Kabul is a city of hustle and bustle. There are few paved roads and no traffic lanes, intersections or traffic lights. Livestock including sheep, goats and camels weave in and out of traffic consisting mostly of old Toyota Corolla Sedans converted to taxicabs while young men in jeans talk on cell phones. It is a cacophony of traditional and modernity. (Camel photo courtesy of Marsha MacColl)

11 comments:

free lotto said...
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jfmarcelo said...

Hola:
Acabo de ver tu blog.
Espero que visites mi blog, son fotos de mi pueblo, de España y de Italia y Francia:

http://blog.iespana.es/jfmmzorita

http://blog.iespana.es/jfmm1

http://blog.iespana.es/jfmarcelo

donde encontrarás los enlaces de todos los blogs.
UN SALUDO.

Susan Hall said...

Hola jfmarcelo,

yo hablo solamente un poquito espanol pero yo voy Honduras con mi hermano en tres semanos.

vaya con dios :)

aryaman bhatnagar said...

Dear Susan,

I work for an organisation called The YP Foundation in New Delhi, India. It is a youth organisation aiming at promoting social entrepreneurship among young people.
As part of this organisation I'm heading a project called "Bridge the Gap", which is a cultural exchange project between Indian and Afghan students aiming to engage both the student communities through literature, films and discussions.
As part of the project we are publishing a magazine called "The Bridge:Understanding Afghanistan Today". the purpose of this publication is to focus on the post-2001 developments taking place in Afghanistan; the culture, heritage and history of Afghanistan; the role of the media and external forces in shaping Afghanistan's current situation; and people's personal experiences with Afghans or Afghanistan.
I went through your blogs and felt that they would definitely fit the mandate of our publication. Would you like to help us out by submitting some of your articles for our magazine or pictures.
For more information please feel free to contact me at yp.aryamanbhatnagar@gmail.com.
Hoping to hear from you soon with a positive response!
Thanks!
Aryaman

Kala said...

I found your blog on photoblogs.org.

Fascinating!

Anonymous said...

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Anonymous said...
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Free Ecards said...

Very good blog and photos. I realy congratulate the bloger

Cheers
prasad

Anonymous said...

Your blog keeps getting better and better! Your older articles are not as good as newer ones you have a lot more creativity and originality now. Keep it up!
And according to this article, I totally agree with your opinion, but only this time! :)

Anonymous said...

Hi, Susan, I was looking for some pics of Afghanistan online, I came across your blog. I think I worked as your translator for about a week in Kabul. I worked for A4T.

I am in the US now.

Sayednaqibullah@yahoo.com


Naqibullah

the publisher said...

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Afghanistan: Implications of the US endgame