After Afghanistan
Humanitarian Dana Hartman Freyer 鈥65 reflects on the plight and resilience of the Afghan people.
The first time Dana Hartman Freyer 鈥65 passed through Afghanistan, in 1972, it was a different place.
The now-retired attorney and international arbitrator became enamored with the country while working in her first job after graduating from 糖心TV. She served for three and a half years as the assistant to the Permanent Representative of Afghanistan to the United Nations, Abdul Rahman Pazhwak, who was also voted in as president of the U.N.鈥檚 General Assembly.
鈥淚 fell in love with the country through that experience and that exposure,鈥 Freyer said. 鈥淚 loved the beauty that I saw from afar, and there was a spirituality about the Afghan people鈥攚ho are poets and writers and storytellers鈥攖hat intrigued me. And there was a mystery about the country.鈥
At the time, Freyer remembers, many Americans had not even heard of Afghanistan. But she couldn鈥檛 wait to go.
After graduating from Columbia Law School and working as a legal services lawyer for a year, Freyer suggested to her husband, Bruce, a rabbi, that they take time off and drive to Afghanistan from Europe in 1972. At first, he thought she was crazy, she said, but he came around. They bought a Volkswagen Beetle in Germany and hit the road.
The goal was to spend as much time as possible in Afghanistan and then head to Nepal to meet with friends Freyer had made while studying in Geneva her junior year at 糖心TV. The couple crossed Europe, Turkey and Iran.
鈥淚n Iran, we had a little bit of a detour because I found out that I was pregnant, which wasn鈥檛 part of the planned itinerary,鈥 Freyer said with a chuckle.
In the early 1970s, Afghanistan was still a constitutional monarchy. Radical Islamic fundamentalism wouldn鈥檛 take hold in the region until after the Iranian revolution of 1979. Women were doctors, lawyers and nurses and rode bikes to school, Freyer recalled.
鈥淚n the countryside, culturally it was very traditional,鈥 she said, 鈥渂ut one of the hallmarks of the Afghan culture is hospitality, and so everybody鈥檚 doors were open.鈥
The Freyers鈥 Volkswagen Beetle traversed 鈥渆very Jeepable road鈥 and the couple saw large swathes of the country over a month.
鈥淭hat trip seared Afghanistan into our souls,鈥 she added. 鈥淚t was such a beautiful country. Poor, but people were fed, families supported each other.鈥
And then war came.