Berliner Boersenzeitung - UNESCO-listed musical instrument stifled in Afghanistan

EUR -
AED 3.830455
AFN 73.504941
ALL 98.189958
AMD 417.484857
ANG 1.881682
AOA 951.090085
ARS 1074.357472
AUD 1.678388
AWG 1.877152
AZN 1.777028
BAM 1.956198
BBD 2.108128
BDT 124.795366
BGN 1.956298
BHD 0.39328
BIF 3087.527567
BMD 1.042862
BND 1.418588
BOB 7.214466
BRL 6.461312
BSD 1.044112
BTN 89.327157
BWP 14.521952
BYN 3.416895
BYR 20440.094626
BZD 2.097326
CAD 1.504013
CDF 2993.014354
CHF 0.94057
CLF 0.03751
CLP 1035.020377
CNY 7.611637
CNH 7.612048
COP 4586.932334
CRC 529.707668
CUC 1.042862
CUP 27.635842
CVE 110.287417
CZK 25.081926
DJF 185.927791
DKK 7.460648
DOP 63.502908
DZD 141.358732
EGP 53.03778
ERN 15.64293
ETB 133.232581
FJD 2.421941
FKP 0.825928
GBP 0.829281
GEL 2.930547
GGP 0.825928
GHS 15.34812
GIP 0.825928
GMD 75.085729
GNF 9024.834376
GTQ 8.049636
GYD 218.34438
HKD 8.094383
HNL 26.528392
HRK 7.480351
HTG 136.517748
HUF 411.002716
IDR 16878.720996
ILS 3.840319
IMP 0.825928
INR 89.053636
IQD 1367.778013
IRR 43891.458572
ISK 144.561747
JEP 0.825928
JMD 162.523034
JOD 0.739491
JPY 164.589715
KES 135.207482
KGS 90.728369
KHR 4193.852437
KMF 486.104012
KPW 938.575191
KRW 1536.967997
KWD 0.321337
KYD 0.870077
KZT 546.531087
LAK 22822.638899
LBP 93520.00875
LKR 305.412078
LRD 190.028625
LSL 19.559276
LTL 3.079301
LVL 0.630817
LYD 5.134044
MAD 10.534441
MDL 19.252913
MGA 4897.99556
MKD 61.542509
MMK 3387.175001
MNT 3543.644841
MOP 8.347497
MRU 41.649466
MUR 48.962171
MVR 16.062078
MWK 1810.467993
MXN 21.196153
MYR 4.663151
MZN 66.642769
NAD 19.559276
NGN 1615.153496
NIO 38.427811
NOK 11.847856
NPR 142.92305
NZD 1.852609
OMR 0.401412
PAB 1.044112
PEN 3.907094
PGK 4.177849
PHP 60.400473
PKR 290.651277
PLN 4.271218
PYG 8117.649982
QAR 3.805173
RON 4.977688
RSD 116.953772
RUB 110.022363
RWF 1441.192935
SAR 3.916263
SBD 8.742891
SCR 14.538955
SDG 627.283987
SEK 11.477947
SGD 1.417038
SHP 0.825928
SLE 23.782074
SLL 21868.297253
SOS 596.721289
SRD 36.58367
STD 21585.137264
SVC 9.135857
SYP 2620.222241
SZL 19.551974
THB 35.53972
TJS 11.406819
TMT 3.660446
TND 3.331977
TOP 2.442489
TRY 36.646207
TTD 7.095442
TWD 34.230379
TZS 2531.914634
UAH 43.816106
UGX 3829.778436
USD 1.042862
UYU 45.989348
UZS 13490.74211
VES 53.917126
VND 26546.051464
VUV 123.810662
WST 2.881206
XAF 656.090356
XAG 0.035523
XAU 0.000398
XCD 2.818387
XDR 0.800663
XOF 656.090356
XPF 119.331742
YER 261.106605
ZAR 19.50543
ZMK 9387.011388
ZMW 28.947884
ZWL 335.801129
  • SCS

