Current:Home > reviewsU.S. veterans use art to help female Afghan soldiers who fled their country process their pain -Quantum Finance Bridge
U.S. veterans use art to help female Afghan soldiers who fled their country process their pain
View
Date:2025-04-16 06:07:21
In a sunlit gallery high above Manhattan, artist Jenn Hassin is trying to repurpose the tattered threads of lives unraveled.
Hassin, a U.S. Air Force veteran, didn't create the art on the gallery's walls. Much of it comes from female Afghan military veterans who evacuated the country after the Taliban regained power more than two years ago. For the past year, Hassin has been hosting Afghan servicewomen at her studio near Austin, Texas, where she teaches them how to transform beloved items of clothing like hijabs, hats and even uniforms into colorful paper pulp that can be molded and shaped into anything they want.
One of those "escape artists," Mahnaz Akbari, told CBS News that the art came from her heart and helps her process the chaos of the fall of her country and the loss of her hard-fought military career.
"I really had a passion to join the military because I really love to be in uniform," Akbari said, noting that it was "so hard" to convince her family to let her join the military.
Even after the U.S. removed the Taliban from Afghanistan in 2001, the country was still a hard place for women. Akbari and another soldier, Nazdana Hassani, said their uniforms shielded them, marking them as fierce and capable members of a female tactical platoon. Akbari said she even did more than 150 night raids with the military.
Pride in their service turned to anguish in 2021, when U.S. troops withdrew from Afghanistan and the country fell back under Taliban control. With help from the U.S. servicewomen who had trained them, Akbari and Hassani made it out of Kabul, traveling to the United States, though at the time they didn't know where they were going.
"When the aircraft landed, I asked one of the people there where we are. And she told me 'Welcome to the U.S.,'" Akbari recalled.
The women had to burn their uniforms before fleeing, leaving a part of themselves in the cinders.
"It's really weird to say, but these physical items, they hold so much weight that we don't even realize," said former U.S. Army Airborne officer Erringer Helbling, who co-founded Command Purpose to provide support for women leaving the military. "When I put on my uniform, the community saw me a certain way. And when you don't have that, and people look at you, it's just different. I lost my voice. I lost my community."
Helbling's Command Purpose joined forces with another non-profit, Sisters of Service, to create the Manhattan exhibit showcasing the Afghan soldiers' art.
"What's been really powerful about this project is allowing us to simply be women in whatever way that means to us," Helbling said.
The women making the art said that they have found many of their experiences to be similar.
"War is so negative, but there's also this, like, extremely positive, beautiful thing about this sisterhood that I've found myself being part of," Hassin said.
The exhibit will continue through the end of the month. All of the artwork is available online.
- In:
- Afghanistan
- U.S. Air Force
- Veterans
CBS News correspondent
veryGood! (759)
Related
- Have Dry, Sensitive Skin? You Need To Add These Gentle Skincare Products to Your Routine
- Scores of starving and sick pelicans are found along the California coast
- A Florida man is recovering after a shark attack at a Bahamas marina
- The Archbishop of Canterbury addresses Royal Family rift: 'They need to be prayed for'
- Grammy nominee Teddy Swims on love, growth and embracing change
- Neuralink brain-chip implant encounters issues in first human patient
- Missouri’s GOP Gov. Parson signs bill to kick Planned Parenthood off Medicaid
- Taylor Swift performs 'Paris' in Paris for surprise song set
- Skins Game to make return to Thanksgiving week with a modern look
- 'Killer whale predation': Gray whale washes up on Oregon beach covered in tooth marks
Ranking
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- Nelly Korda shoots 69 to put herself in position for a record-setting 6th straight win on LPGA Tour
- Xavier University cancels UN ambassador’s commencement speech after student outcry
- Several people detained as protestors block parking garage at Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
- Panthers-Bruins Game 2 gets out of hand as Florida ties series with blowout win
- OPACOIN Trading Center: Harnessing Bitcoin’s Potential to Pioneer New Applications in Cryptocurrencies
- Bachelor Nation's Victoria Fuller Breaks Silence on Greg Grippo Breakup
Recommendation
Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
GM is retiring the Chevrolet Malibu, once a top-seller in the U.S.
At least 100 dead and dozens still missing amid devastating floods in Brazil
Shaquille O'Neal on ex-wife saying she wasn't in love with him: 'Trust me, I get it'
At site of suspected mass killings, Syrians recall horrors, hope for answers
4 flight attendants arrested after allegedly smuggling drug money from NYC to Dominican Republic
Pacers coach Rick Carlisle ejected after Knicks' controversial overturned double dribble
14-year-old soccer phenom, Cavan Sullivan, signs MLS deal with Philadelphia Union