">Forum Views ()
">Forum Replies ()
Read more with google mobile :
Afghan music school emerges from ruins
Yahoo!
My Yahoo!
Mail
Yahoo! Search
Search:
Sign InNew User? Sign Up
News Home -
Help
Navigation
Primary Navigation
Home
Singapore
Asia Pacific
World
Business
Entertainment
Sports
Technology
Top Stories
Most Popular
Secondary Navigation
Australia
China
India
Indonesia
Japan
Malaysia
Philippines
Thailand
Vietnam
Search
Search:
Afghan music school emerges from ruins
AFP - Sunday, May 3
KABUL (AFP) - - Two teenage violinists scrape their way through a French gavotte in a chilly classroom at Afghanistan's only high school for music, a bleak building and one-time ruin of Kabul's civil war.
ADVERTISEMENT
"When it is cold, our fingers don't work so well," says 18-year-old Hogat Ruzabeh, perhaps trying to justify the rough sound. His dream, he says, is to one day perform in an Afghan symphony orchestra.
Clad in denim jeans, Ruzabeh has turned up to practice an artform that he says is as important to him as "eating and drinking".
But Afghanistan's potential musicians are starved in a nation where war and Islamist extremism have eroded classical culture and destroyed a wealth of ancient art, film libraries and paintings.
The Taliban regime, which ruled from 1996 to 2001, banned music, forcing many musicians to put away their instruments or go into exile.
While the US-led ouster of the brutal regime revived musicians' fortunes, age-old traditional instruments are nevertheless on the brink of extinction.
Classical Western disciplines introduced in the 1940s and again in the 1970s have almost been lost.
Kabul's Secondary Vocational School of Music embodies such decay, having been plundered during the civil war in the 1990s between various political and military factions that ousted the Soviet occupiers.
"Everything was stolen," says Abdul Mohammad, the school's caretaker for 30 years. "It was a battlefield, they took everything, even the power lines."
"They used tablas (traditional drums) for flower pots, pianos for firewood, brass instruments were sold as scrap metal in Pakistan," he says.
Mohammad holds up a small stool, the only item remaining from the school that once flourished in the 1980s.
"I couldn't do anything to protect the school and the musical instruments," he says. "I would have cried blood instead of tears if I could because of the destruction."
Hand grenades were tossed into concert pianos to splinter the wood into manageable sizes, adds musicologist Ahmad Sarmast, a driving force behind post-Taliban efforts to revive music in Afghanistan.
It is "more like a prison than a music school," says Sarmast of the dark corridors and damaged doors fastened with padlocks.
The 90 or so students also have few usable instruments: 35 students share a single drum kit, while 17 share one saxophone.
Yet the dark times and sour notes may soon be coming to an end for the school, which is to be given a makeover due to begin next week.
What is now a crumbling symbol of broken dreams is to be transformed into a world-class National Institute of Music for Afghanistan, Sarmast says.
Classrooms will be overhauled, a concert hall will be built and students will follow a new curriculum that will guide the school towards international affiliation and accreditation, says Sarmast, the new initiative's director.
Specialist music teachers will also be employed to bolster the meagre five or six Afghan instructors currently at the school, and Sarmast says he had little trouble in filling the new positions.
"We got a very good response for the teaching positions advertised."
Recruitment is under way to select students and future stars from the war-ravaged country's large number of orphans and street children, whom Sarmast hopes will make up half the future student body.
Years in the planning, the effort involves a host of donor governments, international music colleges and instrument suppliers, with around 200 donated instruments in Germany ready to be shipped over for the new institute.
It is only the beginning of a long journey in a country where the army band is possibly the only group capable of performing the national anthem -- itself produced abroad.
"In eight or 10 years we should have the first symphony orchestra or a well-qualified brass band," Sarmast says.
The doctor and research fellow at Australia's Monash Asia Institute says he believes that music can heal his war-torn and ethnically divided nation.
"In a country that has had 30 years of civil war, music and music education can assist traumatised people, especially young children and orphans who witnessed the killing of their parents and destruction of their homes.
"No one can argue against the unifying power of music."
Back in the classroom, the other teenager battling with the tricky French score, 19-year-old Ramin Shekwa, also believes music is "good for the mind and soul" of his traumatised nation.
"Music is good to keep away sorrow and feel the happiness of other countries through their music," Shekwa says, wrapping his cold fingers around the violin he hopes will one day put him in his country's first symphony orchestra.
