Thursday, November 30, 2006

The Baghdad Reunion


When it comes to vacations, I never say no. It has been six months since the last time I had a vacation with friends. I might have been lucky that I was able to do that when I was in Iraq last June by the time many other people were hardly leaving their houses to school or work.

The last trip I adventured was with my friends Ahmed and Safaa in Iraq. We went to Iraq’s Northern Kurdistan region where we had some of the best times in our lives. Mostly, it was a farewell trip. I decided to take the risk and have fun with my friends as I might not see them in my entire life again.

All that time, I was thinking about how my life was going to be in the US. Different thoughts came into my mind. The first one was how I am going to be a stranger in a new world that has a huge sensitivity against Arabs and Muslims.

When I left Iraq, I cried a lot. Not only for Iraq, but for myself. Everything around me started to change. No family, no friends, and no homeland to see. All faces become different since the airplane landed in Jordan. What eased the pain was Omar’s presence in Amman. We spent a great time together to overcome the sadness inside our hearts.

Shortly after I settled in Philadelphia, Jon, my American friend, came in Philly for a wedding of one of his friends. We met the next day of the wedding. At that day, he invited Omar and I to spend the Thanksgiving holiday with him and his family in Vermont. I didn’t know what Thanksgiving meant at the time but I knew it’s a holiday in which people serve turkey as a tradition.

Omar and I encircled November 23rd in our calendars to make sure we don’t have other plans on that day. We made plans for the trip. Jon and I were in touch to make sure everything goes perfect.

Since this holiday is one of the biggest in the U.S., Jon advised me to buy the ticket earlier. So I bought it few weeks before the holiday to make sure I find a seat on the train. Since then, I started preparing for it. I didn’t know what to do. I was so excited, not only about having a vacation but about seeing my friends. Although I have a wonderful group of friends now in Philly but my Baghdad friends lie in a special part in my heart. They are not only friends. They are part of my life in Iraq. The part that is engraved in my mind.




I’ve been in touch a lot with my friend Jill since I came to the U.S. Hearing her voice makes me feel hopeful, strong, and willing to go on with everything that makes me succeed. She is so much like my sister in Iraq whom I terribly miss. Jill was invited by Jon as well as my former bureau chief in Baghdad.

On Tuesday November 21st, I took my bags and went to the train station. I was very excited. The moment I entered the station, I received a text message from Omar saying his friend’s father was kidnapped. I was shocked! I thought it’s not the right time to hear bad news. I just needed to have fun, for God’s sake. As I read the message, million thoughts came into my mind starting from my neighbor who was kidnapped and then found tortured and dead. I called Omar. He was miserable. I tried to calm him down but in vain. It wasn’t only his friend’s father kidnapping but his brother who called him that day crying and pleading for help as well.

The train station was incredibly crowded. Neither I nor the people traveling with me found seats on the train. It’s the crazy holiday, one old woman complained as she was standing next to a young man in his seat looking at her and turning his face in dislike!

As I was making my way to find a seat after a 20-minutes standing, Omar called me. People started staring at me in daze as I spoke with Omar in Arabic. I stared as well and was about to say, “Why are you looking? I didn’t invade your country and abused your people!”. Oh well. I decided not to. I just wanted to have fun and ignore all those who looked at me as if I were an alien coming from another planet. I wonder when the Americans will get out of the bubble they live in.



I took the train to New Haven, CT where Jon lives. The plan was to travel to Boston to meet up with Omar, Jill and our friend and bureau chief. On the next day, we had lunch in a restaurant called “Louis’ Lunch”, a restaurant in New Haven famous for its hamburgers, which opened in 1895. The proprietors claim that Louis' Lunch was, in 1900, the first place in the United States to serve hamburgers as they are known today. Louis' Lunch refuses to sell a hamburger with ketchup or mustard. It's either cheese, tomato, or onion, or not at all. The Louis' Lunch hamburger is served on toast, not buns. As we were eating, one of the sign drew my attention. It read, “This is not Burger King. You don’t get it your way. You take it my way or you don’t get the damn thing.” It reminded me with a sign I saw in New York City last year when I was with Mad Canuck. The sign read, “Don’t even think of parking here.”!!



After that, we drove to Boston. On the way, two friends of Jon came with us. The trip took about two hours. During that time, I closed my eyes in the car to take a nap after a long day I had with Jon and his other friend exploring New Haven. As I closed my eyes, I thought about my family and other Iraqis. How many Iraqis were closing their eyes with tears falling on their pillows at that moment, I asked myself. I found no answer.

Finally, the reunion happened. We united again after a long time of nostalgia. I was very happy. I even forgot all the sad things at that moment. I felt I was in Baghdad, not in Boston. It was so weird to see them here.

Altogether, we went to Vermont where Jon’s family lives. Jon was driving while all of us chatted all the way to his family’s house remembering the old days in Baghdad with their sweetness and bitterness.

It was about 10:30 p.m. when I we arrived. We took our bags out of the trunk and marched towards the family house. As we stepped in, I noticed something familiar, the smell. It was like the smell in my house. With a big smile, Jon’s family welcomed us in their beautiful house. Dinner was served. We joined them eating a variety of delicious food.



The trip was long but I never felt tired. I was happy and excited. It was the very first thing that made me happy since I arrived in the States. After dinner, Jon directed us to our rooms. The room which Omar and I shared was his brothers’. A blue-colored square room decorated with pictures of him and his brothers playing hockey. A group of prizes were lined up on the bookcases and dresser marking the brothers’ achievements in sports.

Before we slept, Omar and I went to Jon’s room. It was his room since he was born. A nice small room that almost looks like his brothers’. I asked him to show us old pictures of him. He grabbed some photo albums. The three of us sat on the bed and saw the pictures of young and teenage Jon. We laughed as if we have never laughed before. Then Jon pulled a flute that looks like my father’s. He started playing. Silence followed. He played the Iraqi National Anthem. Omar and I looked at each other in happiness. “How did you do that?” I asked Jon happily. He smiled and didn’t answer. I couldn’t believe that this was not a dream. I couldn’t even imagine that three of us who used to laugh, joke, and sometimes fight in Baghdad were together again. It was such a nice feeling. I think I wouldn’t be able to be fair in describing it.

