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A Letter to the Mothers and Fathers of the World
I could not sleep last night, and I will not pretend otherwise.
This morning The Times of London printed a sentence that should have stopped the world: "Taliban legalise child marriage for girls as young as nine." The decree — thirty-one articles signed by the Taliban supreme leader and published in the official gazette this month — removes any minimum age for the marriage of girls and declares that the silence of a virgin girl is to be treated as her consent...

Anosha Zereh
May 206 min read


Things Fall Apart: The Story of My Father
My father, Lal Zereh, came to California twice in his life.
The first time, he was a teenage exchange student from Afghanistan — full of curiosity, living with an American family, learning what the world looked like from the outside.
The second time, he came as a refugee. The Soviets had taken his homeland. He packed up our family and started over at 43 — from nothing.
But here is what the newspaper didn't say:
He chose California specifically. Not by accident. Not just

Anosha Zereh
May 144 min read


To my sisters in Iran and Afghanistan
To my sisters in Iran and Afghanistan—
I write to you tonight not as a distant observer, but as one whose heart beats with yours.
If I could, I would sit beside each of you tonight—on rooftops in Tehran, in courtyards in Herat, in dimly lit rooms in Kabul where the curtains stay half‑closed—and place your tired hands between my own. I would say, before anything else: you are not alone, and you have never been forgotten.
I know that some days the weight is unbearable: the clo

Anosha Zereh
Apr 34 min read


The Soul of Islam: The Sacred in a Burning World.
On being a Muslim woman between Kabul, Tehran, and San Francisco Bay Area
By Anosha Zereh
When I say I am Muslim, I am not offering you a party, a passport, or a political program.
I am naming the wound and the wonder at the center of my being — the place where God looks at God through these borrowed eyes.

Anosha Zereh
Mar 77 min read


No Savior from Abroad: A Conservation With Jalal Al-e Ahmad!
A people’s letter from Iran, Afghanistan, and the borderlands, this piece sits with Jalal Al-e Ahmad’s warning about Gharbzadegi and asks what liberation means when it is imposed from above versus awakened from within. It is a meditation on tyrants and martyrs, Western “saviors,” and the quiet, vast freedom that still breathes beneath our borders and our hardest days.

Anosha Zereh
Mar 65 min read


The Side of the Human Soul: Iran and Afghanistan, My Two Homes
I understand the trauma and rage that erupt as celebration, but I cannot call the machinery of assassination and airstrikes a path to liberation. I was not born for empires or emirs. I do not belong to the turbans that ban my sisters from the sky, nor to the uniforms that baptize bombs as freedom. The regimes that rule my motherland Afghanistan and my adopted home Iran have broken my heart a thousand times, but I will not offer that broken heart to Washington or Tel Aviv as p

Anosha Zereh
Mar 27 min read


“No More Girls”: How Afghan Daughters Are Being Erased from Public Life
“No More Girls”: How Afghan Daughters Are Being Erased from Public Life

Anosha Zereh
Feb 144 min read


Khalifa: An Ancient Human Trust
Enhanced Version: Stewardship, Dignity, and a Lineage Older Than Doctrine
Long before religion wore names, humans already knew—they were not owners of the world, but guests within it. The Islamic teaching of khalifa is not a new revelation. It is a remembering—an echo of an ancient human responsibility that has traveled through nomadic memory, Zoroastrian ethics, and Islamic consciousness.

Anosha Zereh
Jan 123 min read
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