Urinals in Afghanistan
When construction does happen at Nangarhar University, it usually takes place in the summer months when the students and faculty are on vacation and there is less interference with classes and all that. Upon returning to campus, there is a buzz of surprise among the students with each new building.
This is the veterinary building in Nangarhar University. The funds for its construction were provided by USAID and its blueprint followed a standard mold for such a building, designed in the west and probably never intended for Afghanistan.
A local construction company was hired and contracted to build according to the provided specifications. Since the design of the building specified urinals in the bathrooms, the local construction company built them.
In Islam it is prohibited to urinate while standing. Prophet Mohammad “pbuh” always squatted when he urinated and we do everything the same as he did. Â The term for following his practices and customs is “Sunnat”. So five years after the construction of these urinals, they remain as clean as all the other urinals I have seen in Afghanistan (and the only ones I’m aware of in Nangarhar Province.)
A few years ago, a similar construction mishap occurred. Another foreign company designed the dorms at NU and incorporated Western toilets. The students in the dorms soon destroyed all of the toilets because they happened to be facing Mecca.
According to Islam, even when seated, you are not allowed to urinate in the direction of Mecca.
The plumbing hole in the ground is all that remains from those toilets, and that is where we do our business. With a symmetric round hole, it’s up to you which direction to swivel.
In my opinion, to avoid such misunderstandings and others like these, foreigners who work in Afghanistan could consult with their Afghan colleagues in the process of implementing any development projects, and give their contractors flexibility to push back on cultural issues.