We went to sleep. I was so excited that I couldn’t sleep at first. I closed my eyes and a flashback of memories of my life with my friends at the office came into my mind.



The next day, I didn’t wake up early. I heard the sound of the anthem again. I immediately knew it was Jon. He was playing it at the door to wake us up. It was such a great start that made my day. I took a shower after Omar did and went down to have breakfast with the whole family. We had breakfast and then we started chatting to get to know each other.

Jon has such great parents. His father is exactly my father, an educated, calm man whom you like from the first word he speaks. His mother is so lovely. She reminded me with my mother, a smiling happy woman whom everybody loves. Jon’s sister, a public school teacher, is so friendly and his brother, a painter, looks like him a lot.

The weather was great. It was chilly but sunny. Jon, Omar, and our bureau chief and I decided to have a walk in the meadows that encircle the whole house. Jill was still asleep by that time. We put on our coats and went out enjoying the wonderful nature that almost looks like the nature in northern Iraq.

Unlike its overdeveloped neighbors to the south, east, and west, Vermont was a state of nature. The meadows were green despite the cold weather. The trees were lined up next to each other like a comb. The air was fresh and mixed with the smell of the grass and the leaves on the trees. I was walking joyfully. I wanted to dance, to jump and be crazy. I imagined my family and friends in Iraq with me. I wanted them there enjoying this beautiful piece of heaven. I loved everything there, even the green and black mail boxes that reminded me with the American cartoons we used to watch when we were kids. We returned back and saw Jill awake. So we decided to have another tour. This time, it was by car. We went to the downtown. We joked, laughed, and took pictures to record these wonderful times.




At lunch time, the house was amazingly crowded by friends and relatives. They were all lovely and friendly. When I was among them, I never felt I don’t know them. They were like my family. As we were having lunch, Jon’s father turned on the CD player and put an audio CD of Iraqi songs and music. Naseer Shamma playing his wonderful lute pieces and Kadhum al-Sahir singing happy songs. I found out later that he burned them on a CD from the internet specifically for us, Omar and me. “No, don’t sigh,” al-Sahir sang. “Laughter will be back in a while and the fire in your chest will quell.”

The song came at the right time. I felt a little bid sad as I heard the news of the car bombing in Sadr City and the tension that happened afterwards. I didn’t know about until a produce from the BBC radio called me and told me about it. I was so worried about my family. Jon’s father handed me the phone to call them and make sure they are OK. When I called them, they tried to hide their fears and asked me to enjoy my time and never think about what is happening there. It was impossible, of course. However, I felt relieved to hear their voices. I needed to know they were still alive and nothing bad happened to them.



It was the Thanksgiving night. Food was made joyfully by most of the family members during the whole day. Jon’s mother made the turkey. Before dinner, Omar lit the candles in the chandelier in the big room, which was built in the late 1700s. After that he brought his computer and made Jon’s entire family enjoy watching a slideshow of Jon’s photos with us in our Baghdad Bureau. As they sat lined up at the sofa and the floor, they stared and laughed out loud at the funny pictures that Jon and we took in the Baghdad Bureau. They were historical pictures of a group of friends going through happy and sad times.

At 5 p.m., we gathered in the big room. Jon’s father installed his high-tech camera and put it on a timer. We took our seats and the camera shot three photos of all of us. Before we dug in, Jon’s father gave a toast. He welcomed all the attendees-family and friends- and invited all of us to visit his wonderful house and family again.

After dinner, we enjoyed deserts while chatting and talking about different topics. Then, we went to the living room to watch TV. One of the channels was showing “Live from Baghdad, a movie about how CNN crew covered the 1991 Gulf war in Iraq. Personally, I didn’t like the movie as there were so many untrue details in it like the information minister sipping tea with the CNN reporter who appeared smoking in Saddam’s palace before interviewing him, not to mention the painters drawing Saddam’s visage in the middle of the street. All these never happened because Saddam was very strict about such things.



The next day, we spent the whole day touring in the city. At night, we were divided into two groups. We went to the movies. Jill, two of Jon’s best friends and I watched Babel while Jon, Omar and our bureau chief watched “The Queen”. Tow days later, Jon, his sister and I drove back to New Haven while the others returned back to their homes by train, bus, and airplane.


It was such a wonderful trip. It was nice not only because of the place but because of the warmth and loveliness of all the people I met there. I will never forget it in my entire life.

baghdadtreasure@gmail.com

Tuesday, November 28, 2006

Not yet?!

It strikes me to see how the world has not realized yet that Iraq is already going through a civil war. Amidst all the bloodshed, politicians and officials show up on TV and say Iraq is NOT yet going through a civil war.

Kofi Annan has said publicly Iraq is teetering on "the brink of civil war". Most U.S. officials say that the violence in Iraq is called a sectarian strife and not a civil war. Only Iraqis themselves realized that what is happening now is no longer strife and the long-term unity they enjoyed before has no place among them anymore.

I don’t know how the U.S. national security adviser Stephen Hadley spoke on behalf of Iraqis few days ago. He said, "The Iraqis don't talk of it as civil war." Where did he get that from? He never asked me! He’d never been to Iraq. He represents his country’s views, not ours. So how come he speaks on our behalf?!

The uproar taken place in the Middle East became the center of attention these days. Maliki and Bush are going to meet up in Jordan. Talabani is in Iran discussing the same issue. But the solution for the real problem, which seems no one realized yet, is not by talking to neighbors. It is solved by talking to ourselves.

Iran and Syria are the first words Bush always says after the word “terrorism” when he shows up on TV with his useless remarks. Yes, these two countries are part of the problem but they are not the main problem. Let’s try to concentrate on what are the mean reason behind this civil war and try to solve them. Foreign fighters coming from Syria, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and Iran are not the main reasons now. Have you read lately a foreign fighter blew himself up? No, you hear and Iraqi [Shiite or Sunni] blew up himself or shot someone dead.

