Looking at a young woman in a headscarf quietly ringing up groceries at Walmart, you would never know the dramatic life she has lived. During the war in Afghanistan, the US military trained a small, elite force of Afghan women called the Female Tactical Platoon (FTP) to serve alongside American special forces on dangerous night raids of suspected Taliban homes and compounds.
These female soldiers had to keep their work secret, even from their own neighbors, because they were not safe in their own country. And when the Taliban took control, there was no plan in place to protect them.
That's when US soldiers - mostly women - who trained and worked with the FTPs decided they would have to be the ones to get this highly endangered group out of Afghanistan. They call themselves Sisters of Service.
This week on Stranger Becomes Neighbor, we follow the path of one remarkable Afghan soldier and the sisterhood that stands by her side.
For more information including pictures and a transcript of this episode, visit us at kslpodcasts.com.
For more on Hope4Afghanistan, visit the website: hope4afghanistan.org.
And find Sisters of Service at https://sistersofservice.org/
For more information on the PenFed Foundation’s Afghan Rescue and Resettlement program, visit penfedfoundation.org.
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Stranger Becomes Neighbor is sponsored by Better Help.