Destination: Afghanistan

Jalalabad’s Sweet Ice Cream Shop

You never know when you might find yourself in eastern Afghanistan in need of a little ice cream. Try Pakiza in Jalalabad, which is lit up like a casino. NPR’s Ivan Watson recently sampled the handmade, cardamom-flavored ice cream, which comes plain and topped with a tangle of thick white noodles (an Afghan specialty called jalla). His verdict? “It melts fast, but for a sweet moment offers a much-needed escape from the Jalalabad heat.”

Photo by zoonie via Flickr (Creative Commons).


Dispatch from Afghanistan’s Kandahar Province

Photo by mknobil via Flickr, (Creative Commons).

I’ve been irked lately by the increasing attention Afghanistan is getting as a reemerging tourist destination. Yes, some visitors are returning to Kabul. But in the south of the country, the war is still being fought, and recent travelers’ reports of cheery residents beginning to pick up the pieces are much harder to find. So I was pleased to find a dissenting perspective in David Common’s recent dispatch from Kandahar, where NATO troops are still involved in heavy fighting and the Taliban sometimes seems to be gaining ground.

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Dreaming of Extreme Golf in Kabul

If Mohammad Afzal Abdul was Kevin Coster, the Kabul Golf Club would be his Field of Dreams. Never mind that the nine-hole course in Afghanistan is a barren patch of earth and the greens are actually “browns”—a mixture of firmly packed sand and oil. And forget that most golfing vacations are usually in the beachy lands of glossy travel brochures instead of war-torn countries. As Mr. Abdul’s website states, this is “extreme golf with attitude.”

 

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Travels in Afghanistan: ‘This is no Ordinary Vacation’

That realization hit Cassie Biggs 40 minutes into her flight to Afghanistan, which to me seems, oh, at least 40 minutes too late. Afghanistan is, after all, a war zone. Yet among a certain breed of curious travelers it’s showing signs of returning to popularity—Lonely Planet just released a new guidebook—and even for those who, like Biggs, are just looking for “something unusual to do” for a birthday. In a story for the AP about her trip, Biggs writes about a country where the signs of war and destruction are all around, yet she still finds things one might see on an “ordinary vacation.” She writes: “[W]hat I found on a week-long trip was a surprisingly green country with incredibly welcoming people. Often peeping from beneath those enveloping burqas I saw strappy high-heeled sandals and crimson-colored toenails.”

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Tags: Asia, Afghanistan

Lonely Planet Publishes Guidebook to…Afghanistan?

Indeed. The San Francisco Chronicle’s John Flinn leafed through it recently for kicks. He writes: “The accommodations section for Kabul lists guesthouses meeting the United Nation’s Minimal Operating Security Standards, and there’s a helpful list of acronyms: Car bombs are called VBIEDs, for vehicle-borne improvised explosive devices. And then there are DBIEDs—donkey bombs. That these are common enough to qualify for their own acronym is a little troubling. Rather than the typical lecture about the advantages of traveling light, the guidebook advises visitors to pack a ‘quick run (or grab) bag.’ This, it explains, ‘is to be kept with you should you have to leave in a hurry.’ All this raises the question: What in the name of Mullah Omar was Lonely Planet thinking?” LP’s short answer: Stability will come, and with it a market for the book.

Related on World Hum:
* Q&A With Paul Kvinta: Travels with Rory Stewart in Afghanistan
* Rory Stewart on Afghanistan: ‘The Problem is That We Act on the Basis of Our Own Lies’
* No. 17: ‘A Short Walk in the Hindu Kush’ by Eric Newby

Tags: Asia, Afghanistan

Q&A with Paul Kvinta: Travels With Rory Stewart in Afghanistan

To report his inspired profile of Rory Stewart in the latest issue of National Geographic Adventure, Paul Kvinta ventured where few Western travelers are going these days: Kabul, Afghanistan. Stewart, the author of the books The Prince of the Marshes and The Places in Between, now leads a nongovernmental organization in Kabul called the Turquoise Mountain Foundation, which is working to save the Old City. His exploits as a writer—“Places” is based on Stewart’s solo walk across Afghanistan—and, as Kvinta writes, his “significant clout and talents” have enabled him not only to help focus the world’s attention on Kabul, but put him in a position to affect real change in the country.

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Recalling Afghanistan and a Father’s Wanderlust

When he was just 14, Scott Anderson embarked on a nearly yearlong journey through Europe and Asia with his father in a VW bus. In Afghanistan, the two took a detour up a remote, bumpy road to a place called Band-i-Amir. His father wasn’t sure the detour was a good idea, but the younger Anderson insisted the pair go. He recalls the trip In a beautifully written essay in the latest issue of National Geographic Adventure. “I think my desire to go to Band-i-Amir had less to do with actually seeing the lakes or with whatever it was I imagined I might find there, than it was a symptom of how I’d changed since reaching Afghanistan,” he writes. “The land had roused a fascination in me, an engagement with my surroundings. On this trip, I was no longer merely along for the ride. For the first time, I was pointing the way, leading my father.”