I really don’t know why the U.S. administration does not want to focus on the real crisis instead of talking continuously about “terrorism”. It’s either they know the problem and don’t want to admit it [as they would look like losers] or they are trying to fool the American people by these slogans to ensure them that they are fighting “terrorism” by the time they increased it.

Now what is that internal problem? It is the Iraqi government. Yes, it is! You are going to say but it is elected. Yes, it IS elected. But have you asked the Iraqi people’s opinion of that government now? Did you hear how Maliki’s motorcade was attacked in Sadr City by people throwing stones? Who did that? Weren’t they the people whom he was elected by? Why don’t they like him now? Did you ask yourself why? They believe in their clerics militias now more than Maliki, his government and the parliament. Simply because Sadr and his militia are more powerful than Maliki. People always look for the powerful to be protected.

The government let the people down. Maliki is only a puppet and a mouthpiece of Bush. His government is only a face of fake democracy Bush claims he brought to Iraq. It is corrupt from head to toe. Militiamen are members of the security forces. They kill whoever they like and however they like, mostly by torturing the hostage first. They are not loyal to Iraq. Their loyalty is addicted to their clerics like Abdul Aziz al-Hakim and Muqtada al-Sadr.

What about the parliament? It is even worse than the government itself. Sunni politicians who were involved with insurgency-whether Iraqi or foreign- are no better than the Shiites who always defend their militias like the Mahdi Army and the Badr Troops. Well-known parliament members are known of their loyalty to these insurgents. The Iraqi Islamic Party, Adnan al-Dulaimi [who was behind Jill’s kidnapping], Salih al-Mutlaq, Mishaan al-Jubouri [whose banned channel broadcast footage of insurgency fighting in Iraq and songs of the former regime] and of course, Tariq al-Hashimi who is now the Vice President of the country.

What a blend of thieves, thugs and criminals running Iraq!

What about the secular politicians? Where are they? Probably enjoying the chilly weather in Britain or the U.S. using their second nationality. I used to like Allawi as he seemed to be a good leader. But where is he now? Why did he disappear? Where is Chalabi? Oh I forgot! He stole millions of dollars and went to enjoy them in his second country.

I exclude some secular members who really want to solve the problems but they are powerless among the hundreds of Shiite and Sunni fighting and hateful members. I’ve seen them arguing and exchanging insults when I covered some of their sessions in Baghdad. You may think this is democracy. If this democracy divides my country and kills my people, I don’t want it. Take it back and bring me back my life and my unified Iraq.

I do hope from the bottom of my heart that we revolt against this new, oppressive regime and restore our Iraq back. I know this would never happen because those who think like me are either killed by these militias and insurgents or had to leave the country after receiving death threats.

Monday, November 20, 2006

Killing Laughter

This morning, I heard the news of the assassination of one of the funniest Iraqi comedians. It seems there is no place for laughter anymore, even when people are locked up inside their houses watching TV.

Here are the details:

BAGHDAD, Nov 20 (Reuters) - One of Iraq's best known satirists and broadcasters was gunned down on his way to work on Monday, his colleagues and the police said.

Waleed Hassan's "Caricature" sketch show was an unmissable part of weekend Fridays for Iraqis seeking a release in laughter from the blood and chaos around them. Hassan poked fun at sectarian violence, bickering politicians, power blackouts and all aspects of the turmoil that is daily life in Iraq.

He was found in west Baghdad with three bullet wounds to the head, said the Sharkiya channel. Hassan was a director of the station and also produced a political interview show for it.

As with other media, several journalists and employees of Sharkiya have been killed. Owned by a London-based Iraqi businessman it takes an independent editorial line, though many viewers see it as leaning toward minority Sunni Arab viewpoints.

"We feel we're all at risk," a senior journalist at Sharkiya told Reuters. "We all think of quitting the station."

Friday, November 17, 2006

Around the World

Last Thursday, I joined my friends from different countries in one of the most popular festivals in the university. As a member of the international group that sponsored the festival, I participated by representing Iraq.

International students who are members in the group represented their countries by presenting pictures, souvenirs and traditional food their countries famous of.

The festival was sponsored by students from Japan, Austria, Nigeria, Mexico, Bolivia, India, Australia, Poland, China, Hong Kong, The Philippines, Kenya, The Dominican Republic, and Iraq.

Student and faculty staff allover the university enjoyed the food, music, pictures and the information they learned from the international students.

Enjoy the photos.

Al-Qaeda Ally Wanted

Last Sunday, I read a transcript of an interview by al-Arabiya channel with Harith al-Dhari, an Iraqi Sunni cleric. Dhari, who heads the Muslim Scholars Association, one of the associations suspected of supporting terrorism, considered what al-Qaeda in Iraq is doing “resistance”. I stopped here and thought to myself what kind of a person considers al-Qaeda’s operations as such?

Asked if he considers what al-Qaeda is doing in Iraq is “resistance”, Dhari said, “yes, absolutely. [Al-Qaeda] and the other groups are doing the resistance operations in Anbar, Mosul, Salahuldeen, Kirkuk, Diyala, and Baghdad.”

In the same interview, Dhari attacked the Anbar tribes that are fighting al-Qaeda now calling them “road gangs who don’t like the resistance which defeated their crimes.” He also described these tribes as “weak groups”.

Since that Association was formed, I believed that this man and his gangs were behind most of the killings and kidnappings that started shortly after the invasion. The kidnapped western journalists, who some of them showed up at the Association Headquarters, is a fact that made me think twice about the kind of relationship between them and al-Qaeda. I finally discovered that when I was at their headquarters as I was waiting to interview Dhari Jr.

Unfortunately, no one was able arrest this poisonous man previously as there was no clear evidence of his involvement with such groups. But now and Few days after the interview, the Iraqi government happily seized the opportunity and issued an arrest warrant against Dhari who was accused of encouraging sectarian violence and supporting terrorism, represented by al-Qaeda.

