-Caveat Lector-

http://dear_raed.blogspot.com/

Where is Raed ?

----------
"the West won the world not by the superiority of its ideas or values or
religion but rather by its superiority in applying organized violence.
Westerners often forget this fact, non-Westerners never do."
----------

 :: Monday, March 24, 2003 ::

The last two days we didn.t have internet access. I thought that was it
and started what a friend called a .pblog., what you will read is what
should have been the entries for the 22nd and 23rd.
Blogger and Google have created a mirror to this weblog at
[dearraed.blogspot.com] for those of you who have trouble with the
underscore in the URL. There are not enough words to thank the people at
Blogger for their help and support.


22/3
4:30pm (day3)
half an hour ago the oil filled trenches were put on fire. First watching
Al-jazeera they said that these were the places that got hit by bombs from
an air raid a few miniutes earlier bit when I went up to the roof to take
a look I saw that there were too many of them, we heard only three
explosions. I took pictures of the nearest. My cousine came and told me he
saw police cars standing by one and setting it on fire. Now you can see
the columns of smoke all over the city.
Todat the third in the war, we had quite a number of attacks during
daytime. Some without air-raid sirens. They probably just gave up on being
able to be on time to sound the sirens. Last night, after waves after
waves of attacks, they would sound the all-clear siren only to start
another raid siren 30 minutes later.
The images we saw on TV last night (not Iraqi, jazeera-BBC-Arabiya) were
terrible. The whole city looked as if it were on fire. The only thing I
could think of was .why does this have to happen to Baghdad.. As one of
the buildings I really love went up in a huge explosion I was close to
tears.
today my father and brother went out to see what happening in the city,
they say that it does look that the hits were very precise but when the
missiles and bombs explode they wreck havoc in the neighborhood where they
fall. Houses near al-salam palace(where the minister Sahaf took
journalist) have had all their windows broke, doors blown in and in one
case a roof has caved in. I guess that is what is called .collateral
damage. and that makes it OK?
We worry about daytime bombing and the next round of attacks tonight with
the added extra of the smoke screen in our skies.


