KABUL -- An American historian who spent decades working in Afghanistan to preserve the heritage of the war-torn country has died in Kabul at the age of 89.
An Afghan government statement on September 10 said historian Nancy Hatch Dupree died overnight. The statement did not specify the cause or the precise time of her death.
A statement from the Afghanistan Center at Kabul University said Dupree died of an "illness." It described her as "the honorary 'grandmother of Afghanistan.'"
Dupree first arrived in Kabul in 1962 as the wife of a U.S. diplomat.
She later married the archaeologist and anthropologist Louis Dupree and lived for decades in Afghanistan.
She spent much of her life collecting and documenting historical artifacts – amassing a large collection of books, maps, photographs, and rare recordings of Afghan folk music that is now housed at Kabul University.
She raised millions of dollars for the Afghan Center at Kabul University, where she worked to create an extensive library that can be accessed electronically from universities in Herat, Kandahar, Jalalabad, and Mazar-e Sharif.
She also created a mobile library program that brought thousands of books in Pashto and Dari to rural communities across the country.
The books in that program were often transported on the backs of donkeys.
Hundreds of Afghans on September 10 posted condolences on social media in response to Dupree's death.