In January, he and his mother were able to find a new home in the Bull City with the help of World Relief Durham.
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"I always wanted Afghanistan to be free," Ghaznavi said.
It was 2016, his dad was threatened by the Taliban and forced to leave. His father and older brother were able to escape to the United States. However, Milad and his mother had no choice but to stay in Afghanistan.
"(The Taliban) came after my dad to take his life," he said.
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Listening to him recall how life was and what he sees on television is unfathomable to many.
"There are explosions," he said. "Explosives in schools, mosques; nobody wants to live in that situation."
In January 2021, he was finally able to reunite with his father and older brother. However, other family members were not as fortunate to relocate to the US.
"They're terrified. They're sad. They're depressed," he said of other women in his family back home. They can't go outside, because they're scared. (The Taliban) is in the streets with the guns. So, no one wants to get outside their house, because of their fear."
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He recounts former President Ashraf Ghani's departure over the weekend as something that surprised a lot of people and made the situation even more real.
When Milad was in the seventh grade he began to learn English. After arriving, he credits ESL courses with helping him become more comfortable and conversational with the English language. He also hopes to be a computer science engineer.
He hopes to return to Afghanistan someday; but only if the situation is much different.
"If there is peace in my country," he said. "if we have the human rights in my country."