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Afghan evacuees mark first US Ramadan with gratitude

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As they adjust to their new communities, Afghan families evacuated to the United States as the Taliban regained power last summer are celebrating Ramadan with gratitude for their safety. With that gratitude comes sadness at being away from their homeland, and agony over what has happened to their loved ones left behind by the Biden administration. As reported by the AP:

Far from the Taliban threat, many displaced Afghan refugees mark their holiest of holidays here in the U.S., Ramadan   

LAS CRUCES, New Mexico (AP) — Sitting cross-legged on the floor as his wife and six children laid plates of fruit on a red cloth in front of him, Wolayat Khan Samadzoi watched through the open balcony door for the sliver of new moon to appear in the cloudless New Mexico sky, where the sun had set beyond a desert mountain.

Shel Alam Momand prays before breaking the Ramadan fast at his new apartment in El Paso, Texas, on Sunday, April 3, 2022. Momand, his wife and six children are among thousands of Afghans evacuated to the United States as the Taliban regained power last summer who are celebrating their first Muslim holy month of Ramadan in the U.S. (AP Photo/Giovanna Dell’Orto)

Then, munching on a date, the bushy-bearded former Afghan soldier broke his first Ramadan fast in the United States – far from the Taliban threat, but also the three dozen relatives he would be marking the start of the Muslim holy month with if he was still home in Khost, Afghanistan.

Wolayat Khan Samadzoi watches through the open balcony door of his apartment for the sliver of new moon to appear in the cloudless sky, where the sun had set beyond a desert mountain, in Las Cruces, N.M., Saturday, April 2, 2022. Samadzoi and thousands of other Afghans evacuated to the United States as the Taliban regained power last summer are celebrating their first Muslim holy month of Ramadan here – grateful to be safe, but agonizing over their families back home under the repressive Taliban regime. (AP Photo/Giovanna Dell’Orto)

A few minutes after naan was dipped into bowls of stewed okra and beans, Samadzoi, his wife and the two oldest children retired to worship on their prayer rugs. On Saturday evening, the two-bedroom apartment filled with the murmurs of their invocations.

“I pray for them, and they pray for me, they miss me,” he said of his relatives back home. His cousin Noor Rahman Faqir, who is also now in Las Cruces, translated from Pashto to the simple English he learned working with American forces in Afghanistan.

Qais Sharifi, left, and Abdul Amir Qarizada, right, leave the mosque in Las Cruces, N.M., after attending Friday prayer on April 1, 2022. Both Afghan men were evacuated to the United States when Kabul fell to the Taliban without even the time to bring their wives and children. So instead of celebrating the Muslim holy month of Ramadan with their loved ones, they planned to partake of free nightly iftar meals at the Southern New Mexico Islamic Center. (AP Photo/Giovanna Dell’Orto)

As they adjust to their new communities, Afghan families evacuated to the United States as the Taliban regained power last summer are celebrating Ramadan with gratitude for their safety. Yet there’s also the agony of being away from loved ones who they fear are in danger under a Taliban leadership crafting increasingly repressive orders.

From metropolitan areas with flourishing Afghan diasporas to this desert university community less than 40 miles (64 kilometers) from the Mexican border, tens of thousands of newly arrived Afghans share one predominant concern that’s amplified in what should be a celebratory time: With only temporary immigration status and low-paying jobs, they feel helpless to take care of their families here and back home.

Wolayat Khan Samadzoi and his four-year-old son, Gawhar, in a uniform of the Afghan military sewed by his mother, pose under the Afghan flag in their new apartment in Las Cruces, N.M., on Saturday, April 2, 2022. Samadzoi and thousands of other Afghans evacuated to the United States as the Taliban regained power last summer are celebrating their first Muslim holy month of Ramadan here – grateful to be safe, but agonizing over their families back home under the repressive Taliban regime. (AP Photo/Giovanna Dell’Orto)

Abdul Amir Qarizada repeats several times the exact moment, 4:30 p.m., when he was ordered to take off from Kabul’s airport during the chaos of the evacuation – with no time to get his wife and five children, who are still in Afghanistan more than seven months later.

“My concern is the aircraft is safe, but my family is not safe,” the former flight engineer says after Friday prayer at Las Cruces’ only mosque, where he goes by bike to find some “peace.”

So does Qais Sharifi, 28, who says he can’t sleep with worry for his kids left behind, including a daughter born two months after he fled Afghanistan alone.

Wolayat Khan Samadzoi prays using beads made in the colors of the flag of his native Afghanistan in his new apartment in Las Cruces, N.M., Saturday, April 2, 2022. Samadzoi and thousands of other Afghans evacuated to the United States as the Taliban regained power last summer are celebrating their first Muslim holy month of Ramadan here – grateful to be safe, but agonizing over their families back home under the repressive Taliban regime. (AP Photo/Giovanna Dell’Orto)

Both men break into smiles when the mosque’s education director, Rajaa Shindi, an Iraqi-born professor at nearby New Mexico State University, invites them to register for the free iftar dinners held nightly in the meeting hall decorated with gold balloons spelling “Ramadan kareem” — an Arabic greeting often used to wish people a happy Ramadan.

Local congregations like the mosque and El Calvario United Methodist Church in Las Cruces, as well as the Jewish and Christian-based organizations that resettle refugees across their national networks, have been helping Afghans find housing, jobs, English-language classes, and schools for their children.

They decry the fact that most displaced Afghan families don’t have permanent legal status in the United States, despite their services for the U.S. government, military, or their Afghan allies during the post-9/11 Afghanistan war. That would give them access to many government benefits and an easier path to work and family reunification.

