
Based around a young Afghan refugee who lives in London, Homing Birds tells the story of a young doctor, Saeed Khattak, returning to Kabul and to the country he fled from during the war, in order to work with Medicine Sans Frontiers, re-connect with his roots and find his sister who was left behind when he was sent to London as a boy.
The play gives you an insight into what the modern city of Kabul looks like after years of being ravaged by war. It is unrecognisable to those who lived there 30 years ago. It looks at the difficulties facing the people, especially the women of Afghanistan within this new society, still living in fear and danger. Child marriages are still taking place and women are still being silenced. Although the politician that Saeed meets early on in the play, the new health minister, Raabia Durrani, tells a story of hope and re-building, that women have more rights now after the war than they did before, this isn't the view which is represented in the streets and the hospitals when Saeed starts to work there; women do not have the same rights as men in Kabul.
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