Museum Day

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MOVCGIRL.jpgA free public reception will be held at the Martin V. and Martha K. Pavillion during the 6th Annual Museum Day on September 25 from 6:00-7:00 p.m., with a presentation by photographer James Lee.

Museum of Ventura County

100 East Main Street
Ventura, California 93001
 
Information Desk: 805-653-0323

Museum Day Exhibit Hours:
11 a.m. to 7 p.m.

Free Museum Day Tickets:
Download Now

Free Parking:
Adjacent to the Museum

Durand Line

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Facing dust-loaded dry winds, Afghan Border Police officer Masoud Sayed watches for signs of trouble along the Durand Line in Nangarhar province on April 15, 2010. Drawn with British ink in the late-nineteenth century by Officer Henry Mortimer Durand, this borderline intentionally bisected tribal lands in a largely unsuccessful attempt to eliminate Pashtun opposition to English interests. Contemporary Afghans seldom recognize the Durand Line, which demarks the North West Frontier Province and Federally Administered Tribal Areas. Both of these areas have become havens for criminals and guerrilla fighters that fervently denounce foreign interference in the region.

Words and Photo by James Lee

Uniformed culture

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Pashtuns, Tajiks, Hazaras, Uzbeks, and Turkmen move together in a slow moving chow line in Mehtarlam district, Laghman province on April 23, 2010. Such united fronts are short lived. After grabbing lunch trays of rice and goat meat, these Afghan National Army soldiers find seats at tables divided along ethnic lines. Distrust amid some groups can be traced back to late-nineteenth century land disputes. Bridging these ethnic fault lines within the Afghan National Security Forces will become increasingly important during future stability operations as foreign governments prepare to withdraw military resources.

Words and Photo by James Lee

Outside of Islam

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Shedding his sandals, a Sunni Afghan National Army soldier strides across a row of footwear and through the screen door of a crowded mosque during the sunset Magrib prayer in Mehtarlam district, Laghman province on April 26, 2010. Eighty percent of Afghans are Sunni Muslims, while Shia Muslims comprise a religious and political minority. Some Shia Muslims serving in the ANA are opposed to peace negotiations with Sunni Taliban members. Taliban forces have been accused of religious cleansing against Shia communities. In 2001, the Taliban reportedly murdered more than 300 Shia Muslims in the Afghan town of Yakawolang.

Words and Photo by James Lee

Wildlife

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Juma Khan surrenders himself to a boyish grin while a pet bird is perched on his wool beret in Mehtarlam district, Laghman province on April 24, 2010. "I feed this bird small insects," said Khan, a sergeant in the Afghan National Army. "Watching birds makes me forget about the problems in my country." Khan began raising birds during his childhood in the city of Mazari Sharif.

Words and Photo by James Lee

Daily bread

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Steeped in flower, a skillful hand stamps patterns into bread bound for Afghan Border Police in Goshta district, Nangarhar province on April 14, 2010. Once decorated, the dough is fired in a round clay oven dug into the kitchen floor. By utilizing traditional food processes and products, Afghan National Security Forces have reduced their daily dependence on foreign governments. Applying this principle beyond the kitchen will be necessary before Afghanistan can assert independence and national sovereignty.

Words and Photo by James Lee

Small screen

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A pair of Afghan Border Police watches a female singer from a local spin-off of "American Idol" on a satellite phone in Goshta district, Nangarhar province on April 15, 2010. As Afghanistan's broadcast media expands, the government has begun to censor some programming that subverts Islamic values. Officials with the Ministry of Culture have questioned employees at private television stations about music videos that feature women in nontraditional clothing. 

Words and Photo by James Lee

Border game

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On a board game manufactured in Pakistan, Afghan Border Police roll a set of dice and plan their next move in Goshta district, Nangarhar province on April 16, 2010. With the odds in their favor, guerrilla fighters and criminals routinely travel unimpeded through security check points at border crossings along Pakistan's tribal areas. Complicit ABP often fail to perform routine vehicle inspections. As a result, shipments of illicit drugs and weapons traverse the AfPak border every day.

Words and Photo by James Lee

Double occupancy

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Beds sit empty behind an earth filled blast wall located along a steep ridgeline in Goshta district, Nangarhar province on April 15, 2010. Some of the Afghan Border Police assigned to this remote observation post believe their position exposes them to unnecessary risk. Last December, guerrilla fighters launched a coordinated nighttime attack against Observation Post Sangar in neighboring Anarguy. Five officers were killed defending their mountaintop post. When foreign military officials denied requests for helicopters, the survivors bound the dead to borrowed donkeys and followed local villagers off the mountain.

Words and Photo by James Lee

Heavy weapon

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An Afghan Border Police officer armed with a Russian-made PKM machine gun descends from a mountain patrol near the Pakistan border in Goshta district, Nangarhar province on April 16, 2010. Weighing more than ten kilograms, this light duty machine gun is difficult to portage on steep terrain. A military modernization program by the International Security Assistance Force has begun to replace some of these Soviet-era rifles with weapons commonly fielded by NATO forces.

Words and Photo by James Lee

American made

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In Ford pick-up trucks, a dozen Afghan Border Police officers speed along a dirt road in Goshta district, Nangarhar province on April 14, 2010. More than 14,000 ABP recruits have received basic law enforcement training by foreign military personnel. American officials plan to increase the total number of Afghan National Police officers to 123,000 by 2011. This number reflects the combined total force strength of the Afghan Uniformed Police, Afghan Border Police, Afghan National Civil Order Police, and the Afghan Counter Narcotics Police.

