In Pictures: A taste of Afghanistan helps these bakers find home in India (2024)

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In Pictures: A taste of Afghanistan helps these bakers find home in India (1)

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In Pictures: A taste of Afghanistan helps these bakers find home in India (2)

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In Pictures: A taste of Afghanistan helps these bakers find home in India (15)

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Middle East

In Pictures: A taste of Afghanistan helps these bakers find home in India (16)

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Shefali Rafiq

People buy bread from Afghan bakers in the Lajpat Nagar area of India’s capital state, Delhi. The Afghans living in India have introduced their traditional bread, and customers have developed a taste for it.

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  • By Shefali RafiqContributor

|Delhi, India

Najibullah heads to the bakery as soon as the birds start chirping. He and his co-workers are among the many Afghan refugees to seek safety in India.

The bread-making starts at 7 a.m. and goes until 8 p.m., with small breaks in between. Afghan naan is different in shape, texture, and taste from Indian varieties. While the main ingredient – wheat flour – is the same, Afghan bakers hand-shape the dough, rather than rolling it out, and their use of a tandoor results in large, pillowy rounds. It is eaten by not only Afghans, but also by Iraqis, Sudanese, and Kashmiris, and now by local Indian customers, too.

Why We Wrote This

Finding asylum is only one step of a refugee’s journey. These bakers brought industrious spirits and a taste of Afghanistan with them to India. Both have helped them fortify a sense of home.

Najibullah says he and his colleagues have no plans to go back to Afghanistan. When asked if they miss their home, he says with a smile, “This is our home now.”

Click the “deep read” button to view the full photo essay.

For Najibullah, the birds act as his alarm clock. As soon as the chirping starts, he leaves his apartment for the small bakery shop in the Lajpat Nagar area of south Delhi. He does not care about the weather or the time, but trusts the birds.

He and three co-workers, Wali Khiri, Shahrukh, and Niamatullah, have been working in the shop for the last seven years. They are among the many Afghan refugees to seek safety in India. Since the late 1990s, Afghan naanwais (makers and sellers of naan, or bread) have been plying their trade in India.

For the four young men, bread-making starts at 7 a.m. and goes until 8 p.m., with small breaks in between. They mix wheat flour with water, yeast, salt, and sugar and set it aside. After this, dough balls are made and weighed so that each one is the same size. The balls are then flattened and kept under a cloth for the yeast to do its work. Then the rounds are shaped by hand, imprinted with a decorative pattern, and sprinkled with water and sesame seeds before going into the tandoor, or clay oven. The men spend the time chatting and listening to Wali Khiri’s jokes – they say he has a great sense of humor.

Why We Wrote This

Finding asylum is only one step of a refugee’s journey. These bakers brought industrious spirits and a taste of Afghanistan with them to India. Both have helped them fortify a sense of home.

Afghan naan is different in shape, texture, and taste from Indian varieties. While the main ingredient – wheat flour – is the same, Afghan bakers hand-shape the dough, rather than rolling it out, and their use of a tandoor results in large, pillowy rounds. The bread is enjoyed alongside curries at meals and eaten plain or topped with butter as a snack throughout the day. It is eaten by not only Afghans, but also by Iraqis, Sudanese, and Kashmiris, and now by local Indian customers, too.

According to Wali Khiri, they are able to sell 500 loaves a day and are doing decent business. After Afghanistan was retaken by the Taliban in 2021, Afghans who had traveled to India for medical treatment or jobs went home, which affected sales. “We would otherwise sell 1,500 breads a day,” he says.

The bakers also sell to small food stalls and local restaurants, with Niamatullah making the deliveries on his bicycle.

Najibullah says they have no plans to go back to Afghanistan. When asked if they miss their home, he says with a smile, “This is our home now.”

In Pictures: A taste of Afghanistan helps these bakers find home in India (17)

Shefali Rafiq

Wali Khiri takes the bread out of the tandoor, or clay oven. The tandoor gives it texture and its famous golden color.

In Pictures: A taste of Afghanistan helps these bakers find home in India (18)

Shefali Rafiq

Shahrukh places dough balls on a board to rest. The balls have been weighed so that each is the same size.