23/3
8:30pm (day4)
we start counting the hours from the moment one of the news channels
report that the B52s have left their airfield. It takes them around 6
hours to get to Iraq. On the first day of the bombing it worked precisely.
Yesterday we were a bit surprised that after 6 hours bombs didn.t start
falling. The attacks on Baghdad were much less than two days ago. We found
out today in the news that the city of Tikrit got the hell bombed out of
it. To day the B52s took off at 3pm, on half an hour we will know whether
it is Baghdad tonight or another city. Karbala was also hit last night.
Today.s (and last night.s) shock attacks didn.t come from airplanes but
rather from the airwaves. The images Al-jazeera is broadcasting are beyond
any description. First was the attack on (Ansar el Islam) camp in the
north of Iraq. Then the images of civilian casualties in Basra city. What
was most disturbing are the images from the hospitals. They are simply not
prepared to deal with these things. People were lying on the floor with
bandages and blood all over. If this is what .urban warefare. is going to
look like we.re in for disaster. And just now the images of US/UK
prisoners and dead, we saw these on Iraqi TV earlier. This war is starting
to show its ugly ugly face to the world.
The media wars have also started, Al-jazeera accusing the pentagon of not
showing how horrific this war is turning out to be and Rumsfeld saying
that it is regrettable that some TV stations have shown the images.
Today before noon I went out with my cousin to take a look at the city.
Two things. 1) the attacks are precise. 2) they are attacking targets
which are just too close to civilian areas in Baghdad. Looked at the Salam
palace and the houses around it. Quite scary near it and you can see
widows with broken glass till very far off. At another neighborhood I saw
a very unexpected .target. it is an officers. club of some sorts smack in
the middle of [...] district. I guess it was not severely hit because it
was still standing but the houses around it, and this is next door and
across the street, were damaged. One of them is rubble the rest are
clearing away glass and rubble. A garbage car stands near the most damaged
houses and help with the cleaning up.
Generally the streets are quite busy. Lots of cars but not many shops
open. The market near our house is almost empty now. The shop owner says
that all the wholesale markets in Shorjah are closed now but the prices of
vegetables and fruits have gone down to normal and are available.
While buying groceries the woman who sells the vegetables was talking to
another about the approach of American armies to Najaf city and about what
is happening at Um Qasar and Basra. If Um Qasar is so difficult to control
what will happen when they get to Baghdad? It will turn uglier and this is
very worrying. People (and I bet .allied forces.) were expecting things to
be mush easier. There are no waving masses of people welcoming the
Americans nor are they surrendering by the thousands. People are oing what
all of us are, sitting in their homes hoping that a bomb doesn.t fall on
them and keeping their doors shut.
The smoke columns have now encircled Baghdad, well almost. The wids blow
generally to the east which leaves the western side of Baghdad clear. But
when it comes in the way of the sun it covers it totally, it is a very
thick cloud. We are going to have some very dark days, literally.
We still have electricity; some areas in Baghdad don.t after last night.s
attack. Running water and phones are working.
Yesterday many leaflets were dropped on Baghdad, while going around in the
streets I got lucky, I have two. After being so unkind to the people at
[industrialdeathrock.com] I don.t know whether I should post images or
not.
And we have had another email attack, this time I was lucky again and have
copies of those, the sender is something called [EMAIL PROTECTED] I
have not checked on that yet. Three of them are to army personnel and two
to the general public in those they gave us the radio frequencies we are
supposed to listen to. They are calling it .information Radio..
:: salam 4:41 PM [+] ::
...
I have internet again will post soon.
but i really have to apologize to the people at
[www.industrialdeathrock.com] because the amount of traffic this blog has
been getting cause their servers to go down, I am very sorry. I should
have been more careful.
looking thri my mail i see that this blog has also been causing blogspot
problems. sorry. and Blogger has been generous again with me and allowed
this to go and and help. thanks. my mail box is full because of the last
two days of internet blackout, going thru them now.
:: salam 3:24 PM [+] ::
...
:: Friday, March 21, 2003 ::
as usual Diane comes to the rescue
IS SALAM PAX REAL?
please stop sending emails asking if I were for real, don't belive it?
then don't read it.
I am not anybody's propaganda ploy, well except my own.
2 more hours untill the B52's get to Iraq.
:: salam 6:05 PM [+] ::
...
The most disturbing news today has come from Al-Jazeera, they said that
nine B52 bombers have left the airfield in Britain and flying .presumably.
towards Iraq, as if they would be doing a spin around the block. Anyway
they have 6 hours to get here.
Last night was very quiet in Baghdad. Today in the morning I went out to
get bread and groceries. There were no Ba.ath party people stopping us
from leaving the area where we live, this apparently happens after the
evening prayers. But they are still everywhere. The streets are empty only
bakeries are open and some grocery shops charging 4 times the normal
prices, while I was buying bread a police car stopped in front of the
bakery and asked the baker if they had enough flour and asked when they
opened; the baker told me that they have been informed that they must open
their shops and they get flour delivered to them daily. Groceries, meat
and dairy products are a different story. One dairy product company seems
to be still operating, not state owned, and their cars were going around
the city distributing butter, cheese and yoghurt to any open markets. Meat
is not safe to buy because you wouldn.t know from where and how it got to
the shops. Anyway we bought fresh tomatoes and zucchini for 1000 dinar a
kilo which would normally be 250. and most amazingly the garbage car came
around.
The Iraqi Satellite Channel is not broadcasting anymore. The second youth
TV channel (it shows Egyptian soaps in the morning and sports afterwards)
also stopped transmitting. This leaves two channels: Iraq TV and Shabab
(youth) TV. They are still full of patriotic songs and useless .news.,
they love the French here. We also saw the latest Sahaf show on Al-Jazeera
and Iraq TV, and the most distressing minister of Interior affairs with
his guns. Freaks. Hurling abuse at the world is the only thing left for
them to do.
On BBC we are watching scenes of Iraqis surrendering. My youngest cousin
was muttering .what shame. to himself, yes it is better for them to do
that but still seeing them carrying that white flag makes something deep
inside you cringe.
we sit infront of the TV with the mao of Iraq on our laps trying to figure
out what is going on in the south.
:: salam 3:13 PM [+] ::
...
:: Thursday, March 20, 2003 ::
.
:: salam 11:00 PM [+] ::
...
the all clear siren just went on.
The bombing aould come and go in waves, nothing too heavy and not yet
comparable to what was going on in 91. all radio and TV stations are still
on and while the air raid began the Iraqi TV was showing patriotic songs
and didn't even bother to inform viewers that we are under attack. at the
moment they are re-airing yesterday's interview with the minister of
interior affairs. THe sounds of the anti-aircarft artillery is still
louder than the booms and bangs which means that they are still far from
where we live, but the images we saw on Al Arabia news channel showed a
building burning near one of my aunts house, hotel pax was a good idea. we
have two safe rooms one with "international media" and the other with the
Iraqi TV on. every body is waitingwaitingwaiting. phones are still ok, we
called around the city a moment ago to check on friends. Information is
what they need. Iraqi TV says nothing, shows nothing. what good are
patriotic songs when bombs are dropping
around 6:30 my uncle went out to get bread, he said that all the streets
going to the main arterial roads are controlled by Ba'ath people. not
curfew but you have to have a reason to leave your neighborhood, and the
bakeries are, by instruction of the Party, seeling only a limited amount
of bread to each customer. he also says that near the main roads all the
yet unfinished houses have been taken by party or army people.

