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You won’t believe it but
it’s true
The painful life of a 13
years old Afghan girl at Quetta Pakistan
By Sulmaz Saeedi
I had to go to the office of the UNHCR in Quetta. I was sitting
in the waiting room and at another corner, a young woman, around
25-26 years old, was breast feeding her newborn.
I asked:
- Where are you from?
She answered:
- Afghanistan.
- What’s your name?
- Atefeh
- Is this your own child?
- Yes
- What are you doing here?
- I need help
And her eyes became full of tears; she caressed her newborn’s
head and asked:
- Do they really help people?
- What’s your problem?
With her sweet Dari accent she replied:
- My father sold me. My husband brought me here. He is much
older than I. He has 3 daughters from his ex-wife. Few months
after marriage, my husband and his mother thought that I am
sterile and started treating me badly. At that house instead of
being the new bride, I was the valet of everybody.
- How old were you at that time?
She looked at me and said: I am not sure, but maybe 10.
- How old are you now?
- I guess it is now 3 years that I have been married.
I was surprised. She looked much older than 13.
- OK. Tell me what happened next?
- When I was pregnant my husband was beating me often: “I will
kill you if it is not a boy”! When this girl was born, while I
was still in pain from the delivery, while beating me my husband
was repeating: “You are inauspicious”. They were not giving me
food. I did not have enough milk. My mother in law was not
allowing me to breastfeed my daughter. After 40 days, my husband
returned me to Afghanistan and told my father that he wants a
divorce. When my father heard that, he grabbed me and threw me
toward the door: “I have 5 more daughters that I haven’t found
husband for them. Here I have no bread for her and no place to
stay. Take her to your home and use her as a made but do not
return her to me”.
Her lips were trembling. You could easily see the pain of
loneliness in her eyes. Few tears were dropping from her eyes.
She wiped them out with the corner of her chador; she didn’t
want me to see them. I stood up and gave her a cup of water from
the water cooler. I told her:
- If repeating these stories are painful to you, stop telling.
No need to tell.
She said:
- Have you ever felt that you are dead but you are walking?
Then without waiting for my answer, she continued:
- My husband brought me back. But five days ago, he announced
that we are divorced. I stayed few days at one of the neighbor’s
house. They told me about this office. I am very lonely. Where
can I go with a little kid? I don’t know. I even do not have
money to buy milk for my child. I do not have enough milk myself
and my daughter cries all the time. She is hungry.
She was right, the child was crying all the time. Atefeh’s eyes
were full of tears again and she was staring at her daughter.
- Now what do you want to do?
- I don’t know. I have nobody here and my father in Afghanistan
is not accepting me.
- Do you have any friend in Afghanistan who would accept you?
- No. In such poverty? Who would add another hungry stomach to
his family? And I have nobody. When my own father refuses to
give me shelter, who would trust me and my child?
- What do you want to do before they give you an answer here?
They are not going to say anything to you today.
- I don’t know. I can not stay more with my neighbor. Her
husband is nagging all the time about the fact that she has
accepted me in their house.
I wanted to talk more with Atefeh but my name was called. When I
was going inside, I asked her to wait for me and she accepted.
I really wanted to help her but my situation did not allow me to
take any step.
When I came back she was not there anymore. I asked the security
where Atefeh was. He said that as the office was not accepting
any application for the day, she had to leave, to come back the
day after. When I realized that she will come back again,
although I knew that I might not be able to help her, I was
happy. Somehow I had the feeling that talking to me was calming
her down a little. I wanted to listen to her. I wanted to answer
her question regarding feeling dead and still walking. That’s
why the day after, much earlier than everyday, I left home. I
had to walk half of the distance as my money was not enough for
a round trip commute. When I arrived, offices were still closed.
I waited for a long time. Time for accepting applications was
over and Atefeh did not come. I don’t know why I was so much
interested in seeing her again. Although I had seen her once,
inside myself I was feeling anxious about her. And that anxiety
is still there. I don’t know where she went and what happened to
her. But I am sure that she will have a hard time. I even left a
message for her, but until today, I have no news from her.
This is something that I have heard often: “In this city Quetta/
Pakistan), most of the prostitutes are either Iranian girls or
Afghan girls. Iranian girls are those who have been given hopes
for a better future and brought here to be sold. Afghan girls
are those whose families while under pressure of debts have sold
them to illegal sex traders. What wrong have done these girls?
Should these lives end up in such fetid milieu? Should the
candle of their lives extinguish in such sewage? Shall we watch
all of that and do nothing? Atefeh too will end up in this fetid
environment, I am afraid, just because she wants to save the
life of her daughter, save her from hunger. What shall we do?
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