Page 406 - Leadership in the Indian Army
P. 406

Taliban  are  regrouping  already  and  will  come  back  with  a  vengeance,

                        that  the  world  will  forget  once  again  about  Afghanistan.  The  lines  are
                        from his favorite of Hafez's ghazals:




                            Joseph  shall  return  to  Canaan,  grieve  not,  Hovels  shall  turn  to  rose
                        gardens,  grieve  not.  If  a  flood  should  arrive,  to  drown  all  that's  alive,

                        Noah is your guide in the typhoon's eye, grieve not




                            Laila  passes  beneath  the  sign and enters the  classroom. The children

                        are  taking  their  seats,  flipping  notebooks  open,  chattering-  Aziza  is
                        talking  to  a  girl  in the  adjacent row. A  paper  airplane floats across the

                        room in a high arc. Someone tosses it back.

                          "Open your Farsi books, children," Laila  says, dropping her own books
                        on her desk.




                            To a chorus of flipping pages, Laila  makes her way to the  curtainless
                        window. Through the glass, she can see the boys in the playground lining

                        up  to  practice  their  free  throws.  Above  them,  over  the  mountains,  the

                        morning sun is rising. It catches the metallic rim of the basketball hoop,

                        the  chain  link  of  the  tire  swings,  the  whistle  hanging  around  Zaman's
                        neck, his new, unchipped spectacles. Laila flattens her palms against the

                        warm  glass  panes.  Closes  her  eyes.  She  lets  the  sunlight  fall  on  her

                        cheeks, her eyelids, her brow.



                          When they first came back to Kabul, it distressed Laila that she didn't

                        know  where  the  Taliban  had buried Mariam. She wished she could visit

                        Mariam's  grave, to sit with  her awhile,  leave a flower or two.  But Laila
                        sees now that it doesn't matter. Mariam is never very far. She is here, in

                        these  walls  they've  repainted,  in  the  trees  they've  planted,  in  the
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