Democracy Dies in Darkness

As Afghan schools remain closed for girls, mental health crisis builds

July 7, 2023 at 2:00 a.m. EDT
Women rest in an inpatient ward of the main hospital in Herat, Afghanistan. (Elise Blanchard for The Washington Post)
7 min

KABUL — Psychiatrist Shafi Azim spent much of his career attending to the trauma caused by two decades of fighting, which ripped apart buildings and families.

But over the past months, his hospital — Afghanistan’s primary mental health facility in Kabul — has filled with patients who say they are experiencing a different kind of suffering, he said. With the Taliban leadership severely restricting female education and work, there are mounting concerns about the mental health of girls and women. The restrictions and “sudden changes,” said Azim, appear to be at the root of the trauma suffered by most women and girls now seeking help at this hospital.