I know, a surreal headline which makes little sense. Let me explain. There is a group of women in Afghanistan who love to play football. Islam forbids women from playing sports, and now their ball has been taken away. I know footballs are no longer made from pigskin, but the irony I did not want to lose.
Once again, Islam forbids those things which are seen as Western, or not Islamic enough. The fact that they had a place for a while says that they were only allowed to play while the world was watching, and once it turned it's eye, Islam took over again.
From CNN June 8 by Nick Paton Walsh
That's after the death threats, and parental disapproval and the ostracizing. You see to many Afghans, in this conservative society, women just aren't meant to play sports at all.
Khalida Popal, their captain, has received threatening text messages from those who say she must stop shaming her society. She's even persevered in the face of her family telling her to stop playing for her own safety.
"I love football and football is everything for me and when I come and feel the football I forget everything and I become very happy when I see my team", she said.
Now her team has a real problem on their hands: They have nowhere to practice.
For the past few months, they were allowed into the main stadium in Kabul. It's where the Taliban used to publicly execute people - but now it's covered in real grass.
Not that the girls got used to it: They were relegated to a patch of concrete down at one end.
But even that's now out of bounds - local officials telling them they can't use the space any more.
So we join them in a strange new world. NATO has taken pity on them and loaned them a small patch of grass just inside the outer walls of its main headquarters in Kabul.
It's grass. And there are goalposts. Yet one small problem remains. The grass is not just meant for football. It's also a helipad -- an active one.
The girls are about 10 minutes into their practice when the sound of the Black Hawks begins.
Two US soldiers calmly walk onto the pitch and wave them off, securing the landing zone.
The girls sit calmly by the side of the pitch, as the three-star general lands. And then, before the helicopter wheels have even left the ground, they're dribbling the ball back onto the pitch.
This fight - to play the game she loves - has been incredibly tough for Khalida. When her parents told her to stop, she could no longer see the point of living.
"When my family stopped me to play football, when they said, 'No, just stop playing football,' I tried suicide." But she survived.
Some of the disapproval against the women stems from how nearly all of their few international matches took place abroad, conservative Afghans particularly outraged by women traveling unaccompanied overseas.
This is Islam.
Once again, Islam forbids those things which are seen as Western, or not Islamic enough. The fact that they had a place for a while says that they were only allowed to play while the world was watching, and once it turned it's eye, Islam took over again.
From CNN June 8 by Nick Paton Walsh
Afghan women footballers risk death threats, disapproval
It is rare that you see a football match interrupted by a military helicopter landing. But that is what the Afghan women's football team, a group of remarkably hardened and brave soccer enthusiasts, regularly face.That's after the death threats, and parental disapproval and the ostracizing. You see to many Afghans, in this conservative society, women just aren't meant to play sports at all.
Khalida Popal, their captain, has received threatening text messages from those who say she must stop shaming her society. She's even persevered in the face of her family telling her to stop playing for her own safety.
"I love football and football is everything for me and when I come and feel the football I forget everything and I become very happy when I see my team", she said.
Now her team has a real problem on their hands: They have nowhere to practice.
For the past few months, they were allowed into the main stadium in Kabul. It's where the Taliban used to publicly execute people - but now it's covered in real grass.
Not that the girls got used to it: They were relegated to a patch of concrete down at one end.
But even that's now out of bounds - local officials telling them they can't use the space any more.
So we join them in a strange new world. NATO has taken pity on them and loaned them a small patch of grass just inside the outer walls of its main headquarters in Kabul.
It's grass. And there are goalposts. Yet one small problem remains. The grass is not just meant for football. It's also a helipad -- an active one.
The girls are about 10 minutes into their practice when the sound of the Black Hawks begins.
Two US soldiers calmly walk onto the pitch and wave them off, securing the landing zone.
The girls sit calmly by the side of the pitch, as the three-star general lands. And then, before the helicopter wheels have even left the ground, they're dribbling the ball back onto the pitch.
This fight - to play the game she loves - has been incredibly tough for Khalida. When her parents told her to stop, she could no longer see the point of living.
"When my family stopped me to play football, when they said, 'No, just stop playing football,' I tried suicide." But she survived.
Some of the disapproval against the women stems from how nearly all of their few international matches took place abroad, conservative Afghans particularly outraged by women traveling unaccompanied overseas.
This is Islam.
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