Search results
Results from the Go Local Guru Content Network
Hazara girls in traditional clothing Hazara culture is a combination of customs, traditions, behaviors, beliefs, and norms that have been formed in interaction and confrontation with the surrounding phenomena for many years and now it is displayed as a cultural identity.
There is a famous story of 40 Hazara girls in Uruzgan committing suicide to escape sex slavery during the persecution. 30 mule loads; or roughly over 400 decapitated Hazara heads were allegedly sent to Kabul. The Sultan Ahmad Hazara tribe of Uruzgan was in particular severely persecuted.
Dozens of women from the Hazara community of Afghanistan protested after a suicide bombing in September 2022, occurred in an educational center that killed more than 52 young women. The Hazaras have long been the subjects of persecution in Afghanistan. The Hazaras are mostly from Afghanistan, primarily from the central regions of Afghanistan ...
9 Hazara men killed: Taliban used torture and extrajudicial executions to commit the massacre. January to June 2021 Attacks on the Hazara community: Throughout Afghanistan: Taliban, ISKP, Anonymous terrorist groups 143 killed and 357 injured: 2022: Kaaj girl school bombing Kabul, Afghanistan Unknown Alleged Taliban involvement ISKP
Paris-based film sales agency Cat&Docs has acquired “Kamay,” the debut feature documentary from filmmakers Ilyas Yourish and Shahrokh Bikaran. The film will world premiere at Visions du Réel ...
Taliban arrest women and girls in Kabul for violating dress code. In January 2024, the Taliban regime in Afghanistan arrested dozens of women and girls in western Kabul, a predominantly Hazara neighborhood, for wearing "bad hijab," which means not covering their faces or wearing tight clothes.
Hazara clothing or Hazaragi clothing (Persian: لباس هزارگی) has an important and special role in supporting the traditional cultural and social identity of the Hazaras. Hazara clothes are produced manually and by machine; in Afghanistan Hazara clothing is sewn in most parts of the country, especially in the central provinces of the ...
Hazara people make up the second or the third largest ethnic group in Afghanistan, making about 20%–25% of the total population of Afghanistan (Some suggest the real population might reach 30%) where they mainly inhabit the Hazaristan region, as well as parts of Pakistan (especially Balochistan) and Iran.
Afghan Girl is a 1984 photographic portrait of Sharbat Gula, an Afghan refugee in Pakistan during the Soviet–Afghan War. The photograph, taken by American photojournalist Steve McCurry near the Pakistani city of Peshawar , appeared on the June 1985 cover of National Geographic .
Fighters claiming allegiance to the Islamic State took seven members of the Hazara ethnic group hostage in October 2015 in Ghazni and held them in Arghandab District, Zabul Province. The hostages included four men, two women, and a nine-year-old girl, Shukria Tabassum.