:: salam 10:33 PM [+] ::
...
I watched al sahaf on al-jazeera. he said that the US has bombed the Iraqi
sattelite channel, but while he was saying that the ISC was broadcasting
and if it really did hit the ISC headquarters it would have been right in
the middle of baghdad. what was probably hirt were transmiters or
something. all TV stations are still working.
:: salam 4:28 PM [+] ::
...
Now that was really unexpected. When the sirens went on we thought we will
get bombs by the tom load dropped on us but nothing happened, at least in
the part of the city where I lived. Air-craft guns could be heard for a
while but they stopped too after a while and then the all clear siren
came.
Today in the morning I went with my father for a ride around Baghdad and
there was nothing different from yesterday. There is no curfew and cars
can be seen speeding to places here and there. Shops are closed. Only some
bakeries are open and of course the Ba.ath Party Centers. There are more
Ba.ath people in the streets and they have more weapons. No army in the
streets. We obviously still have electricity, phones are still working and
we got to phone calls from abroad so the international lines are still
working. water is still runing.
the english speaking radio station on FM is now replaced by the arabic
languge state radio program broadcasting on the same wave length. i just
say thet because last night just as the BBC was broadcasting from baghdad
(yes we have put up the sat dish again) their news ticker (or whatever you
call that red band down there) said that the Iraqi state radio has been
taken over by US broadcast. We watched saddam.s speech this morning, he.s
got verse in it!!
:: salam 1:23 PM [+] ::
...
there is still nothing happening im baghdad we can only hear distant
expolsions and there still is no all clear siren. someone in the BBC said
that the state radio has been overtaken by US broadcast, that didn't
happen the 3 state broadcasters still operate.
:: salam 6:40 AM [+] ::
...
air raid sirens in baghdad but the only sounds you can here are the
anti-aircraft machine guns. will go now.
:: salam 5:46 AM [+] ::
...
It is even too late for last minute things to buy, there are too few shops
open. We went again for a drive thru Baghdad.s main streets. Too
depressing. I have never seen Baghdad like this. Today the Ba.ath party
people started taking their places in the trenches and main squares and
intersections, fully armed and freshly shaven. They looked too clean and
well groomed to defend anything. And the most shocking thing was the
number of kids. They couldn.t be older than 20, sitting in trenches
sipping Miranda fizzy drinks and eating chocolate (that was at the end of
our street) other places you would see them sitting bored in the sun. more
cars with guns and loads of Kalashnikovs everywhere.
The worst is seeing and feeling the city come to a halt. Nothing. No
buying, no selling, no people running after buses. We drove home quickly.
At least inside it did not feel so sad.
The ultimatum ends at 4 in the morning her in Baghdad, and the big
question is will the attack be at the same night or not. Stories about the
first gulf war are being told for the 100th time.
The Syrian border is now closed to Iraqis. They are being turned back.
What is worse is that people wanting to go to Deyala which is in Iraq are
being told to drive back to baghdad, there was a runor going around that
baghdad will be "closed" no one goes in or out [check the map go from
Baghdad in a N/E direction until you reach Baqubah, this is the center of
Deyala governerate] people are being turned back at the borders of Baghdad
city. There is a checkpoint and they will not let you pass it. there are
rumors that many people have taken the path thru Deyala to go to the
Iranian border. Maybe, maybe not.
If you remember I told you a while ago that you can get 14 satellite
channels sanctioned by the state, retransmitted and decoded by receivers
you have to buy from a state company. This service has been suspended.
Internet will follow I am sure.

