After years of war, Afghans wary to talk of mental health
KABUL — Soheila Hashemi has hardly slept since a suicide bomber targeted a rally in the Afghan capital last month, killing more than 80 people and wounding scores in the deadliest attack in Kabul since the war with the Taliban began 15 years ago.
She is tormented by feelings of guilt for surviving the carnage and for encouraging fellow Hazaras to come to the protest that called for an end to discrimination against their community, Afghanistan’s poorest ethnic and religious minority.
Hashemi says she needs “professional help” but with the dearth of psychologists in the war-ravaged country, she feels there really isn’t anyone she can turn to.
“I encouraged people to attend the demonstration and yet I wasn’t there when the explosions happened,” said the 23-year-old university student. Many of her close friends were killed or wounded in the July 23 bombing.


