FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Thursday, 24 March 2016
Contact: Liza Lester, 202-833-8773 ext. 211, [email protected] 

ECOLOGICAL COLLAPSE CIRCUMSCRIBES TRADITIONAL WOMEN'S WORK IN THE MOSPOTAMIAN 
MARSHES OF IRAQ
-As the land at the heart of the cradle of civilization dries out, an ancient 
culture is being lost with the unique ecosystem that sustains it.

Nadia Al-Mudaffar Fawzi, Kelly P. Goodwin , Bayan Mehdi, Michelle L. Stevens 
(2016) 
Effects of Mesopotamian Marsh (Iraq) desiccation on the cultural knowledge and 
livelihood of Marsh Arab women. Ecosystem Health and Sustainability 
2(3):e01207. doi: 10.1002/ehs2.1207 Full text open access


Read a photo-enriched version of this release online: 
http://www.esa.org/esa/mesopotamian-marsh-women/ 




For thousands of years, the marshes at the confluence of the Tigris and 
Euphrates rivers in modern day Iraq were an oasis of green in a dry landscape, 
hosting a wealth of wildlife. The culture of the Marsh Arab, or Ma'dan, people 
who live there is tightly interwoven with the ecosystem of the marshes. The 
once dense and ubiquitous common reed (Phragmites australis) served as raw 
material for homes, handicrafts, tools, and animal fodder for thousands of 
years. Distinctive mudhif communal houses, built entirely of bundled reeds, 
appear in Sumerian artwork from 5,000 years ago. Now that culture is drying up 
with the marshes.  

Recent decades have brought extreme change to the fertile lands famous for the 
birth of agriculture and the rise of some of the world's earliest cities. The 
sphere of daily life for Marsh Arab women has shrunk as the natural resources 
they traditionally cultivated have vanished, reports an international team of 
researchers in "Effects of Mesopotamian Marsh (Iraq) desiccation on the 
cultural knowledge and livelihood of Marsh Arab women," published today in the 
March 2016 issue of Ecosystem Health and Sustainability, a joint journal of the 
Ecological Society of America and Ecological Society of China.

The study is the first effort to specifically document Marsh Arab women's 
cultural relationship to marsh ecological services.

"Imagine the Everglades. The Marsh Arabs used to live in the middle of the 
water, surrounded by everything green. The fields, the reeds, and the water 
buffalo were around them. Now they have to walk five, ten kilometers to reach 
resources. The land is dry and brown," said study author Nadia Al-Mudaffar 
Fawzi, an Iraqi marine ecologist who returned from New Zealand to the city of 
her birth in 2009 to teach and conduct research at the University of Basrah. 
Al-Mudaffar Fawzi studies the impact of climate change on biodiversity in the 
marshes, the Persi
an Gulf, and the Shatt al-Arab river which connects them. Rising temperatures, 
falling water volume in the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, and groundwater 
pumping is causing the salt water in the Gulf to extend up the Shatt al-Arab, 
which is formed by the confluence of the Tigris and Euphrates. Basrah, now the 
second largest city in Iraq, is on the Shatt al Arab about 70 kilometers 
downstream of the confluence.

"When I came back in 2009, I knew there were lots of problems with drying of 
the system. We knew there was big impact on fish production, on water quality 
in the Shatt al-Arab, and in the north of the Gulf," said Al-Mudaffar Fawzi. 

In her investigations of the water systems, she also grew interested in the 
social impact of environmental change, and in people's understandings of the 
effects of the environment on their lives. Iraq did not have environmental laws 
until the change of government in 2003, and they remain a low priority in the 
current chaotic conditions in the country.

"The whole situation in the marshes is completely different from what I saw 
before, in the '70s and early '80s," she said. "Women used to play a role in 
the ecological system. They used to work with men in gathering reeds and in 
fishing, and we would see them in the market when they come and sell their 
produce, like the fish, and the milk from the buffalo, the cheese and the 
yogurt that they make."

Al-Mudaffar Fawzi and her colleagues designed a survey to more formally ask 
Marsh Arab women about their lives and activities. With the exception of women 
living on the edge of the Mesopotamia Marshland National Park, created in 2013, 
where restoration efforts have seen some success, Marsh Arab women reported 
that their daily lives had narrowed to domestic tasks in the home. Very few 
women today go out to gather reeds or care for buffalo.

"The older women who were adults before the war would tell us, 'back then I was 
out making dung patties, collecting reeds, taking care of buffalo,'" said 
author Kelly Goodwin, who works with the international NGO Millennium Relief 
and Development Services. "They say, 'now I'm just at home'."

Goodwin interviewed 34 women, ranging in age from teenagers to more than 70 
years, in the Hammar Marshes north of the city of Basrah in December 
2013-February 2014. More than half the interviewees were over 50. These older 
women were born and grew to adulthood before the war in the 1980s and 
destruction of the 1990s. Nearly 60 percent of younger women under 40 described 
their days as exclusively "domestic."