Tags: Asia, Afghanistan

Rory Stewart on Afghanistan: ‘The Problem is That We Act on the Basis of Our Own Lies’

Rory Stewart, whose book about walking across Afghanistan, The Places in Between, was hailed as one of the best travel books of 2006 by the New York Times and Entertainment Weekly, began a stint as a guest columnist for the Times this weekend. His first column, which, unfortunately, resides in the TimesSelect pay-only section, addresses what he sees as the dangers of the international community’s rhetoric about Afghanistan. “Afghans, like Americans, do not want to be abducted and tortured. They want a say in who governs them, and they want to feed their families,” he writes, “But reducing their needs to broad concepts like ‘human rights,’ ‘democracy’ and ‘development’ is unhelpful.”

Tags: Asia, Afghanistan

Driving Afghanistan’s Ring Road

Further evidence that some of the most compelling newspaper travel stories don’t appear in the travel section: Paul Watson’s front page account in the Los Angeles Times last week of his seven-day drive along Afghanistan’s Ring Road. “On the way,” he writes, “we managed to avoid a Taliban ambush, a potential kidnapper or highway robber, a suicide bomber and a gunman who fired close enough to take off one of our heads.”


‘Naked Tourist,’ ‘The Places in Between’ in the New York Times

It’s rare that the New York Times reviews a travel book, and even more rare when it reviews the same travel book twice. And I can’t remember the last travel book that made the cover of the Sunday Book Review. This weekend the paper hit the trifecta. Last Sunday, Lawrence Osborne’s The Naked Tourist: In Search of Adventure and Beauty in the Age of the Airport Mall landed a spot in a roundup of summer travel books; yesterday it got a full review from William Grimes, who called it a “a biting, highly amusing and occasionally profound inquiry into travel and its discontents.” Today, the cover of the Book Review features Tom Bissell’s stellar review of Rory Stewart’s The Places in Between, which chronicles the writer’s walk across Afghanistan in 2002. “Even in mild weather in an Abrams tank, such a trip would be mane-whitening,” Bissell writes. “But Stewart goes in the middle of winter, crossing through some territory still shakily held by the Taliban—and entirely on foot. There are some Medusa-slayingly gutsy travel writers out there—Redmond O’Hanlon, Jeffrey Tayler, Robert Young Pelton—but Stewart makes them look like Hilton sisters.”

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No. 2: “The Road to Oxiana” by Robert Byron

To mark our five-year anniversary, we’re counting down the top 30 travel books of all time, adding a new title each day this month.
Published: 1937
Territory covered: Persia (Iran) and Afghanistan

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No. 17: “A Short Walk in the Hindu Kush” by Eric Newby

To mark our five-year anniversary, we’re counting down the top 30 travel books of all time, adding a new title each day this month.
Published: 1958
Territory covered: Afghanistan
In A Short Walk in the Hindu Kush, one of the classic mid-century travel adventures, Newby sets out to climb one of Afghanistan’s highest peaks with just four days of mountaineering experience under his belt. His inexperience shows. Near the 20,000-foot summit, he has an ice axe in one hand and a climbing manual in the other, trying to learn how to carve steps in the ice. Known for his wry and self-deprecating humor, Newby is a delightful traveling companion and his descriptions of the high-altitude Kush convey a shimmering sense of wonder. His failure to reach the summit becomes almost irrelevant, because the tale is about the journey, not the final destination. At his side for part of the trip (but not the climb itself, which he did with a friend) is his stolid wife Wanda, who helped save Newby’s life during World War II when he escaped from a POW camp. That story is related in Newby’s “Love and War in the Apennines.” Like his contemporary, Wilfred Thesiger, Newby was an intrepid explorer who helped define the modern travel narrative with sly commentary on our common humanity.

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Global Exchange’s 2006 “Reality Tours”

Back in 2001, when World Hum wasn’t yet a year old, we published a story by Jeff Spurrier about the eye-opening “reality tour” he took of Tijuana, Mexico with a San Francisco non-profit called Global Exchange. It sounded like a great experience, and I’ve been following the travel offerings from the human rights organization ever since.

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Kabul’s New Five-Star Hotel

We just noted the new luxury hotel planned for Baghdad. Not to be outdone, Kabul hosted the opening of a five-star hotel this week, complete with a swimming pool, health club and pastry shop. It’s apparently just the latest sign of progress in Afghanistan. An AP story about the hotel also notes the opening of a fancy Kabul shopping mall this year with the nation’s only escalators. Remarked Ahmad Jan, a 23-year-old tailor visiting from out of town, “I am amazed by these moving stairs.”

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Visit Afghanistan: “Urban Attacks Are Infrequent”

That’s but one of Robert Young Pelton’s “once dangerous, now safe (sort of)” travel recommendations for 2006. Pelton’s picks, published in National Geographic Adventure, also include Colombia (“Yes, I did get kidnapped in Colombia”) and Sabah, which he calls, curiously, “Borneo for grown-ups.” Ever cautious, Pelton suggests avoiding central Iraq, delicately noting that “People are hunting you.”