User:Rahmani1985/sandbox

Abdul Rahman Rahmani
Abdul Rahman Rahmani was born on the 10th of April, 1985 in Walyan Village, Khinjan District, Baghlan Province, Afghanistan. He lost his father at the age of four months and his mother remarried when he was 13 years old. He grew up with his uncle Ghulam Haidar in Peshawar Pakistan. His childhood passed among hundreds of other Afghan children in one of Peshawar refugee camps in Pakistan. When the Mujahidin took power in Kabul in 1992, Rahmani returned to Afghanistan with his uncle’s family and worked hard for his school to graduate and he graduated from Ansari, high school in Kabul in 2001. In late 2002, he joined the Afghan Special Forces. In 2007, he married Hamida and now has four kids, his oldest son is Taha, Taiba is his 4 years old daughter, his son Tawab is 3 years old and his last daughter Aqsa is only 2 months old. In 2009, he went to The United Kingdom and The Ukraine for Flight Engineer training. He received his diploma in the middle of 2010 in aviation and worked with the Special Mission Wing (SMW) for three years while he simultaneously attended Kabul University for Sociology and Philology. He was in the middle of his studies when he published his first book, “London Our Dreams” which is a travel journal of his own experience being abroad from Afghanistan. Shortly after publishing his first book he translated three chapters of the book, “Decision Points” written by George W. Bush, the former President of United States. This book (Afghanistan Decision Points) was published by Taak Publications in Kabul, Afghanistan in 2012. In late 2012, he was then selected for flight school in the United States to be an MI-17 Helicopter pilot and now he is in the midst of flight school at Fort Rucker, Alabama United States of America. Recently Rahmani wrote an English stories book called "Afghanistan, a Collection of Stories" which will be available in by the end of July 2013. This book will be published by www.outskirtspress.com in United States of America.

Category:Biogeography