The Taliban Drove This Afghan Trumpeter Into Exile. He Still Dreams of Home

Qudrat Wasefi fled Kabul after the fundamentalist regime, with its violently enforced prohibition of music, returned to power in 2021. He’s part of a generation of refugees the world has largely forgotten.

This article was originally published by Rolling Stone.

As the Taliban entered Kabul, Afghanistan, on Aug. 15, 2021, Qudrat Wasefi, a resolute 22-year-old trumpeter, flung open the windows of his music school’s empty wood-paneled studio and started to play as loudly as he could. 

“I thought it was my last time,” he tells me, crammed into a booth at a taqueria in Cambridge, Massachusetts, while Harvard Square’s lunch rush is at full tilt. Beside him sit Bob Jordon and Derek Beckvold, two Americans who once taught him scales in Kabul and understood the stakes: Under the Taliban, music — especially from the West — was illegal, punishable by beatings, imprisonment, or death. 

The day of the invasion had been thick with heat, the kind that made the air above the sidewalk kebab spits ripple with diesel smoke. Wasefi was guiding members of Afghanistan‘s first all-female ensemble through a recording of their compositions. 

Mid-song, the doors flew open. Their instruments rattled and their voices faltered into soft silence. A bus driver walked through the center of the room and called Wasefi to the corner, his face drawn tight.

“The Taliban are here,” he said quietly. “I need to drive everyone home.”

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