In Pictures: A taste of Afghanistan helps these bakers find home in India (19)

Shefali Rafiq

Crisp-edged naan, sprinkled with sesame seeds, is stacked in the shop awaiting buyers.

In Pictures: A taste of Afghanistan helps these bakers find home in India (20)

Shefali Rafiq

Niamatullah carries the bakery goods to restaurants and food stalls on a bicycle.

In Pictures: A taste of Afghanistan helps these bakers find home in India (21)

Shefali Rafiq

Wali Khiri prepares a long flat naan before putting it inside the tandoor. He has mastered the art of baking bread since coming to India from Afghanistan. In Afghanistan, people tend not to make bread at home, so they rely on bakeries with tandoors.

In Pictures: A taste of Afghanistan helps these bakers find home in India (22)

Shefali Rafiq

Wali Khiri jokes around with Najibullah as he piles bread in the shop window.

In Pictures: A taste of Afghanistan helps these bakers find home in India (23)

Shefali Rafiq

Local Indians enjoy Afghan food along with traditional Afghan bread made in the bakery.

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In Pictures: A taste of Afghanistan helps these bakers find home in India (24)

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In Pictures: A taste of Afghanistan helps these bakers find home in India (2024)

FAQs

What do Afghans eat on a daily basis? ›

Meal patterns: Most Afghan people eat three main meals and may include two or three snacks over the day. Main meals will feature rice with a meat and beans or vegetable-based dish. Salad and yoghurt may also accompany the main dish.

How do people live in Afghanistan? ›

Because most Afghans live outside the cities, their mode of living can be described as peasant tribal. Kinship is the basis of social life and determines the patriarchal character of the community. Afghans are also identified by their qawm, a term that can refer to affinity with almost any kind of social group.

Is Afghan food similar to Indian food? ›

Afghan cuisine is influenced to a certain extent by Persian, Central Asian and Indian cuisines due to Afghanistan's close proximity and cultural ties. The cuisine is halal and mainly based on mutton, beef, poultry and fish with rice and Afghan bread.

What is the number 1 food in Afghanistan? ›

The treasured national dish called Kabuli (or Qabli) Pulao consists of slow-cooked meat in a dome of gently seasoned rice with lentils, raisins, carrots, ground cardamom and nuts. And of course bread (naan) is eaten with just about everything.

Are Afghans related to Indians? ›

thus, Afghans and Iranians are expected to be related to the current In dian populations. The Bataks of northern Sumatra are considered to be Proto-Malays and had influence from early Indian culture [McDermid et at., 1973]. The Malays and Chinese were included mainly as reference populations.

Why are Afghans so strong? ›

It's the type of jobs that Afghans do that make them so physically strong. Their resilience and strength compared to other people from other countries (in which physical labor is not a huge factor in their jobs) are huge. So yes, physical labor contributes hugely to the strength of the powerful Afghans.

What is considered disrespectful in Afghanistan? ›

It is rude to walk away from someone while they are still talking to you. Both men and women should dress modestly when meeting an Afghan. In Afghanistan, women should only allow their face, hands and feet to be visible and the definition of the legs should not be distinguishable.

What is a typical Afghan breakfast? ›

In Afghanistan for breakfast you would eat the following – Lots of eggs, either fried with vegetables such as potatoes, tomatoes and peppers (there are many different kinds) Roht, a sweet bread. Paneer cheese maybe on its own or with raisins.

Do Afghans drink tea or coffee? ›

Around the World in Tea: Kahwah in Afghanistan

Kahwah is a traditional green tea preparation consumed in Afghanistan, northern Pakistan, some regions of Central Asia and the Kashmir Valley.

How healthy is Afghan food? ›

Afghan cuisine features an array of flavorful vegetable-based dishes that are both nutritious and satisfying. Look for options like Sabzi (spinach), Bouranee Baunjan (eggplant), or Kadoo (pumpkin). These dishes are rich in vitamins, minerals, and fiber, making them a great choice for a healthy meal.

What are the dietary guidelines for Afghanistan? ›

Messages
  • Eat different types of food daily.
  • Eat different types of fruit and vegetables daily.
  • Eat lean meat, poultry, fish, eggs and dairy products.
  • Reduce sugar intake and avoid sweet carbonated beverages.
  • Use less salt and eat fewer fatty foods and highly-processed foods.

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