Al-Dhari denied the accusations from Jordan, telling Al Jazeera English: "I'm accused of inciting terrorism in Iraq, however the real reasons for my arrest warrant is not this accusation."

"Everyone knows that me and the association with all its members call for peace, stability and reconciliation."

In my opinion al-Dhari should have been either arrested or killed immediately after what happened during the funeral of the slain journalist, Atwar Bahjat after the bombing of al-Askari shrine in Sammarra which triggered the civil war in the country. Atwar’s funeral procession through Baghdad was attacked in the area which Dhari and his tribe control. The procession was first attacked by a gunmen and then by a bomber. Three people died, all members of the security forces, compounding the anguish and bewilderment of Atwar’s family and friends at her killing a day earlier.

As a response to the arrest warrant, Tariq al-Hashimi, the country's Sunni Vice-President, condemned the arrest warrant saying "it is destructive to the national reconciliation plan".

In a statement, Al-Hashimi urged the government to cancel the warrant immediately!! Huh! This how our “elected” politicians denounce terrorism!!!

Thursday, November 16, 2006

Kadhum al Sahir - Baghdad don't hurt


To my beloved Baghdad...


The children of sad Baghdad are asking
For what reason are they being killed?
They are staggering on top of the ruins of hunger
They share the bread of death, then they die

God is Greater than the war’s destruction, Baghdad
And this unfair world full of hatred
God is Greater than those who start those wars on the innocents
And greater than all those blood traders
Baghdad don’t hurt…
Baghdad you are in my blood
Baghdad … Baghdad…

Shame on this civilized age… what a shame!
Has scaring nations become a slogan for glory and victory?
Has killing innocents become a sign of honor and pride?

God is Greater than the war’s destruction,
Baghdad And this unfair world full of hatred
God is Greater than those who start those wars on the innocents
And greater than all those blood traders
Baghdad don’t hurt…
Baghdad you are in my blood
Baghdad … Baghdad…

You are the path of the lovers, you are my wound
Leave your wounds on my shoulder and hug my small heart
The civilization will never live without a heart and conscience

God is Greater than the war’s destruction,
Baghdad And this unfair world full of hatred
God is Greater than those who start those wars on the innocents
And greater than all those blood traders
Baghdad don’t hurt…
Baghdad you are in my blood
Baghdad … Baghdad… Baghdad…

baghdadtreasure@gmail.com

Tuesday, November 14, 2006

The Iraqi Killing Fields


When I first watched the Killing Fields last year, I thought to myself if that is going to be our country’s fate. I wasn’t completely pessimistic as I am today but I had my fears.

It is unbelievable how things look exactly the same today. Several scenes in the movie horrified me. One of them was of the young and armed Khmer Rouge taking over the city. But there was a horrible scene which I hoped not to happen in my country. It was about the Khmer Rouge closing schools, forcing people to be illiterate, and killing whoever carries a book or a notebook. The scene starts with the fighters gathering children in new schools they formed. They taught them how to leave education and how to be separated from their families.

Here we are today. EIGHTY policemen, militias or whatever they are named broke into the Higher Education ministry in Baghdad abducting ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTY people in 10 minutes.

The new Iraqi Killing Fields started killing education in Iraq.

I am completely shocked. I lost hope forever now. It is now officially the Killing Fields. It is exactly the same thing when the Khmer Rouge killed and destroyed schools and every aspect of education. I feel so miserable and unable to think. It is unbelievable how this country is dying. Education was one of very good things in Iraq. Students from other countries came to study there despite the sanctions that were imposed by the f****en UN. These thugs don't want this. They need to impose their own fanatic teachings.

These crimes aim at killing the ambition of young Iraqis who want to study abroad as well. The gunmen kidnapped employees of Scholarships and Cultural Relations Directorate. The institute is responsible for granting scholarships to Iraqi professors and students wishing to study abroad. It is a plan to kill the hope and ambition of being educated in the heart of every Iraqi.

I am so mad at the Iraqi government. I think the Prime Minister and his interior minister should resign immediately. This was an organized crime in an area where police and army are always present. I have been in that area hundreds of times before as it was near the place where I worked.

I am so desperate. I don’t know what would happen in the coming days. Everything positive has gone. Democracy and freedom killed every positive seed of hope inside our hearts. I hate Bush, I hate Blair, I hate all the American administration. They destroyed my country. They let thugs and thieves rule it.

You American and British people are also to blame for this mess. It is your silence and your support to these two criminals who once supported Saddam. Wake up and move from your chairs and sofas. Do something. Help my country which your countries destroyed. Try to do something before it is too late, if it is not too late.

Alas !!!!

Monday, November 13, 2006

Tales from Mesopotamia

She sat next to me, stared at the video and fell into tears. She let her head fall into both of her hands. Her face turned pale with washed by tears. She didn’t even care about the other employees around us.

“I can’t imagine any human being can endure what Iraqis are going through,” she said. Since the war happened, she never missed the news, she confirmed, but this time was different. She started reading our blogs and hearing our stories.

“It’s an everyday scene,” I said while I could still see the shock on her face. “And we complain here!?” she exclaimed sarcastically.

She is one of my colleagues at work, another graduate assistant who is as young as I am. Very intellectual, educated, and aware of what is going on. After hearing the truth, she told me she never hated Bush as she hated him now.

We sat for hours talking about Iraq, the country that is bleeding every second. I told her stories of incidents I never expected to overcome. She cursed her country’s media for hiding these every day scenes and stories. She said she is misinformed by the media which covers one side of the story only. And this is the reason why I am writing this entry.

I am going to be speechless and leave the podium for the courageous Iraqi bloggers to talk about one of the dozens of the horrifying incidents they went through since the invasion in 2003. But keep in mind that each story is one incident that is still happening everyday for hundreds of thousands, if not millions of people.


Zeyad – Healing Iraq:

Zeyad writes about one of the most horrifying moments in his life.

