I am living in the elegant foreign workers' Guest House in the photo above while I work with USAID's Afghanistan Rule of Law Project. The house is spacious with three floors and a basement where we eat our meals. The second and third floors of the house are ringed with porches that offer dazzling views of TV Mountain in the near distance and the Hindu Kush in the background. My colleagues and my housemates are one in the same. We live together and work together. It's a nice group.
I am the Performance Monitoring and Reporting Specialist for USAID's Afghanistan Rule of Law Project which brings together US lawyers, judges, law professors with their Afghan counterparts to rebuild and restore Afghanistan's Justice Sector. (Details can be found at http://afghanistan.usaid.gov/en/Activity.85.aspx.) I am responsible for preparing scheduled progress reports for USAID on the full scope of work accomplished weekly, bi-weekly, monthly, and quarterly. Our office is in another neighborhood of Kabul. We are driven there and back every day. Most of the staff are Afghan locals and kinder, more professional colleagues one could not ask for.
6 comments:
Ann - This is fascinating. Your descriptions are so vivid. I almost feel I'm there. It's good to hear that it is a positive experience. It's always special to be able to jump out of your world and step into an entirely different reality. I'm glad you're there, too! S
Ann, I love reading your blog. This experience sounds amazing!!
Dear Ann - thank you so much for this blog and for sharing your adventures with us. Fascinating!
(I also love your descriptions of the house in California, the long-lived rattlesnake and the mesmerizing monkey - that reminded me of the Olivier/Caine movie, 'Clue' - *shudder*)
Did you ask your friend how to anchor the scarf so it doesn't make you nuts?
Stay safe, enjoy, and keep us posted!
xox - Mary O'
An incredible adventure. Afghanistan is not on my top 10 list but your descriptions are making me think that I should reconsider my preferences.
So useful - since you have time on your hands, pls peruse this article from I am sure a newspaper you trust : http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/02/world/asia/02kabul.html?scp=1&sq=afghanistan%20bribery&st=cse
Do you really believe that you summaries of legalese are helping in any way ? or do you just feel proud to help the US share the wealth with a failed state ?
You albeit brief recounts are so vivid they give such a sense of being there. We know you are busy but would always love to hear more. Best.
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