Things on Iraqi TV today:
- an interview with the minister of interior affairs. Turned the volume
down, didn.t want to hear anything.



- demonstrations in Iarqi cities



-yesterday the last 500 prisoners from the Iraq-Iran war were being
exchanged. I can.t believe they are still doing this, for fuck.s sake that
war ended in 1989. every Iraqi family can tell you a hundred heart braking
stories about things that happen when you have thought you
brother/father/son is dead and he suddenly appears after 10 years.



:: salam 12:21 AM [+] ::
...
:: Wednesday, March 19, 2003 ::
-
:: salam 11:32 PM [+] ::
...
I would have posted something earlier today but there was a lot to do and
my brother reminded me that we have to go refill the car and that was two
hours of wasted time waiting. It is not as bad as two days ago but the gas
stations are still crowded. A couple of hours after I wrote that two
police cars were standing near gas stations to keep things in order we
went out again and there were more party members wearing their olive-green
uniforms with Kalashnikovs in gas stations but today it is back to the
police cars. There is a rumor that they will open the .special. gas
stations for the public too, there are four of these in Baghdad used only
by .them. or whoever has the right ID.
Before I go into what was going on today I really want to thank all the
people who have been sending emails and letting me know that they care and
worry about what will happen in Iraq, thank you so much. I hope you
understand that it takes a bit of time to answer your questions so please
don.t be angry if I don.t reply promptly. I print them out for Raed to
read and he is totally baffled. some of them I wish I could publish or
print and paste on light poles. Thank you very much.
And as a thank you here is a little web-gem. a true ohmigod moment. This
is an image I found on [spaceimaging.com]. It is rather large but worth
every second. Below I have posted a color coded thumbpix to give you a
little info.




The feature most people would recognize when not seen from the top is the
grand festival square (which is not a square at all. It is a semi-circle)
it is in light blue. This is the one which has two huge intersecting
swords at its entrance. The building below the semi-circle is the grand
stand; this is the place that saw the big army marches last winter. The
road to the right of it is called the Zaitoon (olive tree) Street, it has
lots of olive trees obviously. On the green side of that street (the green
area is a residential area called Harthiya) live many big wigs, don.t
bother you CIA types reading the blog, they are empty now. The yellow area
is the Zawra public garden, you see it here during the renovation period.
They have just finished working on the garden. The brown longish thing
down the left of the image is the clock tower of Baghdad, a very very
hideous building and it houses the museum of Saddam.s presents (the ones
he got from everybody, there was an article about a couple of months ago
in the guardian I think). The blue square is a building that has been hit
twice (desert storm and desert fox) after desert fox they decided to do a
redesign since it was hit really bad. It is still unfinished but it does
look nice. The red area is something I see with you for the first time.
This is off boundaries to Iraqis, the whole area is a .presidential
Palace.. The Sijood palace can be seen from the other side of the river
and it is one of the most beautiful palaces, I really hope it does not get
its .havoc recked.. I see it as a museum or some sort of academy in the
future, I really like it.

