As of August 25, more than 350 artists, art professionals, and organizations have signed an open letter calling for the United States government to include Afghan cultural workers as at-risk individuals in its evacuation plan. Currently, evacuees are largely restricted to US passport and green-card holders, and applicants for the Special Immigrant Visa who worked for or have connections with US forces and agencies.
The letter, issued under the banner of Arts for Afghanistan, argues that Afghanistan’s artists, filmmakers, performers, writers, and curators are particularly vulnerable because their work contradicts “the very foundation of the Taliban’s claim to legitimate power, which is based on a vision of Afghanistan as only ever having been a monoethnic, monotheistic society.” They also state that the US government—which supported and encouraged these cultural workers to articulate the truths about life in Afghanistan—has the responsibility to protect those who have fostered free expression and civil society.
As such, the letter’s signatories are calling on the US government to place cultural workers on evacuation lists; to keep Kabul airport open for all at-risk individuals; to expedite the processing of special visas; and to remove or increase quotas for Afghan refugees, among other measures. The supporters of these demands include international artists and art professionals such as Michael Rakowitz, Martha Rosler, Naeem Mohaiemen, and Hou Hanru, as well as US-based nonprofit organizations such as Pen America, Asia Contemporary Art Forum, and Film Fatales.
The letter’s grave concerns for the safety of Afghanistan’s arts and culture workers resonate with those voiced by local and international institutions. Citing the track record of the Taliban’s “systematic destruction of cultural heritage,” Karima Bennoune, the United Nation’s special rapporteur for cultural rights, argued that there is the urgent need “to ensure the safety of all forms of culture and cultural heritage . . . and to protect those who defend it on the frontlines.” Kabul’s National Museum of Afghanistan, which was ransacked by the Taliban in February and March 2001, posted a statement on social media on August 16, confirming the safety of its staff but stressing that the “continuation of this chaotic situation causes a huge concern about the safety of the museum’s artifacts and goods.” The International Council of Museums and the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation have echoed these sentiments.
Since the Taliban’s takeover of Kabul on August 15, an estimated total of 78,570 people have been evacuated from Afghanistan in efforts led by countries including the US, the United Kingdom, France, Germany, Italy, Australia, Turkey, Spain, Switzerland, and Norway. However, Taliban checkpoints across Afghanistan mean that getting to an evacuation point is impossible for most local citizens. Shaharzad Akbar, chairperson of the Afghanistan Independent Human Rights Commission, called the situation “failure upon failure,” as even those who qualify for evacuation have been unable to get on planes, slowed by visa problems, or barred from leaving the unsecured airport.
Many journalists, activists, cultural workers, and civilians who once assisted the US have since gone into hiding, and, as the Arts for Afghanistan letter states, “are unlikely to get out of the country without immediate changes to Washington’s approach to granting visas and providing flights.”
The full statement is reproduced below.
Open Letter from Arts for Afghanistan
We are writing to urge the United States government to do everything in its power to facilitate the departure from Afghanistan of at-risk Afghans, and to include artists, filmmakers, performers, and writers in that category. As a group of individuals—artists, filmmakers, performers, writers, curators—and institutions, acting in solidarity with our peers in Afghanistan, we recognize the vulnerability of the country’s cultural workers, who are already being targeted by the Taliban and forced into hiding. Like Afghan journalists, activists, and citizens who have assisted the US, cultural workers face threats to their lives because of the work they’ve done—and they are unlikely to get out of the country without immediate changes to Washington’s approach to granting visas and providing flights.
Even before the Taliban’s takeover, cultural workers took grave risks in depicting the experiences and articulating the aspirations of Afghans, with the encouragement—and, often, direct support—of the US government. Now, the vocation of truth-telling has become much more dangerous, and many of our peers see no choice but to leave the country. In addition to standing with advocates for journalists and activists, we insist on the protection of all who have devoted themselves to fostering free expression and civil society in Afghanistan. We make the following demands of the US government, in order to save lives and fulfill the promises made to Afghan allies, colleagues, and friends:
● Take immediate action (through the State Department and Department of Homeland Security) to facilitate expedited visa processing and provide asylum for all vulnerable Afghans.
● Immediately include cultural workers in the categories being used to refer at-risk Afghans for evacuation lists.
● Hold the Taliban accountable to commitments made during the Doha negotiations and to international human rights norms, including the safeguarding of the right to free expression by all members of society and of all aspects of cultural heritage.
Additionally, we stand with other advocates and Afghan citizens in calling on the US government to:
● Remove—or, at least, increase—the quotas for Afghan refugees, and permanently halt any deportations of Afghan refugees currently in progress.
● Keep the Kabul airport open until all at-risk Afghans who wish to evacuate have done so, and allow chartered, commercial, and humanitarian flights to operate out of the airport under the protection of the US.
● Expedite the processing of Special Immigrant Visas for Afghans who worked with the US government, as well as visas for cultural workers, and remove the requirement that such visas be processed in a third country. (This unnecessary, burdensome rule is jeopardizing the safety of visa applicants.) Instead, allow all visas to be processed either in Afghanistan or the US.
● Indefinitely suspend the standard (and various) term limits and reapplication requirements for SIV, P-2, and humanitarian parole visas granted to Afghans or, instead, create a new class of extended Temporary Protected Status for all Afghan refugees.
● Continue to offer international exchange programs and visas for Afghan students.
In addition to the above demands, we call on governments of all nations to facilitate the evacuation and resettlement of Afghan refugees by offering asylum and aid. And we call on Americans and US cultural institutions to bolster our demands by communicating them directly to local and national representatives.
Destroying art and artists has never been incidental to the Taliban’s project. In fact, doing so is at the very foundation of the Taliban’s claim to legitimate power, which is based on a vision of Afghanistan as only ever having been a monoethnic, monotheistic society. Afghanistan’s cultural heritage undermines the Taliban’s claim to power and contradicts the underlying vision. But if a new vision of Afghanistan’s future is ever to emerge, the country’s dreamers must survive.
Alongside our peers in Afghanistan, we are watching events with great concern, and we are demanding swift action to aid Afghans who have risked so much over the years to create independent, defiant, and transformative work—and whose lives are now at risk as a result.
Suining Sim is an editorial intern at ArtAsiaPacific.
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