Sunnis & Shias are two arms (Bazoo) of the Islam.
-- Imam Khomaini

Show of Sunni-Shiite unity in Iraq
 [image: Samarra] Email
Picture<http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/lat-iraq_kg37mqnc20090306134500,0,7356030,email.photo>
 Mahmud Saleh AFP/Getty Images
Sunnis and Shiites gather in Samarra to attend a joint prayer.
 Sunni Arabs welcome hundreds of thousands of Shiite pilgrims in the city of
Samarra, where an attack on a Shiite shrine three years ago sparked
sectarian bloodshed.
By Hamid Rasheed
March 7, 2009
Reporting from Samarra, Iraq -- Sunni Arab residents welcomed more than 1
million Shiite pilgrims to the city of Samarra on Friday to mark the
anniversary of a Shiite saint's death, local officials said, the latest sign
of reconciliation among Iraqis eager to put the country's civil war behind
them.

Pilgrims gathered from all over Iraq after Shiite cleric Muqtada Sadr called
for worshipers to mark the holy day in Samarra. Security was tight and there
were no reports of attacks.

The calm was a remarkable feat in a city where Sunni militants three years
earlier had bombed the Golden Mosque and ignited the civil war between the
sects that left tens of thousands dead. A Sunni mosque even hosted Shiite
pilgrims for a prayer service to commemorate the death in 874 of Imam Hasan
Askari.

"This pilgrimage has exceeded all expectations," said Samarra Mayor Mahmoud
Khalaf, who estimated there were more than 1 million visitors in the mostly
Sunni city. "It serves the unity of Iraq."

Shiite pilgrims visited the Golden Mosque, which was attacked in late
February 2006 by members of Al Qaeda in Iraq and is now in the final stages
of reconstruction. The Shiite shrine has a mausoleum holding the remains of
Askari and his father, Imam Ali Hadi, descendants of the prophet Muhammad.

 It was in Samarra that Askari's son, Mohammed Mahdi, disappeared as a
child. Many Shiites believe that the son will return in the world's darkest
hour and usher in an era of justice.

About 5,000 Sunnis and Shiites attended a joint prayer Friday at Samarra's
Grand Mosque and chanted slogans denouncing sectarian violence. "Sunni and
Shiite brothers, this homeland won't be betrayed," they said in unison.

The government deployed police around the city, eager to prevent attacks and
to prove that the country had turned the page on sectarian violence.

Despite the major decline in violence, assassinations and suicide bombings
still occur on a regular basis. Iraq's Sunnis, Shiites and ethnic Kurds have
yet to agree on power-sharing, and tensions among them could still derail
efforts to achieve lasting stability.

Last month during another Shiite festival in southern Iraq, a suicide bomber
killed at least 30 pilgrims on their way to the holy city of Karbala.

Some pilgrims in Samarra described the security forces as overwhelmed by the
crowds and marveled that there had been no attacks. Others fretted that the
measures were preventing them from touring Samarra, where they heard that
residents had set up welcoming tents for them to rest.

"I was very delighted by the pilgrimage; I found absolute safety," said
pilgrim Nabeel Haidari, 34, who came from Karbala.

However, he complained that the security forces had kept the worshipers
inside a zone near the shrine so they could not mingle with residents. "It's
like escaping a prison," he said.

Even so, he planned to find a way to visit Samarra's other famous sight, the
Malwiya, a winding sandstone minaret, 170 feet tall, built in the 9th
century, when the city was the seat of the Abbasid empire, which ruled most
of the Islamic world.

In Baghdad, Prime Minister Nouri Maliki made his own call for reconciliation
Friday. At a tribal gathering of fellow Shiites, broadcast on state
television, he called for Iraqis to turn the page on their recent history.
He appeared to be referring to those who supported Saddam Hussein's regime.

"Today, we must reconcile again and this page of the bad history [should] be
turned and [we must] not allow ourselves to remember it or to return to it,"
Maliki said.

The prime minister warned that anyone who continued to fight the government
would be committing "a double crime." But, he added, "if he returns to Iraq,
his family and his people, he is welcomed."

Maliki has made similar calls before, though his statement Friday appeared
to be the most pronounced plea to Iraqis affiliated with Hussein's regime.

Rasheed is a special correspondent. Times staff writers Ned Parker and Saif
Hameed in Baghdad contributed to this report.


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