A couple of weeks ago journalists were exasperated by that fact that
Iraqis just went on with their lives and did not panic, well today there
is a very different picture. It is actually a bit scary and very
disturbing. To start wit the Dinar hit another low 3100 dinars per dollar.
There was no exchange place open. If you went and asked they just look at
you as if you were crazy. Wherever you go you see closed shops and it is
not just doors-locked closed but sheet-metal-welded-on-the-front closed,
windows-removed-and-built-with-bricks closed, doors were being welded
shut. There were trucks loaded with all sort of stuff being taken from the
shops to wherever their owner had a secure place. Houses which are still
being built are having huge walls erected in front of them with no doors,
to make sure they don.t get used as barracks I guess. Driving thru Mansur,
Harthiya or Arrasat is pretty depressing. Still me, Raed and G. went out
to have our last lunch together.
The radio plays war songs from the 80.s non-stop. We know them all by
heart. Driving thru Baghdad now singing along to songs saying things like
.we will be with you till the day we die Saddam. was suddenly a bit too
heavy, no one gave that line too much thought but somehow these days it is
sounds sinister. Since last night one of the most played old .patriotic.
songs is the song of the youth .al-fituuwa., it is the code that all
fidayeen should join their assigned units. And it is still being played.
A couple of hours earlier we were at a shop and a woman said as she was
leaving, and this is a very common sentence, .we.ll see you tomorrow if
good keeps us alive. . itha allah khalana taibeen . and the whole place
just freezes. She laughed nervously and said she didn.t mean that, and we
all laughed but these things start having a meaning beyond being figures
of speech.
There still is no military presence in the streets but we expect that to
happen after the ultimatum. Here and there you see cars with machine guns
going around the streets but not too many. But enough to make you nervous.
The prices of things are going higher and higher, not only because of the
drop of the Dinar but because there is no more supply. Businesses are
shutting down and packing up, only the small stores are open.
Pharmacies are very helpful in getting you the supplies you need but they
also have only a limited amount of medication and first aid stuff, so if
you have not bought what you need you might have to pay inflated prices.
And if you want to run off to Syria, the trip will cost you $600, it used
to be $50. it.s cheaper to stay now. anyway we went past the travel permit
issuing offices and they were shut with lock and chain.
Some rumors:
It is being said that Barazan (Saddam.s brother) has suggested to him that
he should do the decent thing and surrender, he got himself under house
arrest in one of the presidential palaces which is probably going to be
one of the first to be hit.
Families of big wigs and .his. own family are being armed to the teeth.
More from fear of Iraqis seeking retribution than Americans.

