Whispers of War: An Afghan Freedom Fighter’s Account of the Soviet Invasion is a compilation of diary entries, written over a 10-week period in 1986, by Masood Khalili — diplomat, poet and former member of the Afghan Mujahideen. Currently serving as Afghanistan’s ambassador to Spain, Khalili was a member of the Jamiat-i-Islami faction of the Mujahideen and a close associate of Ahmed Shah Masood. So close, in fact, that he was present with the commander on that fateful day when the latter was assassinated by Al Qaeda agents posing as journalists. Khalili was severely injured in the attack, losing sight in one eye and ending up with over a thousand pieces of shrapnel in his legs. His survival was miraculous. He subsequently went on to make a career as a diplomat.
The diaries date from the height of the war against the Soviet Union, when Khalili begins his journey from Chitral in Pakistan, traversing six provinces in Afghanistan before ending his sojourn in a small village, Kayee Dera, once again near the border with Pakistan. Along the way, Khalili meets a raft of memorable characters, from an old Afghan refugee in Chitral who prays for patience and claims that he could be happy anywhere, even in a refugee camp, to the 22-year-old Nooristani who wants to buy his fiancée a radio so she can spend her time listening to Indian film songs instead of worrying about the war. The book is peppered with these little character sketches that serve to distract from the more difficult underlying theme — Khalili’s bearing witness to the misery and deprivation that war wreaked upon his beloved country.
While the people he encounters are almost without exception hospitable, welcoming and dignified, there is no getting away from the desolation of the Afghan countryside and the grinding poverty in which these isolated communities exist. It is heartbreaking to think that more than 30 years on, things may not have changed much for the communities Khalili visited all those decades ago.
A former member of the Afghan Mujahideen recounts his experience of living through a war
From a Pakistani’s perspective, the book also makes for difficult reading as Khalili’s suspicion of, and hostility towards, what he sees as Pakistani machinations in Afghanistan is evident throughout. On the 10th day of his journey, Khalili enters a village in Nooristan, near the border with Chitral, where he encounters a village headman who follows a “newly imported” from Pakistan, Salafi school of thought. During his conversation with Khalili, he is interrupted by three Arabs who rudely question Khalili on his work and mission in Afghanistan, and also want to know why he is travelling with Europeans (whom they classify as unbelievers). Khalili reacts with rage — aghast at being questioned by foreigners in his own country. But it is also clear that, for him, this encounter is an early realisation of the tortuous path his country’s freedom struggle would take.