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Meet the Afghan skiers hoping to make Olympic history

Paula Froelich

From war-torn Afghanistan to the glitzy Swiss Alps, two Afghan skiers are not only inspiring an emerging tourism industry in their poverty-stricken country, but pushing to make history in the 2018 Olympic Winter Games.

In December, two young men from a tiny hamlet outside of Bamyan, northern Afghanistan, will make their annual three-month pilgrimage to the billionaire’s playground of St. Moritz, Switzerland.

But it’s probably not what you’re thinking: This is not a case of Afghan playboys thrusting off the yolk of their homeland for three months of freedom. It is instead a step on the never-ending ladder for two poverty-stricken goat herders trying desperately to become Afghanistan’s first ski Olympians.

Alishah Farhang, 27, and Sajjad Husseini, 26, will live in this alpine resort town’s only youth hostel, just down the street from the famed Kempinski Grand Hotel—and train for up to 14 hours a day—just as they’ve done for the past three years, in an attempt to qualify for the 2018 Winter Olympic Games this February in Pyeongchang, South Korea.

It is the final step in realizing a seemingly improbable dream, one that I first heard about three years ago when I met them in their home country.

On March 3, 2014, in a tiny hamlet outside Bamyan, Afghanistan, on the slopes of the Koh-i-Baba mountain range, 80 skiers from across the world assembled at a starting line that had been jerry-rigged up just the night before.

Now, you’d be forgiven for thinking you’d read that last sentence wrong. When one thinks of Afghanistan, one usually does not think of skiing. There are several obvious reasons for this: Afghanistan has been war-ravaged for decades. ‘Afghanistan,’ ‘leisure sports,’ and ‘fun, relaxing time’ are paradoxical to the images we’re bombarded by in the news.

Moreover, there are no ski lifts in Afghanistan. At elevations that can reach above 10,000 feet above sea level, it’s not particularly easy to place one foot in front of the other—much less climb a mountain.

And there are no ski shops in the nearby vicinity (and by ‘nearby,’ I mean for at least 3,000 miles.) That means all equipment must be brought into the country, adding a lot of weight to the average ‘adventure day pack’—and making you a target for thieves in this sadly very poverty-stricken nation.

And yet, when Swiss journalist Christoph Zuercher, now a features editor at the Neue Zurcher Zeitung, visited Bamyan in 2009 on a break from assignment in Kabul, he took a different view.

Zuercher sat on the rooftop of his hotel, looked out over the caves of the Buddhas (destroyed by the Taliban in 2001) and the snow-capped peaks of the Koh-e-Baba mountain range and thought, “Skiing!” Because, apparently, when Swiss people see snow and mountains they have a Pavlovian response that compels them to hurtle down the mountain. It’s practically genetic.

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And so the Afghan Ski Challenge was born. The country’s only ski race and pitting locals against ski tourists, it had a somewhat challenging start. There was little interest in the first competition, held in 2010—skiing is, naturally, not native to the area, and the first race featured some rather unwilling locals who had to be talked into participating (and subsequently tried to back out.)

“It was a total catastrophe,” Zurcher said. “No one wanted to ski, and they didn’t want to get tan skin.” Light skin is prized here and there was the understandable aversion to possibly breaking a leg in a region without a decent hospital.

I spent New Year’s 2015 in St. Moritz with Zurcher, Alishah, Sajjad, Henrietta Bjorge, a consultant for the United Nations, and several other friends I’d met in Bamyan earlier that year. Sajjad and Alishah had also just arrived.

“There was some difficulty with the visas,” Zurcher explained. “The government was worried they wouldn’t return to their own country after the three months was up, so I and several others had to vouch for them and assure that they would indeed go back to Afghanistan when their training ended.”

To pay for lessons and gear, a Bamyan Ski Club pop-up bar appears in the middle of St. Moritz from December to March with all funds going to the cause, and a charity race is held on its slopes every January to raise extra money.

And so it goes that for three months over the past three years, Alishah and Sajjad have made the long journey from their homeland to live a spartan, sober life in the glitzy wonderland of billionaire playboys.

This year, they are hoping to make the final qualifications for the 2018 Winter Olympics—but need help.

According to the website Zurcher has set up for donations, “This year it will be particularly intense in terms of training and expenses. [They will be] participating in races around Europe and it will involve a lot of traveling.

“If Team Afghanistan is to have a realistic chance of making it to the Olympics, they need to work with a professional coach who will be taking care of them on a full-time basis. Also,  the trip to South Korea and on-site accommodation need to be paid for. Alishah and Sajjad are sustained by the ski manufacturer Völkl and the Bamyan Ski Club, a non-profit association based in Zürich. However, this is not enough.”

“It is an Olympic fairytale,” Zurcher said. On the crowdfunding site, he adds, “Participating in the Olympics would mean the fulfillment of (their) life’s dream. But what’s more, two Afghan skiers at the Olympics would constitute a sign for the distressed people of Afghanistan and the world that with hard work and a little help, they can overcome even the biggest obstacles.”

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Want to help make these Afghan skier’s dream come true? Make a donation to this crowdfunding project started by Bamyan Ski Club, a non-profit association based in Zürich with the aim to promote skiing in Afghanistan.

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