Remembering Ajmal and creating diverse forms of narrative family therapy — Abdul Ghaffar Stanikzai et al

By: Abdul Ghaffar Stanikzai, Ziba Stanikzai, Shamina Stanikzai, Chelsea Size & David Denborough

This paper shares a tender story from the Stanikzai family, a family from Afghanistan who now live in Australia. It is generously offered in the hope that this it may assist other mothers and families who are silently grieving in their homes and who we can’t expect to bring their suffering to professional counselling offices. This paper tells the story of Ziba Stanikzai, who was very much suffering after one of her sons, Ajmal, was killed in Afghanistan. This paper is an honouring Ajmal’s life and memory. It is told through the perspectives of each of the authors. It begins with the words of Ajmal’s older brother Dr Abdul. Later you will read a series of letters linking the Stanikzai family with many others. These letters weave together storylines of loss, love and memory. They also represent a nuanced form of narrative family therapy and convey how this was a culturally and spiritually resonant response to suffering.  

Key words: narrative family therapy, family therapy, grief, Afghanistan, narrative practice


Stanikzai, A. G., Stanikzai, Z., Stanikzai, S., Size, C., & Denborough, D. (2025). Remembering Ajmal and creating diverse forms of narrative family therapy. International Journal of Narrative Therapy and Community Work, (1), 86–102. https://doi.org/10.4320/GWLK4633

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