The heavy drone of the private neighborhood generator slowly eased down into a familiar whir, marking its shutdown for the night. I cursed the owner under my breath. It was only 8:30 p.m.

With beads of sweat already forming on my forehead, I threw off my shirt and opened my bedroom window. Pausing for a moment, I peered out into the pitch dark that engulfed our street. There were bits of fluorescent light here and there, emanating from stores that were still open or about to close.

Something was not right, though. The lady in the house across the street was watching from her window, and there was almost a sense of foreboding in the street. I could make out pedestrians hurrying away. I imagined it was just a brawl.

“Sit down, I say! Sit, damn you!” someone was yelling. “Take it and leave me,” someone shouted back.

The heated exchange continued for a few seconds. I couldn’t see anything, but it was clear that someone was swearing and fighting across the street from our front door.

As the exchange became more intense, there was a scream of “Allahu Akbar!” followed by four consecutive gunshots that pierced our still street.

I had ducked instinctively, but in a split-second I was running downstairs and outside, wearing just my shorts and flannel. A car screeched away, and my immediate thought was that a friend or a neighbor was either shot or kidnapped.

The street was dark and almost deserted; storeowners were hurriedly locking their stores, while others pointed to a spot across the street from where I was standing. I saw a guy, who is a bit mentally challenged, and who works with the local generator owner, pacing around in circles and muttering “Abu Hassan, Abu Hassan, Abu…”

Abu Hassan is the generator owner. I had a vague notion of what might have taken place, but I hoped I was wrong. I found myself rushing across to the spot that people were still pointing at. There was indeed a body, lying face down in a pool of blood. It was Abu Hassan.

I crouched next to him and tried to check his pulse, but my hands were shaking and I couldn’t feel a thing. His neck was still warm and moist with sweat. Some familiar faces from the area cautiously approached me. “Is he still alive?” they asked. “I don’t know. I don’t know,” I nervously shot back. “But do something. Take him to the hospital. Now.”

They tried to find a car, but it seemed that no one wanted anything to do with it, or were trying to make excuses. Someone stopped a taxi but the driver said no when he saw the corpse. I was still next to Abu Hassan’s body, trying to make sense of what just happened. Even now, when I try to remember those traumatic moments, I get a hazy picture, as if the whole
incident was taking place in a dream, and that I would suddenly wake up and go out to find Abu Hassan in his mechanic’s overall, smiling under his big gray moustache as he poured oil into the generator.

When I tried to turn him over so they could carry him into a car, my hands touched his blood-soaked shirt. I could now see that he was shot four times in the chest. There was also a bag nearby with a box of peaches, medication
and a Pepsi bottle; he was obviously going to take that home to his kids. I stared in his anguished face again, then at my bloody hands. And that was when I momentarily lost it.

“They shouted ‘Allahu Akbar,’ godammit,” I retorted angrily. “It was a [expletive] execution. What do those murderous bastards want?”

My cousin and another neighbor held me by the shoulders and shook me violently. “Get a hold of yourself and watch your tongue,” they whispered urgently. “You don’t know who the hell might be watching. They might be
standing among us to check if he’s dead or not.”

As my cousin led me across the street back home, I burst uncontrollably into tears. “How could you go out in your shorts?” he was saying, almost to himself. “Are you out of your mind? Haven’t you heard that they banned
shorts?”

The whole family was waiting. My father scolded me for going out, in such a situation, in shorts. “Do you want them to kill you?” he yelled at me.

“Them?” I yelled back. “How long are we going to cower in fear and wait for them to get to us too? How long until we’re next in the line?”

“Yes, living here is like waiting in a damn line to get killed,” he said. “Either you learn to live with it, or you leave. Period.”


Chickitita –first words, first walk, first.... in IRAQ


Chickitita fears the Iraqi commandos when they broke into her house and kidnapped her step father. Baghdadis fear these commandos as most of them were either members of the Badr Troops or are loyal to Sadr and his militias.


To me the night the Iraqi commandos raided my house was the most horrific of the lot. The way they stormed into my room caused me a lifelong phobia of anyone in khaki, camouflage or any type of military uniform and any machinegun that looks exactly like the ones they pointed at my family and me. The sight of them makes my heart pound so fast, my tummy hurt, my whole body shake and my mouth parch.

The sound of mum's pleas to those horrible thugs to leave step dad alone and have mercy on him is still echoing in my ears. And the way he was dragged to their vehicles bound and scared with eyes downcast trying to assure us all that he will be back soon is still haunting me.

After 12 hours of detention and humiliation, step dad was back home baffled, tired and unable to say a word, and to this day he has no idea why he was taken in the first place.


Iraqi Konfused Kid –

In this incident, the kid narrates to us the sorrowful loss of four of his best friends…

Four of my friends were killed by a huge double roadside bomb that exploded in Karada on Sunday June 11. That’s right, four, count them … that is, if you can identify their bodies. Forever gone — can you imagine that? Since you are all comfy in your air-conditioned rooms sitting on armchairs, sipping Pepsi or Kool-Aid or whatever it is that you care to sip while your sons and daughters go safely to colleges and your spouses sleep in bedrooms million miles away from here, I’d like to take the opportunity to offer what it feels like to be insane amidst the apocryphal hell of Iraq, both weather-wise and people-wise.

They were the best of people. Two of them, my best friends, were Shiites; another was Sunni and the other was Christian — an example of unity that can never be portrayed in a million years by the hypocritical fake advertisements they numb us with on TV. Three of them lived in the internal hostel because their families were abroad, and each one’s story is sadder than the other.

I remember precisely the moment when I got the phone call at 10:30 p.m. telling me that three of them were dead. The time went very slowly. The room, just a minute earlier moist and extremely hot, became sullen and cold. I went upstairs and wept alone. I wept all day, frequently looking at the mirror and gesturing incoherently …

My world has not been the same since that day. Everywhere I go there are small marks that bear their faces or actions of the past (like when England wins in the World Cup, of which Hobi was a great fan), and the lectures that Ninos used to make clear to us less-gifted students, and the countless pictures, tokens of a better time that I cannot bear to look at again. Even when I close my eyes to sleep, nightmares creep in and welcome me. Yesterday I dreamt I was killed by marines; before that I was abducted by militias … it goes on and on.


