Inside camp housing thousands of Afghans | Website Hosting Plans

EDINBURGH, Ind. — Amid a collage of cartoon characters and princesses, drawings of Afghanistan’s black, red and green flag decorated a wall at a United States Army base in Central Indiana.

Across the room, “Welcome” was scrawled in Farsi on a white board.

Hundreds of young Afghan children drew the flags and filled in the coloring pages while their parents discussed their uncertain futures at Camp Atterbury in Edinburgh, Indiana.

A translated welcome sign is ready to greet evacuees at the intake facility as part of Operation Allies Welcome, Thursday, Oct. 14, 2021 at Camp Atterbury in Edinburgh, IN.

“This is one of the first stops that people get an opportunity to kind of share their experience and what happened,” Aaron Batt, federal coordinator for the Department of Homeland Security, told reporters at the camp Thursday.

In just over a month and a half, government officials and aid organizations have transformed one of Indiana’s major military training sites into a temporary home for some of the men, women and children who fled Afghanistan as the Taliban swept across the country in August. 

An Afghan family walks to a bus to take them back to their community at the Operation Allies Welcome Afghan evacuees settlement Thursday, Oct. 14, 2021 at Camp Atterbury in Edinburgh, IN.

“The goal of our facility here is to have as efficient of a process as possible,” Capt. Nigel Liefveld, who handles evacuee reception at the facility, said. “We understand that the guests are tired. They’ve traveled a long way.”

A young girl waves at Capt. Jennifer Pendleton outside an Operation Allies Welcome community building Thursday, Oct. 14, 2021 at Camp Atterbury in Edinburgh, IN.

The Indiana site is one of eight across the country hosting evacuees as part of Operation Allies Welcome, a Homeland Security effort offering refuge to Afghans in the aftermath of the Taliban takeover. More than 70,000 people have settled at the sites across the country, and the majority of the evacuees worked alongside the United States during the 20-year war in Afghanistan. 

Many evacuees have large families

Evacuees began arriving at Atterbury Sept. 1. More than 6,600 Afghans arrived in the first six days, officials said. 



Inside camp housing thousands of Afghans

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