Written: 7/25/12
No doubt many of you have not heard, and those of you who have, by the time you’re reading this, you’ve probably already started to worry about other things, but early yesterday morning the Tajik government launched a major offensive into its autonomous region. This area of the country, which international news agencies are quick to point out, borders one of the more lawless regions of Afghanistan, and here in Tajikistan it stands alone, largely governing itself and for the most part minding its own business. … except of course when it doesn’t. In an attempt to avoid too much politics and dragging on for paragraphs with an analysis of this side or that, I’ll leave you to do a quick google search. Suffice it to say that it looks a lot like war, and no matter which side you’re on there are losses.
No doubt many of you have not heard, and those of you who have, by the time you’re reading this, you’ve probably already started to worry about other things, but early yesterday morning the Tajik government launched a major offensive into its autonomous region. This area of the country, which international news agencies are quick to point out, borders one of the more lawless regions of Afghanistan, and here in Tajikistan it stands alone, largely governing itself and for the most part minding its own business. … except of course when it doesn’t. In an attempt to avoid too much politics and dragging on for paragraphs with an analysis of this side or that, I’ll leave you to do a quick google search. Suffice it to say that it looks a lot like war, and no matter which side you’re on there are losses.
This morning when I left my apartment, okay, to be fair …
this afternoon when I left my
apartment and walked to work the streets were somber. These are not normally the streets of carnival, and I do not expect cartwheels
and cheers, but on most days there will be smiles, stares, and bubbling
conversations. More importantly, there
will be conversations. This afternoon
though, pedestrians are rare, and conversations are few.
At work, talking with colleagues, the subject is entirely
avoided. When asked how I slept, I admit that I didn’t
sleep well because I kept waking up worried, checking the news for updates, but
more importantly checking my email and facebook. I am not really worried for my safety. In reality I am in no more danger than I was
the day before, which is to say almost none at all. I am
worried that my family will worry. That
I will sleep through an email or a panicked facebook message which will spiral
out of control while I slumber. My
colleague shakes his head and mutters how sad it is, and how my parents would
worry so much if they knew what was happening here – obviously worrying about
his own children. If he were a cartoon
character there would be a storm cloud over his head.
The day moves on, and no one talks.
Hours later I find myself in the office alone. It’s been this way for about an hour now …
another rarity. It is then that I start
to hear it. Pitter-patter, pitter-patter. For the first time since I arrived the
weather is doing something other than shining sun. I opened the window and in came a cool breeze,
a cloud burst, and a smile erupts on my face.
Then the winds come. I thought it
best to close the window and was glad I did.
The skies opened up and instantly the sidewalks became rivers. Sheets of rain fell and more than once I
heard glass shattering as the winds rearranged the furniture.
Another colleague, who doesn’t speak much English, poked his
head in the room with a big smile on his face.
“Ok?” I laughed, “yeah, okay!”
20 minutes after the rains had stopped the street was still
a raging river, and a doctor I work with offered me a ride. Passing downed power-lines and coursing
through streets with inches of water on them we laughed as the water flew from
the car’s tires. People on the street
were also laughing, and most didn’t even seem to mind the inevitability of the
waves of water kicked up by passing cars.
While the situation in the south isn’t gone, and the fear
will return along with the dread from those who have already lived through one
civil war, for now we are cleansed. If
only for a moment, we have remembered how to laugh, children are playing and
old women run happily through puddles in the streets.
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