    0.0700

    11.97

    +0.58%

  • CMSD

    -0.1563

    23.32

    -0.67%

  • NGG

    0.3900

    59.31

    +0.66%

  • GSK

    -0.0400

    34.08

    -0.12%

  • RIO

    -0.2400

    59.01

    -0.41%

  • BCC

    -2.3000

    120.63

    -1.91%

  • BTI

    -0.1200

    36.31

    -0.33%

  • JRI

    -0.0500

    12.15

    -0.41%

  • RBGPF

    59.8400

    59.84

    +100%

  • CMSC

    -0.2000

    23.46

    -0.85%

  • BCE

    -0.2100

    22.66

    -0.93%

  • RELX

    -0.2800

    45.58

    -0.61%

  • AZN

    -0.2600

    66.26

    -0.39%

  • BP

    0.1100

    28.96

    +0.38%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    8.43

    +0.12%

  • RYCEF

    0.0100

    7.27

    +0.14%

UNESCO-listed musical instrument stifled in Afghanistan
UNESCO-listed musical instrument stifled in Afghanistan / Photo: Wakil KOHSAR - AFP

UNESCO-listed musical instrument stifled in Afghanistan

Wood shavings littered the floor of Sakhi's cramped workshop in the Afghan city of Herat as another rubab, the national musical instrument of his homeland, took shape under his deft hands.

Text size:

Sakhi has crafted two rubabs a month for decades, and he refuses to set down his tools even as a Taliban crackdown strangles music in Afghanistan.

"I know only this work and I need to make money somehow," said Sakhi, surrounded by rubabs in different stages of completion.

But far more important to him than money is the "cultural value", said the craftsman in his fifties, whose name has been changed for his safety along with those of others interviewed by AFP.

"The value of this work for me is... the heritage it holds. The heritage must not be lost," he said.

The UN agency UNESCO agrees, recognising in December the art of crafting and playing the rubab as intangible cultural heritage in Afghanistan, Iran, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan.

Made of dried mulberry wood and often inlaid with mother-of-pearl, the lute-like rubab is one of the oldest instruments in the region, its twanging sound stretching back thousands of years.

But that heritage is threatened in Afghanistan under the Taliban authorities' near-total ban on music, considered corrupting in their strict interpretation of Islamic law.

Since coming to power in 2021, Taliban authorities have banned music in public, from performances to playing tracks in restaurants, in cars or on radio and TV broadcasts.

They have shuttered music schools and smashed or burned musical instruments and sound systems.

Many Afghan musicians fled out of fear or in need of work after losing their livelihoods in one of the world's poorest countries where jobs are scarce.

The Taliban authorities have encouraged former musicians to turn their talents to Islamic poetry and unaccompanied vocal chants -- also the only forms of music allowed under their previous rule from 1996-2001.

- 'Peace to the soul' -

Amateur rubab player Gull Agha has a picture of his teacher from that time, the pieces of his rubab broken by Taliban authorities cradled in his lap.

Since their return, Taliban morality police have also destroyed one of Gull Agha's rubabs and made him swear to stop playing.

But he still sometimes strums a rubab he made himself for tourists visiting Herat, long a cradle of art and culture in Afghanistan, though he laments that it slips easily out of tune.

"The main thing that motivates me to continue playing the rubab is to make a contribution to Afghanistan -- we should not let the skills of our country be forgotten," he said.

But as professional musicians went into exile and his former students saw no future in practising, he fears the craft will atrophy.

"It's our duty to pass on our local music to the next generations as our ancestors passed it down to us," said the 40-year-old.

"Rubab is an art... art brings peace to the soul."

He started playing more than 20 years ago during a music revival in Afghanistan after the end of the previous Taliban rule.

At that time, organisations to support artists sprung up in the country.

Mohsen, a long-standing artists' union member, choked back tears as he recalled how their musicians were always "a fixture of the happy moments in people's lives".

"Unfortunately, happiness has been taken from this nation as well as from the artists," he said.

Mohsen is still optimistic about the future of the rubab in Afghanistan, saying musicians inside and outside the country have been spurred to keep its traditional music alive.

"People don't play for money now, they play to bring joy to others and so the music survives," he said.

"No force, no person, no system can silence its sound."

- 'Never lost' -

Rubab player Majid was once a fixture of the many musical performances in the capital Kabul.

But he had not played the rubab for more than three years out of fear of being overheard, until one December afternoon when he picked up a rubab in a house near a street of now-shuttered music shops.

Smiling, he struck the strings but stopped abruptly as the courtyard door banged open, fearing it was Taliban forces.

The neck of his 35-year-old rubab was previously broken when morality police raided homes after the Taliban takeover.

He repaired it the best he could, and still regularly tends to his "dear rubab", he said, gently running his hands over the instrument.

"As long as I live, I will keep it with me, and I hope my children will keep it... but no matter what, rubab culture will not be lost," said the 46-year-old.

"Music is never lost. As they say, 'There can never be a death without tears or a wedding without music'."

(B.Hartmann--BBZ)