And by the smell of it we are going to have a sand storm today, which
means that the people on the borders are already covered in sand. Crazy
weather. Yesterday it rains and today sand.
:: salam 3:13 AM [+] ::
...
:: Monday, March 17, 2003 ::
impossibly long lines in front of gas stations last night, some even had
two police cars in front of them to make sure to no "incidents" occur.
the price of bottled water jumped up 3 fold.
on "shabab TV- youth TV" there were announcements that the NUIS (national
union of iraqi students) is selling. water pumps and tanks, hard helmets,
small electrical generators and most surreally Chemical-biological attack
protection chambers, in the picture they showed it looked like an
octogonal barrel layed on its side with two bunks in it and some starnge
equipment on the outside. no prices just a phone number.
rumors of defaced picturs of Saddam in Dorah and Thawra Districts (maybe
maybe not)
and the cities of Rawa and Anna are so full of people now you wouldn't
find a hut to rent, it was pretty safe to be there during the first war
and people who have the money are renting placed there hoping that it will
be safe this time.
the dinar is hovering around the 2700 per dollar and the hottest items
after the "particle-masks" are earplugs, they can't be found in shops and
you have to pre-order.
:: salam 8:48 AM [+] ::
...
:: Sunday, March 16, 2003 ::
[RANT]
No one inside Iraq is for war (note I said war not a change of regime), no
human being in his right mind will ask you to give him the beating of his
life, unless you are a member of fight club that is, and if you do hear
Iraqi (in Iraq, not expat) saying .come on bomb us. it is the exasperation
and 10 years of sanctions and hardship talking. There is no person inside
Iraq (and this is a bold, blinking and underlined inside) who will be
jumping up and down asking for the bombs to drop. We are not suicidal you
know, not all of us in any case.
I think that the coming war is not justified (and it is very near now, we
hear the war drums loud and clear if you don.t then take those earplugs
off!). The excuses for it have been stretched to their limits they will
almost snap. A decision has been made sometime ago that .regime change. in
Baghdad is needed and excuses for the forceful change have to be made. I
do think war could have been avoided, not by running back and forth the
last two months, that.s silly. But the whole issue of Iraq should have
been dealt with differently since the first day after GW I.
The entities that call themselves .the international community. should
have assumed their responsibilities a long time ago, should have thought
about what the sanctions they have imposed really meant, should have
looked at reports about weapons and human rights abuses a long time before
having them thrown in their faces as excuses for war five minutes before
midnight.
What is bringing on this rant is the question that has been bugging for
days now: how could .support democracy in Iraq. become to mean .bomb the
hell out of Iraq.? why did it end up that democracy won.t happen unless we
go thru war? Nobody minded an un-democratic Iraq for a very long time, now
people have decided to bomb us to democracy? Well, thank you! how
thoughtful.
The situation in Iraq could have been solved in other ways than what the
world will be going thru the next couple of weeks. It can.t have been that
impossible. Look at the northern parts of Iraq, that is a model that has
worked quite well, why wasn.t anybody interested in doing that in the
south. Just like the US/UK UN created a protected area there why couldn.t
the model be tried in the south. It would have cut off the regimes arms
and legs. And once the people see what they have been deprived off they
will not be willing to go back, just ask any Iraqi from the Kurdish areas.
Instead the world watched while after the war the Shias were crushed by
Saddam.s army in a manner that really didn.t happen before the Gulf War.
Does anyone else see the words (Iran/not in the US interest) floating or
is it me hallucinating?
And there is the matter of Sanctions. Now that Iraq has been thru a decade
of these sanctions I can only hope that their effects are clear enough for
them not to be tried upon another nation. Sanctions which allegedly should
have kept a potentially dangerous situation in Iraq in check brought a
whole nation to its knees instead. And who ultimately benefited from the
sanctions? Neither the international community nor the Iraqi people, he
who was in power and control still is. These sanctions made the Iraqi
people hostages in the hands of this regime, tightened an already tight
noose around our necks. A whole nation, a proud and learned nation, was
devastated not by the war but by sanctions. Our brightest and most
creative minds fled the country not because of oppression alone but
because no one inside Iraq could make a living, survive. And can anyone
tell me what the sanctions really did about weapons? Get real, there are
always willing nations who will help, there are always organizations which
will find his money sweet. Oil-for-Food? Smart Sanctions? Get a clue. Who
do you think is getting all those contracts to supply the people with
.food.? who do you think is heaping money in bank accounts abroad? It is
his people, his family and the people who play his game. Abroad and in
Iraq, Iraqis and non-Iraqis.
What I mean to say is that things could have been different; I can.t help
look at the Northern parts of Iraq with envy and wonder why.
Do support democracy in Iraq. But don.t equate it with war. What will
happen is something that could/should have been avoided. Don.t expect me
to wear a [I heart bush] t-shirt. Support democracy in Iraq not by bombing
us to hell and then trying to build it up again (well that is going to
happen any way) not by sending human shields (let.s be real the war is
going to happen and Saddam will use you as hostages), but by keeping an
eye on what will happen after the war.


