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Inside the Taliban
By Diane Ainsworth, Public Affairs
17 October 2001
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After only a brief time together, the Taliban bodyguards escorting Berkeley scientist Ted Papenfuss through the deserts of southern Afghanistan were asking him to watch their Kalashnikov rifles while they raced off to catch the lizards Papenfuss was studying. A proud and simple people, the ordinary Taliban officials did not seem to share the deep-seated anti-American sentiments of their leaders, said Papenfuss, a research specialist in Berkeley’s Museum of Vertebrate Zoology. The people of Afghanistan originally lived in nomadic tribes scattered across a country about the size of Arizona and New Mexico put together, he said. “They were nice people, simple and fascinated by my lizard chasing. They were interested to find out that some species of lizards came out at night.” In June of last year, Papenfuss was on a field trip, partially funded by a National Science Foundation grant, to study relationships between specific species of Asian reptiles and amphibians. He had chosen Afghanistan after learning that lizards he was studying could be found there, east of the Iranian habitats he had previously explored. “My trip had been approved at the highest level of (the Afghani) government. Without that, I never would have been allowed in the country with the degree of movement I had,” Papenfuss said. The Taliban “had been getting some bad press,” he said, “and I think that by showing the Western world that scientists were welcome in their country, they hoped to show that they were, in fact, a real country and not just a bunch of radicals.” Base camp During his first few days in Kandahar, Papenfuss stayed in a surprisingly modern guest house, which had served as officers’ quarters for the Russian military during its occupation of Afghanistan. The house was equipped with “new plumbing, a hot shower, a refrigerator, and a cook who had prepared food for Westerners in the past,” he said. When the top Taliban military corps commander for Kandahar, General Osmani, heard that an American scientist was visiting, he decided to pay Papenfuss a visit. “As soon as he greeted me,” Papenfuss recalled, “he told me a Bill Clinton-Monica Lewinski joke, speaking in the local southern dialect, Pashtun. It probably lost something in the translation, but the general roared with laughter after reciting it. In search of lizards Next, the team set out on a camping trip to the “regestan” (sandy desert) around the Helmet River, the biggest river draining out of the Hindu Kush mountain range. Papenfuss saw enormous fields of opium and nomads harvesting the crop and loading it onto camels. “By this time I had gained the Taliban’s trust,” he said. “I had been forbidden to take pictures of people; it was against the Taliban interpretation of Islam law. But they told me to take pictures of the opium fields. Muhammad told me that their country had been destroyed by civil war and the Russian invasion, and that without natural resources or gold, the only thing they had that the West was interested in was opium.” Opium harvesting has since been outlawed. Papenfuss saw many nomads, some of them wheat farmers, who eked out an impoverished existence in a country that conjured images of 7th century Arabia. Outside of the big cities, women went about their daily lives unveiled. “They didn’t need to wear veils because they weren’t seen by anyone,” he said. His work was not quite done, however. On his final day in the country, while finishing his laboratory work to preserve lizard tissues in a large canister of liquid nitrogen, Papenfuss received another visit by General Osmani. This time the enthusiastic general brought four truckloads of Afghani warriors and asked Papenfuss to tell them about his lizard collection. “I did,” he said. “I had a captivated audience.”
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