"Tell me about Afghanistan."
The English tutor looks expectantly at Nilofar Mulakhail as they sit on the living room floor of a Bloomington apartment, weeks after the Taliban takeover forced the country into chaos.
Mulakhail replies that her homeland is good, as if out of polite formality, or perhaps she does not know what to make of such a broad question. Prodded further, she elaborates:
"It's not safe … no money, there's no working."
"Do you know the word 'crisis'?"
"Crisis?"
"A big problem."
The tutor, Molly Hauver, opens a workbook for their lesson and reads aloud a story about a woman who runs into trouble trying to see her friend at the hospital. She points to words from the anecdote and asks Mulakhail for their meaning: out of order, elevator, visit.