To end this rant, a word about Islamic fundis/wahabisim/qaeda and all
that.
Do you know when the sight of women veiled from top to bottom became
common in cities in Iraq? Do you know when the question of segregation
between boys and girls became red hot? When tribal law replaced THE LAW?
When Wahabi became part of our vocabulary?
It only happened after the Gulf War. I think it was Cheney or Albright who
said they will bomb Iraq back to the stone age, well you did. Iraqis have
never accepted religious extremism in their lives. They still don.t.
Wahabis in their short dishdasha are still looked upon as sheep who have
strayed from the herd. But they are spreading. The combination of
poverty/no work/low self esteem and the bitterness of seeing people who
rose to riches and power without any real merit but having the right
family name or connection shook the whole social fabric. Situations which
would have been unacceptable in the past are being tolerated today.
They call it .al hamla al imania . the religious campaign. of course it
was supported by the government, pumping them with words like .poor in
this life, rich in heaven. kept the people quiet. Or the other side of the
coin is getting paid by Wahabi organizations. Come pray and get paid, no
joke, dead serious. If the government can.t give you a job run to the
nearest mosque and they will pay and support you. This never happened
before, it is outrageous. But what are people supposed to do? thir
government is denied funds to pay proper wages and what they get is
funneled into their pockets. So please stop telling me about the fundis,
never knew what they are never would have seen them in my streets.
[/RANT]
:: salam 1:37 AM [+] ::
...
:: Saturday, March 15, 2003 ::
the big momma of all demonstrations is going on and I will be stuck in the
office for ever. maybe i will take a walk and watch the show. Operation
"Office Evac" is now in its final phase. any day now.
:: salam 10:30 AM [+] ::
...
:: Thursday, March 13, 2003 ::
Today is a public holiday, in the Muslim calendar it is the 10th of
Muharam, or Ashura (3ashura2) for Shia Muslims. A pivotal date in the
history of Shia. Today is the day Imam Hussein was killed in Karbala/Iraq.
Which in the words of Shiapundit .is a time for grief, reflection, and
ibadat . Nothing else..
My mother is Shia from Karbala, so each year we wake up in the morning (it
is 1am as I write this) to the sound of the .3azah al 7ussain . the lament
of Hussein. from the radio, not very pleasant. And after that we hear the
stories of the public laments that used to take place in Karbala, now they
are banned. The last three days of the Imam.s life are acted out
throughout the whole city of Karbala. I.ll give you an idea of these last
few days, I hope the Shia readers will excuse me if I don.t get it fully
right:
Basically it is the story of the battle between Imam Hussein, the grandson
of the prophet Mohammed, and Caliph Yazid on the Kerbala desert in 680
A.D.
Imam Hussein is to return to Kufa/Iraq after he has been reassured that
the people there will help him in his struggle after he had fled to Mecca
under the threat of being assassinated by Yazid.s people. On his way back
the horse he is riding stops at a certain place near the Euphrates and
doesn.t move. When the Imam asks the name of this place he is told it is
the desert of Karbala (karrun wa bala2) which roughly means harm and
calamity. He tells his followers that this is the place where he will be
killed as prophesied. Tents are put up and they are very soon after that
surrounded by Yazid.s army. The Imam does not have many people with him
and most of them are family members with women and children. We.ll move a
bit quickly thru the events now. First their water supply is cut off for
three days, and then the battle starts, family members of the Imam die one
after the other trying to protect Imam Hussein including his young sons.
After all the men have been killed, Yazid.s army moves thru the camp and
burns the tents down. Imam Hussein.s head is then taken to Damascus to
prove to Yazid that al-Hussein has been killed.
Now imagine this being enacted in real life thru the whole city, to this
day there is a district in Karbala called .Mukhayam . the camp. which
actually used to be the site of the tents for the play. The most hated
role that had to be played is the role of the soldier who will kill Imam
al-Hussein, my aunt tells me it usually ends with the people running after
him throwing stones until he hides in one of the houses. Groups of
lamenters would then move thru the city, from the scary . groups of people
hitting themselves with whips on their backs for not being there to help
al-Hussein in his tragedy, to the poetry reading groups of students, to
the solemn lawyers. People would come from all over Iraq, and from as far
as Pakistan to join with their own lamenters. In houses and mosques you
would see loads of men and women listening to the .maqtal . the killing of
Hussein. beating their chests and crying. There is even special food for
these days cooked in the streets.
I have seen nothing of this ever. It has been banned as long as I can
remember; it is considered a public unauthorized demonstration. Laments
can be held in houses but not the big play in the streets of Karbala.
Lately even the cooking of (qima - minced meat with chickpeas) and
(Harissa - something which looks a bit like gruel actually) in public has
been banned. My aunt just came from Karbala today said that the army is
all around Karbala, which happens every year.