And there you sit, comfortable in your ignorance, sipping on your Pepsi and choking on your Burger King while I tell you a story of one of those statistical body counts. You are to blame. Your ignorance was a major cause of all this.

Later that night, I printed out a glorious color picture of Abu Musab Al-Zarqawi, the flag of Iran, and the American star-spangled banner, put them one on top of the other in the backyard, the American flag on top of all, and set them all to flame … I didn’t feel a goddamn thing. I don’t consider my actions in the above paragraph justified, even morally correct. I apologize for that, but it’s the truth. Heck, I’m going to write to Bono to ask him if he can do a song about my friends, but I’m not hoping for much.

I said that four people were killed, but only talked about three. The last person, Saif, survived the explosion and was hospitalized with third-degree burns. I visited Saif that first day; his face was completely unrecognizable. He kept asking me about the fate of the three others, tears stuck at the corner of his eye. I told him they were fine.
Five days later, I had a dream where I met Sayoofi on the streets. He looked much healthier but somehow out of touch. I woke up giddy and expectant that day; He died that afternoon.


I did visit him on that last day and he told me the story of the explosion. It contained some interesting details :
Saif: “When the explosion occurred, the four of us were walking hand in hand. All of a sudden I felt myself hurled 50 meters in the air, and felt a severe burning all over my body. I wore a t-shirt which eased the pain on my arms; not so for my legs. All around me people were burning and moaning horribly; the stench was unbearable. I could still walk and I crossed the street, calling for anyone I saw for help. When I reached the other side, I flung myself in a pool of mud and water — people came and started throwing cold water on me. I had barely settled when a second larger explosion rocked the streets. I looked behind me and saw the building set to flames, Ninos [the Christian] was beside me: his face was white and something had entered his stomach.”


Here Saif stops with tears running down his face to ask me for the zillionth time about the other three. I tell him that they are resting just as he is.

Nobody of sane mind can live here … We Iraqis have been so used to being kicked and dragged through the mud that we did not recognize the abyss in which we found ourselves. But there comes a time when you look around see your world for what it is and cannot take any more of it. I hate to be a whiner, but I tell you nothing but the absolute truth. Iraqis today are strange, sorry creatures — confused, constantly paranoid, and filled with distrust and hatred.


Nabil – Nabil’s Blog

Here, Nabil describes how he felt when a mortar fell in front of his house’s main gate…

I was in my room...around 7 pm...chatting on the internet with my friends...then I heard a huge sound of bombing...and huge amount of dust came into my room.... I was shocked... I stopped thinking for minutes...I didn't know what to do...then heard the voice of my mum from down stairs...screaming..Nabil, Nabil...are you okay?!.... I ran downstairs to check if my mom and dad are okay...and thanks to god they were okay.

Then we started to try to understand what happened...meanwhile we heard voices in the street...saying that a mortar missile fell on a shop in front of my house.... the owner of the shop is one of my friends... and his house is just behind the shop...so I ran out to check if they were okay... I crossed the street...it was too dark...no electricity as usual...saw few men with torch lights looking at the shop and trying to find what happened...then a guy who was passing the street....stood in front of my house and shouted to us...that he found a hole in the street... we ran to his spot...and found what you see in these pictures...
We found that it was a mortar missile which fell on the side-walk as you see....

Its not safe for us...even being locked up in our homes...WHAT A MESS !!!!!


Fatima – Thoughts from Baghdad

Fatima fears for her husband's and baby's lives as they were caught in corss fire on their way to home.

About two weeks ago, my husband, 15 month old daughter and I were at our neighbors' house. We walked out of their gate at about 10 pm. Right then, in the dark of the electricity-less night, really loud gunfire, very close to us, started going off. We couldn't easily slip back into our neighbors' yard because the gate was locked, and running home was about 30-40 meters away. At that moment, those 30 meters seemed like a mile away. All I could think of was whether we would get home safely. All I could think of was whether we would get caught in the middle of a gunfight between insurgents and the Iraqi army checkpoint set up at the beginning of our street, or if a stray bullet would hit my husband, baby or I.

It wasn't a major gunfight, but it quickly took me back to about a year ago, when my young daughter and I were home alone at night and a major gunfight actually did occur on our tiny street. All the cars parked on the street had their windows blown out, and a couple of houses had bullets through their windows. I was hoping that this wouldn't be the same thing. Thankfully, we made it home safely, where I breathed a sigh of relief. Others have not been as lucky as I.


Sunshine – Days of my Life

Sunshine, the high school girl, tells us how she and her relatives survived a mortar attack at their school…

One day and as I went to school, I saw a panic situation. Teachers were crying and the girls were running here and there and crying. I asked a girl what is going on?! She said "a missile hit our school garden"


After few minutes I knew that the teachers' room was damaged and the school's windows were broken, as well as the library and one of the classrooms. Two girls were injured, one in the fourth grade, the other in the second.


There were so many policemen. Each one of them was nervous. I wanted to find my relatives who attend the same school. I went to the other building then a policeman stood in the middle of the yard and shouted "GO TO THE OTHER BUILDING NOW”. I didn't move from my place as I was trying to find my relative, then he shouted "YOU , GO". I told him that I was searching for my relatives . Then, thank God, I found my relatives.

We stayed together. We tried to use a cell phone to call our families but we couldn’t as it is forbidden to bring cell phones to school .However, one of my classmates hid her mobile. I asked her if I could use her phone. She accepted and let everyone call their parents.

After a while my relative’s father arrived. I felt relieved to see him. He took me to their house. At 12:15 pm my Dad came and picked me up to my worried mother. She looked so pale. I am so blessed to see my family again. I am alive. It is a miracle.