Words and Photo by James Lee

Papaver Somniferum

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Before being pocketed, a soldier in the Afghan National Army inspects a scored seedpod during a poppy eradication operation near the Pakistan border in Goshta district, Nangarhar province on April 17, 2010. An annual flower, the opium poppy seedpod can produce a milky sap when scratched. Laden with powerful opiates like morphine, this sap is typically harvested from a series of parallel cuts and dried for the illegal heroin trade. This multibillion-dollar crop has spread corruption throughout the Afghan National Security Forces and directly financed a regional guerrilla war.

Words and Photo by James Lee

Substation

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Afghan Uniformed Police greet Afghan National Army Col. Mohamad Zamir during an unannounced visit to their police substation located along National Highway 7 in Laghman province on April 24, 2010. According to recent interviews, the Uniformed Police provide no assistance to their military counterparts. Along with the public, Afghan soldiers widely view the police as corrupt and grossly ineffective. In the past nine years, the American government has spent more than $6 billion on the training and operation of the Afghan Uniformed Police.

Words and Photo by James Lee

Bad cop

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Holding an embroidered taqiyah prayer cap, Mohamad Wahli faces another day of prison life at Laughman province's Central Jail on April 22, 2010. A former Uniformed Police officer, Wahli became addicted to heroin and was later arrested with four grams of black tar heroin in his vehicle. "It was less than four grams," said Wahli, while seated in a folding chair. His claim was instantly met by laughter and taunts from a dozen prison guards standing nearby. His arrest points towards a much larger problem. A recent report by the Center for Strategic and International Studies revealed that one in five Afghan police recruits test positive for drug use.

Words and Photo by James Lee

Evil eye

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Below the Arabic phrase Masha Allah, a mirror mounted to the decorated cab of a freight truck reflects a dirt road leading to the main AfPak border crossing in Goshta district, Nangarhar province on April 14, 2010. This phrase is commonly used in South Asia to ward off the evil eye. This superstition pertains to bad luck or injury caused by the envious eyes of others. Regardless of the potential supernatural risks, thousands of people engage in cross border movements each day, often motivated by economic or social reasons.

Words and Photo by James Lee

Open highway

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Returning from Kabul, dump trucks and passenger vehicles speed past Afghan National Army forces along National Highway 7 at the foot of the Woreshmin Tangay Mountains in Laughman province on April 24, 2010.  According to ANA officials, keeping this supply route open is vital for NATO's military bases. "All the American logistical support travels along Highway 7 to Bagram Air Base," said Afghan National Army Col. Mohamad Zamir. "After reaching Bagram, these supplies are flown to bases all over Afghanistan."

Words and Photo by James Lee

Afghan hash

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After massaging heated hash oil into cigarette tobacco, an Afghan National Army soldier smokes a joint under a tree in Mehtarlam district, Laghman province on April 27, 2010. Afghanistan is the largest producer of hash worldwide. A recent survey by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime determined that half of Afghanistan's provinces are engaged in "large scale" cannabis farming. With lower harvesting costs, cannabis has proven more profitable for Afghan farmers than opium poppy production. Last year, the value of this illicit harvest may have exceeded $90 million.

Words and Photo by James Lee

Arms control

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By rifle serial numbers, a handwritten inventory of weapons is conducted by the Afghan National Army in Mehtarlam district, Laghman province on April 27, 2010. According to the Combined Security Transition Command-Afghanistan, less than 400 weapons have been lost by Afghan National Security Forces over the past nine years. However, missing weapons are not the only arms control predicament facing CSTC-A. In 2009, ammunition recovered from guerrilla fighters killed in Korengal valley may have been originally issued to Afghan National Security Forces.

Words and Photo by James Lee

Defensive driver

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An AK-47 assault rifle and three taped magazines rattle across a center console as the voice of singer Ahmad Zaire plays on a cellular phone during a vehicle patrol by the Afghan National Army in Laghman province on April 26, 2010. According to a recent report by the Congressional Research Service, joining the Afghan National Security Forces remains a dangerous decision. Between 2007 and 2009, more than 750 ANA soldiers were killed in Afghanistan. During this same period, 1,948 Afghan National Police lost their lives.

Words and Photo by James Lee

War without Americans

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Caught outside in bad weather, a kilometer long Afghan National Security Forces convoy is hit by a cloudburst while returning from a successful opium poppy eradication operation in Goshta district, Nangarhar province on April 17, 2010. In accordance with a new policy outlined by General Stanley A. McChrystal, NATO forces were prohibited from participating in this counternarcotics mission. By ending NATO's involvement in these types of missions, American forces hope to gain the support of those Afghan farmers actively engaged in illicit opium poppy cultivation. This dramatic policy shift has resulted in some heated international criticism from the Head of Russia's Federal Service for Drug Control. In Moscow, government officials are facing a casualty rate that far exceeds the guerrilla war in Afghanistan. An estimated 30,000 Russians die every year from drug overdoses; including Afghan heroin.

Words and Photo by James Lee

Look Closer

James Lee has partnered with the Museum of Ventura County to create a special two day photography exhibit.

Earlier this year, Lee used this blog to share his stories as a photographer in today's Afghanistan. His previous work has included articles on humanitarian aid in South Asia and sectarian conflict in the Middle East.

Lee graduated from San Francisco State University with a degree in international relations, and served in the United States Marine Corps prior to becoming a photographer.

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