:: salam 2:17 AM [+] ::
...
-
:: salam 2:13 AM [+] ::
...
:: Wednesday, March 12, 2003 ::
here is something fun to read, unlike the comments down there where we
engage in index-finger wagging at each other. this i got from Douglas who
has always been thoughtful and sends me artcles from french magazines or
newspapers translated. thanks douglas, this one is exceptionally good.It
is about events before the first Gulf War.
if vous parlez francais then go to this link:
[Un après-midi avec Saddam]
if you are no-french-please then go to this link, I hope i have not done a
faux-pas by posting your translation douglas:
[An Afternoon with Saddam]
it is on an abandoned blog.
my favourite bits:
......blablabla.........You can tell comrade Fidel Castro,. he (Saddam
Hussein) said getting up, .that I thank him for his solicitude. If the
troops of the United States invade Iraq, we shall crush them like that,.
he concluded resoundingly, stamping the carpet several times with his
shining military boots... The audience had
ended...........blablabla........Without asking us to repeat what happened
again, he (Fidel Castro) only asked the Gallego to imitate with his own
feet the gesture with which Saddam had shown how he would crush the
Americans.
It's like watching two kids talking about a fight in the playground, me
crush you lika cock-a-roach, youyou.
We'd rather not talk about who crushed who. As for the next "Mother of all
Battles".... one word (shock'n'awe). learn it in arabic: al-ithara wa
al-faza. that's like putting stones in the middle of mud-cakes and
throwing them at me, cheater.
:: salam 12:49 PM [+] ::
...
:: Tuesday, March 11, 2003 ::
In one of the posts down there I wrote that I seem to have only one Iraqi
reader, well i was wrong. I have two and a half (half Iraqi half Chinese).
what is really exciting is that the second reader is a girl here in
baghdad, she's 23 years old and is a computer geek (well, engineer), and
she agreed to write something for the blog. she will go by the name
"riverbend". pleae give her a warm welcome, i hope she decides to join the
weblog and write as often as she can in the next couple of weeks, without
further ado i give you "Riverbend"
Salam, you've reminded me that we have to get to duct-taping the windows
(did you use an 'X' pattern or the traditional '*'?). [Salam: the * star
is good but with particularly big windows I have been using a plus and Xs
in each quadrant].We've all been talking about the war, discussing the
possibilities, implications, etc. but it really hit me yesterday when I
got home and 'lo and behold! There were no pictures or paintings on the
walls! So I asked, stupidly, "Where are all the pictures?" I was told that
they've been 'put away' because who knew what might come tumbling down if
a bomb fell particularly close... I then pointed to a funky black steel
chandelier that no one seems to pay any attention to and reminded them
that it should be a more immediate worry, not the pictures... It is
beginning to look like a Gothic death trap. I have visions of it coming
down on my head...
Otherwise, yes, we are living normally- going to work, cleaning house,
eating, drinking. Life doesn't stand still every time America threatens
war. It gets more difficult, true enough, but it goes on- which, by the
way, is driving the foreign journalists crazy. They want some action here
and seeing people go about their daily lives is just a waste of time and
film, it seems.
Be careful with the gasoline, Salam, a whole family burned to death the
other day because their gasoline storing facilities weren't adequate (is
that considered 'friendly fire'?)- hope you.ve got it stored in a safe
place.[Salam:yeah we saw that on TV, pretty nasty, my mother freaked
ofcourse] We.ve stocked up on candles (dozens of .em) but my mother is
starting to eye my collection of scented candles anyway. So you can
anticipate the scene- hundreds of bombs flying overhead, the deafening
sound of planes, blended with murmured prayers, in a semi-dark room
smelling faintly of. lavender. And that smell will forever be consecrated
in my mind along with the rest of the .war memories.- candles, duct tape,
kerosene lamps and lavender.
On a not-quite-completely-different subject- I had a flash of déjà vu this
morning while reading the news- did you read this ? *sigh* Aren.t the
Americans *ever* going to get tired of war?
riverbend
the next time,if riverbend decides to join she will be part of this group
blog (yes it was supposed to be a group blog but raed is such a lazy
bastard). I'll be happy to forward ant mail to her until she makes up her
mind whether to put her addy here or not.

:: salam 1:30 PM [+] ::
...

<A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/";>www.ctrl.org</A>
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!  These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html
 <A HREF="http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html";>Archives of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]</A>

http://archive.jab.org/[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
 <A HREF="http://archive.jab.org/[EMAIL PROTECTED]/">ctrl</A>
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to