Caesar of Pentra -- In Iraq, sex is like snow

Caesar of Pentra speaks about an incident his father went through as he was going back home from work…

I just wonder how can we continue doing our jobs and go to schools or to work?! A week before, my father came home terrified! He said that some gunmen stop their office bus on the highway that leads to “Albayaa area” in Baghdad. He added and mentioned that those hirelings obliged the driver to pull over and grabbed that poor driver out of the bus and aim their AK47s over his head. One of them ordered the passengers to show their ID cards! The other gunmen yelled: “Fuck them, let’s move on from here quick!”. They took that poor driver with them and quickly drove their four wheel drive Toyota. One of the passengers volunteered to drive that bus back home. My dad said that nobody believed what was going on! Of course, no one heard anything about that unfortunate driver since that afternoon. It’s familiar situation these days to be murdered according to your fellowship (whether being Sunni or Shiit) by some gunmen, all they have to do is to form a fake checkpoint and hunt some innocent people and leave quickly before they got busted by a US army vehicle or a chopper.


Tara

On her blog, Tara describes in Arabic an unforgettable day in her life.

It was a scary day more than any other day. I left the hospital and found the sky full of smoke. It was not like the smoke of a car bomb or a roadside bomb. I heard one man saying the Shorja market is burning. I waited at the hospital main gate waiting for the driver, then the news came: the roads are blocked, clashes are taking place in Bab al-Muadham etc.

I didn’t know what to do. Should I stay where I was standing waiting for the driver or take a taxi? How could I find a taxi if the road is blocked? If I stayed here, how long will it take me to get home?

I called the driver. He told me a car bomb exploded near the Nidaa Mosque. I could hear shootings through the phone. It means that the area where work and my neighborhood were dangerous at that time.

Half an hour later, the driver came. I arrived home safe. I entered the house and looked at my brother. We both did not utter a word. Then he said, “you weren’t as bad as I was”. He took me to the garage and showed me how one of the bullets hit the windshield of his car on the driver’s seat. He then told me the car was parked in one of the neighborhoods were clashes took place.


Miraj – Baghdad Chronicles

Like most of the Iraqi women who used to live in a former secular Iraq where women were free to wear a scarf or not, Miraj tells us stories of several women killed because they didn’t wear the scarf. She tells us her feeling as a non-scarf woman living in a city controlled by militias and armed men who are free enough to kill whomever they like…

A high school girl went through a horrible time when bunch of armed men shaved all her hair because she wasn't wearing any scarf. This is a new trend found by the animal called Muqtada Alssadar.

Also a woman with her daughter were killed in Saydiya because the woman was driving and that is a taboo now.

The abnormal conditions in Baghdad left a lot of Iraqi women without husbands and women have to adjust and do a lot of stuff alone. Now we can't simply because an animal said so. Excuse me, where is the government? Oh sorry to bother they are busy with more important things.

Even though I am working at home since few months and the risk of going out and getting killed is much more less, still I am the one responsible to fill the car with fuel and sometimes do simple shopping, I still need to go out and cut my hair, still need to go out for many other reasons. Now I am afraid to do so for I do not have a single skirt in my closet, all I have is pants , pants and more pants, I don't even have long shirts to cover the pants and everytime I go out I look horrible trying to cover everything despite the colors while I am known as the most elegant , nice dressed person where ever I go. As for the scarf, I’d rather put a shoe on my head with my full consent than put a scarf without it.

Of course along with that Muqtada was kind enough to make sure not to exclude the Iraqi males from his generosity and he and his militias started killing any male wearing jeans, shorts or cutting their hair the western style which we call here Haffur! Idiot!


Zappy – Where Date Palms Grow

In his latest entries, Zappy seemed so depressed and haunted by fear of death…

I feel like a different person, I am now an engulfed by fear & cowardness, I jump at the sound of a squeaking door, I feel like I’m half dead.

I have this feeling of being stalked; it’s like Spiderman when he gets those vibes when danger approaches. Such a terrible feeling, you feel your heart is going to burst out of your chest.

Furthermore this morning, on my way to work I nearly had a car accident, a Black GMC Suburban nearly hit my Car on the Highway, it then swirled towards the pavement and smashed in, I stopped to see what happened, it seems that the driver was shoot seconds earlier while he was driving or something similar, when they pulled him out of the car he was dead due to multiple gun shots.

This is too much…


I was There

What if you feel your daughters are in danger and might be kidnapped? Read our friend’s account of this incident where gunmen broke into his house trying to kidnap his daughters.

My daughters were not at home at that time because their minibus broke down at that day so they had to walk back home and this is why they were late, “They should be home by now”, one of the gangsters told my neighbor with an interjection when she told him that the girls still at school replying for his question about them.

My fear rushed with me to the house, it was striking hard on my head and making me so meager while it was growing and growing, it filled the car that I was driving in the dusk through the useless police checkpoints in a bumpy road that was not paved since Saddam era.

It took me 45 minutes in a 15-minute road to reach my house because of those police checkpoints and the 150-meter distance that we should maintain between our cars and the US military Hummers that were patrolling the street so slow, we can not pass them even if it was an emergency other wise they will shoot us so I was driving slowly following them while I was boiling deep inside trying to get home as fast as possible.

I can not call the police because I do not trust them and I can not ask for help to protect my daughters, what shall I do? I remembered what that guy said in his comment about Iraqis should help themselves and do not expect every thing from the Americans but how can I help myself in this case to protect my daughters.

The house was dark when I reached there because there was no electricity as it comes on for one hour and goes off for 8, and the public generator that supplies our block with electricity broke down two days ago and no one fixed it because its mechanic was killed last week because he was Shiite.

I walked inside the dark house stumbling with things on the floor that I couldn’t see because of the darkness; my wife and my daughters were all sitting in the living room motionless with awe.

I sat by my daughter who was squatting on the sofa and told them, “I am going to take you all outside Iraq, it is not the place that you can stay in any more, let us leave this country for those marionettes and the gangsters.”

