Popular Culture Review Vol. 18, No. 1, Winter 2007 | Page 70

66 Popular Culture Review violence (violence employed on the pretext of restoring a particular social order). The Soviet Union’s collusion with the Kabul-based government during the 1970s initiated Afghanistan’s modem malaise. The impending civil war post-Soviet withdrawal in 1989 which saw the ascendancy of the Taleban heralded another fonn of redemptive violence assuaged in religious edict. The destmction of the famous Bamiyan Buddhas in March 2001 by the Taleban is typical of the trauma to which the Afghan people and land have been subjected. The Taleban’s rule typifies Arendt’s discourse on totalitarianism: that which did not comply to the religious hegemony had to be eradicated. Afghan women were particularly victimised by two decades of war. Many Afghan women found themselves struggling to support their families due to the death of male family members. Unable to support themselves, many women turned to beggary or entered into marriages of convenience in order to escape penury. Furthermore, under the Taleban, women were placed under strict control by men. Their movements were restricted to the household domain. Girls were no longer allowed to enter schools, nor were female school teachers permitted to teach. Moreover, the subordination of the female body under the puritanical logos of the Taleban reflected global styles of transgression against the female ethos.^"^ That the majority of Afghan landmine victims were children and women underpinned the hatred of the feminine. Gittoes states that of the twenty-five mine victims he saw in a Kabul hospital, only one was a soldier. WhaVsLem (Pakistan 1999) Gittoes’ painting What's Left typifies the plight of Afghan women in general. The painting is highly abstract and denotes the traumatised ordeal of Ghuncha, a young widow with five children from the Bajaur province in Afghanistan.^^ Ghuncha’s husband had previously died by stepping on a land mine. He had survived three weeks in hospital. Consequently, the medical bills had placed Ghuncha in so much debt that she was forced to sell “her small piece of land to cred ito rs.F earin g starvation, Ghuncha and her family travelled to an “unfamiliar place.” While working in a field Ghuncha stepped on a landmine and sustained multiple injuries: the loss of both her legs, paralysis to one ami, the loss of one eye, damage to the remaining eye, and hearing impairment. Ghuncha’s environment conveys the recurring leitmotifs of Afghan society— poverty and war. Piles of rotting vegetables made the air thick and hard to breathe. An arsenal of rifles and handguns hung from the wall, as well as much larger heavy weapon on the bench beside her. In What's Left Ghuncha’s body is compressed, her two stubs protrude from the enlarged face. The expression of the face is forlorn by its disfigurement. Gittoes draws the viewer’s attention to the open amplified eye which is embellished by a crescent moon, relating to Ghuncha’s determination to live. As Gittoes states: “1 feel Ghuncha’s pull also* and have prolonged the drawing process—reading such a strong need for something to relieve the almost hysterical hopelessness in the quiet darkness of her remaining eye.”^^