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Afghanistan’s covered mannequins show life under Taliban’s puritanical rule

  • Taliban softens rules on the display of mannequins after initially ordering them removed or beheaded
  • Order is based on a strict interpretation of Islamic law that forbids statues and images of the human form

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Bare arms are displayed, but not the faces of these mannequins. Photo: AP

Under the Taliban, the mannequins in women’s dress shops across the Afghan capital of Kabul are a haunting sight, their heads cloaked in cloth sacks or wrapped in black plastic bags.

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The hooded mannequins are one symbol of the Taliban’s puritanical rule over Afghanistan. But in a way, they are also a small show of resistance and creativity by Kabul’s dress merchants.

Initially, the Taliban wanted the mannequins to be outright beheaded.

Not long after they seized power in August 2021, the Taliban Ministry of Vice and Virtue decreed that all mannequins must be removed from shop windows or their heads taken off, according to local media.

They based the order on a strict interpretation of Islamic law that forbids statues and images of the human form since they could be worshipped as idols – though it also meshes with the Taliban’s campaign to force women out of the public eye.

Some clothes sellers complied. But others pushed back.

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They complained they’d be unable to display their clothes properly or would have to damage valuable mannequins. The Taliban had to amend their order and allowed the shop owners to cover the mannequins’ heads instead.

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