ON THE DAY THE TALIBAN CAPTURED KABUL, FARAH was at her university. A young man burst in to their classroom, disrupting a financial-management class. “He said, ‘They are coming here. Run!’” says Farah, 24, who asked to be identified by a pseudonym. Shaking with fear, she says, “we just stood and started collecting all our notebooks.”
In the two months since Afghanistan’s government collapsed on Aug. 15, thousands of Afghan girls and women like Farah have been shut out of their high schools and universities, their studies over and futures in flux.
Before August, about half the 20,000 or so students at Kabul University, the country’s oldest university, were female. Women’s education was perhaps the strongest sign of change and hope for the new Afghanistan.
Yet despite Taliban assurances during…