Friday, November 10, 2006

Unforgettable Week

It has been almost two weeks since I talked to Ahmed, one of my best friends, who lives in my neighborhood. I received an email from him. To be honest, I don’t know whether I should be happy or sad after reading this email. On one hand I am happy because he is alive and on the other I am sad because of the content of this email that broke my heart.

His email was all about what he went through for the last week. He is left alone with no friends around him. All of us left and now he is just so miserable living in the most dangerous spot on earth. His words broke my heart especially the part where he said he had to sit in the garden by himself where we all used to gather.

The situation in my neighborhood is deteriorating, he said. The Mahdi army and the armed men are the only controlling power there. Iraqi Police and army are just names they hear about and have never seen there to protect the neighborhood and its people.

Here is the translation of his email.

Hi ****,
How is it going? I hope everything is going well in your
school and work. I miss you a lot and I don’t know what to do without you,
Safaa, Ahmed, Sameem and the others. I miss you so much but at the same time I
feel you did the best thing by leaving Iraq.

I am sorry that I
feel so creepy in this email but I really wanted to share what I saw and what I
see everyday with you as we used to do before. I can’t keep it inside me. I am
afraid I could kill myself one day if I keep them inside.

Day one:

I was going back home one day when clashes between US forces and armed men erupted in front of us. The bus didn’t go further, so I decided to walk through one of the shortcuts to our house. The clashes were near the gas station [which is a little bit far from the shortcut]. Suddenly an American soldier showed up pointing his gun at me. He asked me and the six other people to stop and so we did. He looked so nervous. He was shouting in English and all I could understand was the word “fuck” coming out his mouth. He was followed by three other soldiers who were looking around. It seems they were expecting bullets from snipers who might have been hiding in the houses.

The nervous soldier asked us to turn our backs. The man next to me told me not to say a word because [the soldiers] may do something stupid and kill us. They were so nervous that they could kill anyone in front of them.

One of the three soldiers searched my pockets as he asked me to raise my hands up. He pulled my wallet from my back pocket, saw what was inside and then threw it on the floor. It was windy and I was afraid that some of the identification might be lost. I wanted to lift them up but couldn’t do it as it might cause my life.

Then the same soldier came and took me near his humvee hummer. He asked me several questions and looked at my ID. He and the other soldiers interrogated all of us for two and a half hours. After that they let us go.

Day two:

I was in the garden alone. As usual, shootings and explosion rocked the neighborhood next to ours. But there was something weird. The sound of the shootings was coming closer. I didn’t really care that much because it is not something new. So I stayed there but the shooting started coming closer. Suddenly, armed groups took positions in the neighborhood. Then the a convoy of about ten pickups loaded with the Mahdi Army broke into the neighborhood and started shooting randomly. I couldn’t feel but the bullets at my house’s front door. So I ran inside the house away from the clashes. My neighbor said bullets broke his window but he was unhurt.

Day three:

Almost the same thing happened today but it was by armed men wearing army uniform in white pickups. They were shooting randomly at the houses in my neighborhood. We didn’t know whether these were army or interior ministry forces or men disguising in their uniform. In all cases, the front fence and door were riddled with bullets again. This time I was inside the house. I ran to warn my brothers and parents and we all gathered in the house corridor away form the windows. We found out later that two old men were killed as they were chatting in one of their gardens.

Day four:

Fourteen young men were kidnapped by the [interior ministry] commandos from the neighborhood. They young men were in a KIA minibus and were going to different areas. Their bodies were found dead, tortured and thrown under the highway bridge.

Day five:

I was helpless. I needed to smoke hookah as we used to when you and the guys were here. I set it up and started smoking in the garden where we used to hang out remembering you and Safaa and how we had fun together in spite of our shitty life. I sat alone. I waited for someone I know to pass by that I could talk to but no one did. No one dares to leave his house anymore. I was so desperate that I fell into tears. But I am really happy that you are not here. At least you could be able to get the hell out of hell. I am sure one day we would see each other again.

Day Six:

I was in the market buying some stuff for my mother when the Mahdi army broke into the neighborhood again. The armed men in our neighborhood took up arms and clashed with the Mahdi army. I was really scared at that day. People started running, I left everything and ran, and the shop owners closed their shops and ran. It was nasty and scary. Finally I could reach my house but the clashes continued and reached our street. Eight bullets broke the windows of our kitchen this time.

The clashes remained for about an hour until the Americans came. The Mahdi army and the armed men disappeared in minutes as if they were ghosts. However, we couldn’t sleep that night. I expected someone would break into my house and kidnap me and my other brothers.

Day Seven:

By that time, the Americans had left. The neighborhood was left loose again. The Mahdi army came back again. In the middle of the day in the shopping area, they kidnapped two young men and started beating them in front of the people who could not do anything because the Mahdi army fighters were carrying weapons and anyone came near them could have been shot immediately. As they were beating the young men, a woman pleaded them from a distance to leave these boys alone. The fighters yelled at the women and said, “Shut up you bitch. We’ll clean this neighborhood from you. The young men were strong enough to resist. They ran away from the Mahdi army. The fighters started shooting but the men ran fast and entered a nearby mosque. Then the Mahdi army shot some bullets around the mosque and drove out of the neighborhood.

Saddam’s trial verdict day:

I was at home at that day because curfew was imposed. The moment Saddam was sentenced to death, mortars started falling randomly on our neighborhood, Suleikh, and center Adhamiya. Explosions rocked the neighborhood. I said that’s it. There must be a mortar that is going to kill us this time. It is unbelievable how we survive every time such things happen.

Finally, our neighborhood and center Adhamiya is not the same neighborhood you used to see before you left. It’s worse. It’s a neighborhood of ghosts. Sometimes I walk by myself, or with one or two people. It is really scary to walk by yourself in the streets. They are empty and horrifying.

End of e-mail.

This is just an account of one week of one person in one area in Baghdad. So what about the other days and other places?

Finally, my neighbo, who was kidnapped few weeks ago, was found shot dead. His family found his body at the Baghdad Morgue. He was tortured to death. His entire family sold their house and left the country for no intention to come back even in the far future.