We are not teaching our daughters, older women told the researchers, because 
the water is gone, the ground is dry and there are no reeds to gather. The 
water is too salty for our buffalo.

Although men and women have separate roles in Marsh Arab culture, traditional 
women's work took women outside the home and brought supplementary income to 
the family through market sales. Women cared for water buffalo and gathered 
reeds to weave into mats, baskets, pigeon cages and other tools. Women turned 
high-fat buffalo milk into dairy products, dung into fuel, and raise chickens, 
cattle, and sheep. They helped cultivate rice, wheat, and dates. Usually women, 
not men, took fish, dairy, and handicrafts to sell in city markets. 

 "The marshes were a cultivated landscape, shaped by selective harvest, 
hunting, fishing, and burning to promote the natural resources that the Marsh 
Arabs used-much like the precolonial landscape was cultivated by native peoples 
here in California," said author Michelle Stevens, a professor California State 
University in Sacramento. Also like California, Stevens said, climate change 
modeling predicts a future of hotter summers, accentuated droughts, and 
shrinking winter snowpacks in Turkey's Taurus Mountains, where the Tigris and 
Euphrates rivers arise.

In Iraq, war and ongoing political instability have magnified the problems 
besieging marshes worldwide, particularly in arid landscapes: pollution and too 
many demands on the water that sustains them. The marshes enjoyed a burst of 
recovery the mid-2000s after drying up nearly completely in the previous 
decade. The influx of water, and resulting dramatic greening, can be seen in 
images from NASA's Terra satellite, captured between 2000 and 2010. The 
resilient reeds returned quickly as the marshes rehydrated.

In the 1990s, former Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein deliberately drained the 
marshes to facilitate oil discovery and to retaliate against tribes that 
participated in uprisings against his government. Marsh Arabs who had not 
already fled the front line fighting during the Iran-Iraq War of the 1980s, 
were forced to leave as the land became barren and dry.

After the Second Gulf War removed Hussein from power, Iraqis tore down the 
water diversions and returned water to the marshes. Many Marsh Arabs returned 
to their homeland. The apparent resilience of the ecosystem and the culture of 
the marshes masked fragility, however. The researchers fear that the Marsh may 
be approaching a threshold of no return, as the older generation with the 
wealth of skills needed to flourish in the marshes yields to a younger 
generation that never had the opportunity for hands-on learning. 

Water in the Tigris and Euphrates has dropped to 20 percent of the pre-war 
volume. The remaining water carries so much salt that it is often undrinkable. 
Drought in 2007 hit the region hard, reversing many of the restorative gains 
for the ecosystem. The generation of Marsh Arabs that grew up outside the 
marshes had no practical experience of living in the marshes, and struggled to 
adapt to the lifestyle of their parents' youth.

Goodwin describes the tapwater in Basrah as so salty that a filigree of 
crystals forms on the surface of dishes as they dry. Increased dependence on 
groundwater is worsening saltwater intrusion from the Gulf.

Although the Tigris and Euphrates rivers flow across the length Iraq, the water 
comes from outside its borders. Iraq is at the mercy of the water policies of 
its upstream neighbors Turkey, Syria, and Iran, all of which have intensified 
water development projects in recent years. The current political instability 
makes effective diplomacy on water issues difficult.

Recovery of the ecosystem and culture of the marshes will likely depend on 
diplomatic efforts to secure sufficient water, Al-Mudaffar Fawzi says. In 
Mesopotamia Marshlands National Park, Iraq's first national park, restoration 
practices are emerging that appear to successfully restore social and 
ecological systems, and could be used as templates for restoration in other 
areas of the Mesopotamian Marshes. But this cannot be done without water. 

The authors recommend that programs be implemented to preserve traditional 
skills, to develop a market for handicrafts to support women and their 
families, and to support cultural knowledge. Otherwise, with the passing of the 
older generation, these remnants of ancient Sumerian knowledge systems and 
traditional ways of life will soon be lost.
"It was extremely sobering sometimes to see the circumstances some people are 
living in," said Goodwin. "Much of the land near Basrah city is desertified." 
But visits to the marshes could also be thrilling, she said, and the visit to 
the restored region was almost magical.
"I really consider it was a privilege to sit with these women, drink tea, and 
hear their stories," said Good
win.  "I would have loved to have tangible solutions to take back to them that 
could encourage the retention of cultural traditions and secure ecological 
restoration. I think they feel they are forgotten and overlooked. I wish I 
could tell them that they are not forgotten."

###


Ecosystem Health and Sustainability launched in 2015 through a collaboration of 
the Ecological Society of America and the Ecological Society of China. The 
online-only, open access journal publishes articles on advances in macroecology 
and sustainability science, on how changes in human activities affect ecosystem 
conditions, and on systems approaches for applying ecological science in 
decision-making to promote sustainable development. Papers focus on applying 
ecological theory, principles, and concepts to support sustainable development, 
especially in regions undergoing rapid environmental change.

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