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The poetry of the Taliban, long overlooked by analysts as mere propaganda, is a prominent part of how they present themselves to Afghans and to the wider world. Published on the Taliban website during the last decade, with a few older specimens of Afghan poetry dating from the 1980s and ‘90s, this collection of over 200 poems from uncensored voices within the Taliban draws upon Afghan legend and recent history as much as upon a long tradition of Persian, Urdu and Pashto verse. Their verse is fervent, and very modern in its criticism of human rights abuses by all parties in the war in Afghanistan; whether in describing an air strike on a wedding party or lamenting, “We did all of this to ourselves,” it is concerned not with politics, but with identity, and a full, textured, deeply conflicted humanity.
246 pages |