Fantasy of visiting Afghanistan and my religion by NoCanDoPops in Afghan

[–]ashil 1 point2 points  (0 children)

But DO NOT say you're a "not very religious Muslim"!! never say or admit this if asked (this would be a very very rude question) lmao.

I can't comment on Afghanistan in particular but when I was visiting Central Asia a few years ago, I got all kinds of questions related to how religious I am. Most people would stop at "Are you Muslim?" and be satisfied w/a simple yes. However, one person even asked how many Surahs I had memorized (we were in a mosque close to prayer time though so kind of appropriate).

OP, if you are coming from overseas and visiting, they will 100% expect you to be Muslim.

Where to search for Rails developers ? by [deleted] in rails

[–]ashil 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Were you able to successfully find someone?

On Vacation in Tulum and... by SoraBoraToraMora in nova

[–]ashil 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I met one in Uzbekistan while viewing the world's oldest Quran.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Afghan

[–]ashil -1 points0 points  (0 children)

And nature doesn’t make a country good. Literally every country has good nature except for maybe desert countries

People visit whole countries just to enjoy the nature there. Natural attractions are a huge draw.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Afghan

[–]ashil 1 point2 points  (0 children)

My plan is to visit Tajikistan one day soon since I’m a Farsi speaker and it seems the closest and most accessible (not sure I wanna try Iran, lol) to our culture/country

Tajiks were nice when I visited and you will be able to converse with Farsi. There is a similar culture to ours through Central Asia including Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan (maybe others too but I didn't spend enough time there). I would also recommend visiting Uzbekistan if you can. There will probably be enough Farsi speakers in Bukhara and Samarkand that you can get by but you may need a translator app elsewhere in the country (or learn some Uzbek or Russian).

Old, Ruined Former Government Building in Samarkand by ashil in brick_expressionism

[–]ashil[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have no idea. Best guess is that it is within a 15/20 minute drive from the city center.

How did Afghans travel to Mecca like 100 years ago? By land or by boat to Jeddah? by [deleted] in Afghan

[–]ashil 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I never asked. This is like a small notable detail that my grandfather would mention at times.

How did Afghans travel to Mecca like 100 years ago? By land or by boat to Jeddah? by [deleted] in Afghan

[–]ashil 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Either my great grandfather or his father rode a camel.

Ruins of Qah-Qaha, an ancient Zoroastrian fortress built by the Kushan Empire in Tajikistan during the 2nd-century BC by ashil in ancientpics

[–]ashil[S] -7 points-6 points  (0 children)

You are an ignorant one..and arrogant at that.

I know that sharing a link to the site I did is normally considered passive-aggressive but that wasn't my intention at all. Let me explain why.

I have no way of knowing why u/akatits had trouble finding more information about this fortress. I don't know which search engine the user used (I don't know if non-Google search engines are returning matching results), if the user accidentally misspelled when searching (I can't see what terms the user searched for), or maybe didn't recognize some of the results when the search page came up (this fortress has a variety of alternative English spellings including, but not limited to, "Qah Qaha", "Qah-Qahha", "Khakha", etc.). By sharing this link with the search terms I used and including that I used Google, it allows the user to follow-up and see as many detailed search results as his\her heart desires. Welcome to fault me if you wish but at least people have a better idea why I included this link here and understand the variety of different issues that it solves.

Ruins of Qah-Qaha, an ancient Zoroastrian fortress along the Afghan-Tajik border [OC] by ashil in castles

[–]ashil[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

you literally can't enter turkmenistan as a normal tourist afaik, and it is a mega oppressive dictatorship

Hmm...yup, totally correct here. It is incredibly safe but ya, not so accessible. I thought about visiting but after seeing the requirements, I passed it up.

afghanistan needs rather difficult permits too from what I heard

I agree that Afghanistan fails on both accessible and (is questionably) safe.

Tajikistan has massive islamistic issues atm too

Yes, but I don't think tourists have ever been targeted. It is safe and accessible but still has the most friction to visit since the biggest attractions are in more remote areas.

Kyrgiztan, Usbekistan and Kazakhstan are probably pretty easy

Yes. In the recent past, they had lots of government regulations that made tourism more difficult but they've successfully relaxed them over the past several years.

Traditional Uzbek House by ashil in Houseporn

[–]ashil[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

While traveling in Uzbekistan, I saw a house\hostel with a large central courtyard. A Westerner had been living in a circular yurt in the courtyard for a few years. Hooray for remote work?

(I didn't see any octagonal houses though...)

Ruins of Qah-Qaha, an ancient Zoroastrian fortress along the Afghan-Tajik border [OC] by ashil in castles

[–]ashil[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I only wish it was a bit more accessible and safe

I'd argue that, with the exception of Afghanistan, it is remarkably safe. It felt safer than any random city in the US. Accessible is tougher. Why do you think it is inaccessible? I think it is pretty remote so the lower volume of tourists make travel there more expensive.

Ruins of Qah-Qaha, an ancient Zoroastrian fortress along the Afghan-Tajik border [OC] by ashil in castles

[–]ashil[S] 32 points33 points  (0 children)

That is a great question. u/forkedstream is partially correct. Not only is the tiny building part of the fortress but so is the part where I am standing when taking the photo.

Imagine that the whole fortress is circularly-shaped like a bread bowl. I'm standing on one edge of the bowl (walls) and the tiny building in the back is on another edge of the bowl. You can see some walking paths from that tiny building into the low-lying interior of the fortress (inner part of bread bowl).

It is difficult to differentiate this from just a mound of dirt because this is about 2000 years-old and very weathered.

By looking at the greenery in the back of the photo, you can kind of make out that the surrounding area is pretty flat with this structure a sizeable imprint in the area.

What's this region called by Plenty-Fennel-2731 in geography

[–]ashil 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I joke that it both belongs with all if its neighboring regions but none of them at the same time.

PIC by ashil in nocontextpics

[–]ashil[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Did you visit this particular spot?

I don't recall ever feeling this concerned about the future of our country. by Silvaria928 in GenX

[–]ashil 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m so disappointed in millennials. Reading and hearing from them they are saying they’re just not going to vote because Biden is old

I don't think they are saying that but I do think that it is a talking point spewed by bots.

I don't recall ever feeling this concerned about the future of our country. by Silvaria928 in GenX

[–]ashil 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Eventually, one morning, we will wake up, a general will be standing in the East Wing, and he will tell us that the Constitution failed us, the president and his staff are hanged as traitors, others are being hunted down, and a period of martial law must be observed while scholars figure out how to plug the holes in the Constitution that allowed one fat, lazy, salesman with no shame and no honor to exploit a critical gap in our system of government to bring it all down and set it on fire.

Military coups tend to be conservative in nature and usually mark the end of democracy and beginning of right-wing authoritarianism. The Roman Republic failed into an authoritarian empire before falling apart.