Elaha Sultani, 9, and her brother Shafiullah Sultani, 11, pray at the motel room they share with their parents and four siblings in El Paso, Texas, on Saturday, March 26, 2022. The family was evacuated from Afghanistan when the Taliban regained power last summer and spent months in the motel room with only a few possessions – most treasured among them, the green rug where Elaha prayed. Her grandfather brought it from Mecca after her uncle was killed by the Taliban, the family said. (AP Photo/Giovanna Dell’Orto)

While Afghanistan’s decades of war and current food shortage mean far less extravagant feasts than in many countries where Ramadan is celebrated, the familiar tastes of home are top of mind for many displaced this year. Qarizada recalls his mother’s signature festive dish of bolani, a stuffed fried bread like a giant samosa.

Khial Mohammad Sultani recalls how the family barely escaped Afghanistan during the United States’ chaotic withdrawal last summer as his three oldest children play with phones in their motel room in El Paso, Texas, on Saturday, March 26, 2022. The family spent months in the motel room with only a few possessions until they moved into a new apartment just in time for the start of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan. (AP Photo/Giovanna Dell’Orto)

The mother of Shirkhan Nejat still cries every time the 27-year-old makes a WhatsApp video call home from Oklahoma City, where he was resettled with his wife and the couple’s baby was born. Missing his close-knit extended family at Ramadan brings “bad emotions,” Nejat said, despite his gratitude for being safe.

It’s such bonds, the warmth of large family gatherings around the iftar meal and the cacophony of familiar sights, sounds and smells marking the end of a day’s fast that many are yearning for in America.

Four of Khial Mohammad and Noor Bibi Sultani’s children pose in the motel room they share with two more siblings in El Paso, Texas, on Saturday, March 26, 2022. The family, evacuated from Afghanistan as the Taliban regained power last summer, spent months in the motel room with only a few possessions until they moved into a new apartment just in time for the start of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan. (AP Photo/Giovanna Dell’Orto)

In Texas, Dawood Formuli misses his family’s typical pre-iftar routine: His hungry father irritably asking for his food. His mother asking her husband to calm down, and Formuli, 34, telling a joke to lighten the mood and make his father laugh. His children, in another room with their many cousins, sometimes playing, sometimes fighting. “Allahu akbar,” the call to prayer, spilling over from the mosque down the street.

The three oldest Sultani children, from left, Sana, 8; Elaha, 9, and Shafiullah, 11, eat a midday meal prepared by their mother in the motel room the family shares in El Paso, Texas, on Saturday, March 26, 2022. The children, their three younger siblings and parents were evacuated from Afghanistan when the Taliban regained power last summer. (AP Photo/Giovanna Dell’Orto)

“Every day, it’s like Christmas,” the former translator at the U.S. embassy in Kabul said of past Ramadans in the three-story house his family used to share with his parents, siblings, and their families.

In his new apartment in Fort Worth, the call to prayer now comes from an app, not a minaret.

The transition has been especially hard for his pregnant wife, who is still learning English. Yet there are traces of the familiar in their new community: Muslim neighbors, mosques for the special Ramadan prayers, known as “taraweeh,” and halal food markets.

Khial Mohammad Sultani holds the prayer rug that’s among his family most treasured possessions in the family’s motel room in El Paso, Texas, on Saturday, March 26, 2022. His father brought it from Mecca after another son was killed by the Taliban, Sultani said, and now Sultani brought it to his new life in the United States, where he, his wife and six children were evacuated from Afghanistan when the Taliban regained power last summer. (AP Photo/Giovanna Dell’Orto)

Khial Mohammad Sultani, who the day before Ramadan was still living in an extended stay motel on the outskirts of El Paso, Texas, had to ride nearly 80 miles (128 kilometers) round trip into New Mexico in a taxi to go buy and slaughter a lamb for Ramadan.

The 37-year-old former soldier, his wife Noor Bibi, and their six children broke the second day’s fast with pieces of that lamb stewed in an aromatic sauce around the one table in their duplex, newly built on a barren foothills lot unlike their house in Gardez, with its apple and pomegranate trees.

Afghan refugee Shirkhan Nejat, left, talks to his 2-month-old son, Ansar, at the family’s Oklahoma City apartment on Saturday, April 2, 2022. In the background are Joseph Pham, left, a refugee case manager for Catholic Charities of Oklahoma City; a translator, center; and Carly Akard, director of communications for Catholic Charities. (AP Photo/Bobby Ross Jr.)

Right after iftar, four of the children got ready for their first day of school ever the next morning, another new thrill for their parents who never received a formal education.

But when it comes to faith, Sultani will continue to teach his children at home, as his father did for him.

The three oldest children – a boy, 11, and two girls, 9 and 8, with red headscarves loosely arranged over their long braids – pray in turn on a green rug that is among the family’s most treasured possessions.

Sana Sultani, 8, watches children’s programming on television in the motel room she shares with her parents and five siblings in El Paso, Texas, on Saturday, March 26, 2022. The Sultanis, one family among thousands of Afghans evacuated to the United States as the Taliban regained power last summer, moved into a duplex just in time to celebrate their first Muslim holy month of Ramadan in the U.S. (AP Photo/Giovanna Dell’Orto)

The family’s Quran came from the military base in New Jersey where they first landed in the United States. But Sultani’s father brought this rug from his pilgrimage at Mecca after another son was killed by the Taliban, a possible fate they escaped, crossing many checkpoints as they fled Afghanistan last summer.

“We are Muslim, and a part of our faith is to thank Allah for everything,” Sultani says in Dari through a volunteer translator. “As appreciation for him, we’re doing this.”

By GIOVANNA DELL’ORTO and MARIAM FAM

Fam reported from Cairo. Bobby Ross Jr. contributed from Oklahoma City.

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