an open fire. Sweet tea poured from jugs.
To finish were rolled candies resembling a gooey "Tootsie Roll"
called nakal. This is not to be confused with a narcotic
gum called naswar that the tribesmen chew on long marches
to assuage hunger. It makes the uninitiated quite ill.
Foreign armies have come and gone in Afghanistan for hundreds of
years, but little changes in the end other than the weapons used.
The life and nourishment of the mountain tribal people remains
essentially the same. They'll always love those yellow eggs
swimming in huge gray globs of grease. These are tough people,
quite hospitable in their way, but definitely not ready for
tourism.
topics:
Transportation, Trade, Oil