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Radio Free Afghanistan

A Twenty-Year Odyssey for an Independent Voice in Kabul

Audiobook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 4 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 4 weeks

From Time 100 honoree Saad Mohseni, the deeply moving and surprising story of the attempt to build a truly independent media company in contemporary Afghanistan.

Saad Mohseni, chairman and CEO of Moby Group, Afghanistan's largest media company, charts a twenty-year effort to bring a free press to his country after years of Taliban rule, and how that effort persists even after the Taliban's return to power in 2021.

In the heady early days of the American occupation, Mohseni returns to Kabul which he had last seen as a child before the Soviet invasion. Casting about for ways to be involved in the dawn of a new Afghanistan, Mohseni makes what seems like a quixotic decision to leave the comforts of a career in international banking to start a Kabul radio station with his three siblings. This unlikely venture quickly blossoms into a burgeoning television empire, bringing Mohseni and his family and employees into sometimes uncomfortable contact with everyone who has a stake in the country—from the government of Hamid Karzai to White House officials. Moreover, their radio and television networks soon become a necessary beacon for millions of Afghans, who rely on them not just for independent news but for joyful pleasures like soap operas and Afghan Star, a beloved national singing competition in a country whose previous rulers had banned (and would again ban) music.

Mohseni's position at Moby affords him unique insights into this extraordinary yet troubled country, the youngest in the world outside of Sub-Saharan Africa, and his powerful account captures the spirit and resilience of the Afghan people—notably the hundreds of men and women still working in Moby's Kabul office today, who, once again under Taliban rule, create programs, report the news, and educate the public.

Radio Free Afghanistan is a stunning, vibrant portrait of a nation in turmoil, poised between despair and hope.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      July 29, 2024
      Mohseni discusses founding and running Afghanistan’s largest independent media company in this engrossing memoir. When Mohseni was 12, he and his family fled Afghanistan for Japan after the 1978 Saur Revolution. In 2002, after an interim government was established following the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan, Mohseni abandoned his banking career to return home with his three siblings. While the four initially considered launching an almond exporting business, a meeting with a former colleague of their father’s convinced them to start a radio station instead. In 2003, Mohseni and his siblings launched Arman FM, which played pop music banned during Taliban rule, then parlayed its success into a media company called the Moby Group that included TV networks airing news programs and soap operas. While running down Moby’s programming, including hit man-on-the-street radio show Cleaning up the City, Mohseni highlights the issues facing average Afghans, ranging from garbage collection to concerns about corruption in the country’s post-Taliban government. In 2022, after U.S. troops withdrew and the Taliban regained control, Moby was forced to curtail its news coverage. Throughout, Mohseni nimbly balances moving reflections on his connection to his homeland with fascinating insider information on running a media empire. It’s a fascinating firsthand lens on 21st-century Afghanistan. Agent: Amanda Urban, CAA.

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  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

Languages

  • English

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