EditorialA group of Afghan Hazara refugee women living since they arrived in Brazil in a makeshift camp at the airport in S?o Paulo, on Dec. 5, 2022. (Federico Rios/The New York Times)
EditorialSoudabeh, a Hazara woman, caresses her daughter in a house where they have been hiding because her work on menstrual cycles, a taboo subject in Afghan society, did not sit well with the Taliban, in Kabul, Afghanistan, Aug. 7, 2022. (Kiana Hayeri/The New York Times)
EditorialA man crosses a footbridge built on top of an old Soviet armored personnel carrier in Dara-e Hazara, in Afghanistan’s Panjshir Valley, Sept. 14, 2021. (Jim Huylebroek/The New York Times)
EditorialWomen weep upon viewing the body of Hussein, who was killed in the suicide bombing at the Kabul airport gates, at a mosque outside Kabul, Afghanistan, Friday, Aug. 27, 2021. (Victor J. Blue/The New York Times)
EditorialPeople perform a funeral ceremony on May 9, 2021, for a girl killed in powerful explosions outside a high school in a predominantly Hazara neighborhood in Kabul, Afghanistan. (Kiana Hayeri/The New York Times)
EditorialA teacher leads a class in Pashto literature at the Mawoud Academy tutoring center, where at least 40 students — most from Afghanistan’s Hazara ethnic minority — died two and a half years ago when a suicide bomber detonated explosives during an algebra class, in Kabul, Afghanistan, March 10, 2021. (Kiana Hayeri/The New York Times)