Email Story
IM Story
Printable View
Blog This
Recommend this article
0 users recommend
Sign in to recommend this article »
Most Recommended Stories »
Related Articles: Asia Pacific
Turmoil feared as Nepal sacks army chiefAFP - 1 hour 59 minutes ago
Pakistan's Imran Khan barred from KarachiReuters - 2 hours 27 minutes ago
Afghan rights chief fears vote fraud against womenAP - 2 hours 57 minutes ago
Taliban behead two Pakistani officials in SwatReuters - Monday, May 4
Pakistan creates Islamic courtAFP - Monday, May 4
Enlarge Photo
Afghan music school emerges from ruins
Most Popular – Asia Pacific
Viewed
Kenyan women to sex-starve men -- for politics
Citigroup may need $10 bln more: report
Amy Winehouse hospitalised after fainting
Swine flu spreads economic shivers
Chrysler begins court bid for quick bankruptcy exit
View Complete List »
Search:
Home
Singapore
Asia Pacific
World
Business
Entertainment
Sports
Technology
Top Stories
Most Popular
Copyright © 2009 Yahoo! Southeast Asia Pte Ltd. (Co. Reg. No. 199700735D). All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy
- Terms of Service
- Community
- Intellectual Property Rights Policy
- Help
Other News on Sunday, 3 May 2009 Two U.S. soldiers killed in northern Iraq
| International
|
Israel picks U.S. immigrant for new Washington envoy
| International
|
African Union panel on Darfur will meet ICC: Mbeki
| International
|
French forces grab 3 Somali pirates in Seychelles
| International
|
Gates on US troop numbers in Afghanistan
Anatomy of an `inside' ambush in Iraq
Gunman in Iraqi army uniform kills 2 US soldiers
Pakistan sets up Islamic court for restive region
| International
|
Millionaire magnate lures poor in Panama election
| International
|
Around 30 militants said killed in Afghan attacks
GM could follow Chrysler into bankruptcy: analysts
Gunmen kill Albanian opposition MP ahead of polls
| International
|
US, Canada, Mexico call for flu not to hit trade
Iran hangs woman convicted of murder as a minor
Fiat boss expected to discuss Opel bid with Germany
CORRECTED: Afghan presidential hopeful promises Talib
| International
|
Israeli airstrike against Gaza tunnels kills 2
Iran to review jail sentence of U.S.-born reporter
Amy Winehouse hospitalised after fainting
CORRECTED
Iran shells Kurdish rebel positions in north Iraq
BLM to get $300 million for stimulus projects
Buffett offers bleak outlook for U.S. newspapers
| Technology
|
Clinton returns to Oklahoma bombing site for tour
Boston Globe gets brief reprieve from closure
Spokeswoman: Jack Kemp, one-time VP nominee, dies
Airman in Alaska sentenced for forced miscarriage
At least 3 dead in Russia gas blast
Obamas take a walk, holding hands in the evening
Unpopular Sarkozy recasts his national role
Tweaked about fake tweets, Idaho gov joins Twitter
More than half L'Aquila quake homes 'habitable': Berlusconi
Venezuela's Chavez courts Iran as US shows concern
Chechen president denies link to exile's murder: report
US military deaths in Iraq war at 4,284
Mo. woman convicted of murder commits suicide
Malaysia's 'McCurry' cheers win over McDonald's
Judge: Mumbai attacks suspect to be tried as adult
Pakistan: Islamic appellate court formed
Sri Lanka rebels ask British, French to seek truce
Asia reports no new swine flu cases
'Draconian' powers seen to contain swine flu
Pacquiao knocks out Hatton for historic triumph
Global Weather-Celsius
60 years after WWII, Okinawa still rife with bombs
Asia must retool to boost domestic demand: ADB
Pakistan sets up Islamic court for restive region
Japan offers 38.4 bln dlrs to Asian pool: minister
Swine flu could worsen global recession: analysts
Comedian Robert Schimmel arrested in assault case
Review: Welser-Moest gives magic to Wagner
WWOZ gives New Orleans Jazz Fest to the world
Girl's father does not want Madonna to adopt her
Irish recession strains marriages: church
`Wolverine' has box-office bite with $35M debut
Nepal Maoists sack army chief
| International
|
Egypt pig farmers clash with police over slaughter
U.S. urges calm after three die in south Yemen clashes
| International
|
Israel considers pullout from Lebanon border village
Berlusconi's wife wants to file for divorce: press
| International
|
Israel's Lieberman off to Europe amid tensions
Iraqi forces arrest U.S.-allied militia leader
| International
|
Father rejects Madonna's adoption bid: report
Pakistan's Imran Khan barred from Karachi
| International
|
Afghan music school emerges from ruins
Six climbers killed in Austria Alps avalanche
| International
|
Obama set for 'intense' Pakistan, Afghan summit
Zimbabwe orders school fee cuts as economy struggles
| International
|
Ethanol test for Obama on climate change, science
Israel considers pullout from Lebanon border village
| International
|
Medvedev brings new style to the Kremlin
| International
|
NATO games in Georgia draw fire from Russia
| International
|
Cautious optimism on flu but US 'not out of woods'
Ethanol test for Obama on climate change, science
THE INFLUENCE GAME: Lobbyists prosper in downturn
Iran: US journalist's case will get fair review
SC search for missing NY teen turns up no clues
Canadian party taps Ignatieff as leader
Times Co., Boston Globe unions resume negotiations
Cause not yet known in 28-injury tour bus wreck
2 win Alaska betting game, guess river ice breakup
Afghan rights chief fears vote fraud against women
Key party quits Nepal's coalition government
Taliban behead two Pakistani officials in Swat
Pakistan creates Islamic court
Sydney police rescue alleged burglar from rooftop
Mexico sees swine flug coming under control
HBO's Alzheimer's series aims to push for cure
| Entertainment
|
Philippine rebels attack plantation, 9 wounded
Rights chief warns of Afghan vote fraud
Nepal's prime minister fires army chief
Brazil films shown in NY examine slums, hunger
| Entertainment
|
ASEAN, China, Japan, SKorea finalise crisis pact
Asia urged to rethink growth policies amid crisis
'Best job' contenders arrive on Aussie island
Greece at new risk of being pushed off euro
Bodies of missing Tenn. mom, Jo Ann Bain, and daughter found
Female Breasts Are Bigger Than Ever
AMD Trinity Accelerated Processing Units Now in Volume Production
The Avengers (2012 film), made the second biggest opening- and single-day gross of all-time
AMD to Start Production of piledriver
Ivy Bridge Quad-Core, Four-Thread Desktop CPUs
Islamists Protest Lady Gaga's Concert in Indonesia
Japan Successfully Broadcasts an 8K Signal Over the Air
ECB boosts loans to 1 trillion Euro to stop credit crunch
Egypt : Mohammed Morsi won with 52 percent
What do you call 100,000 Frenchmen with their hands up
AMD Launches AMD Embedded R-Series APU Platform
Fed Should not Ignore Emerging Market Crisis
Fed casts shadow over India, emerging markets
Why are Chinese tourists so rude? A few insights