http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/LD23Ak01.html

Apr 23, 2010

Deepening rift tears at Iraqi hearts
By Abeer Mohammed 


BAGHDAD - When Fatima and Yasin first traded glances in a Baghdad marketplace, 
they were blind to the ancient discord that would tear their country apart. 

She was shopping for clothes, he was passing by with friends, and having seen 
him once, she knew only that she wanted to see him again. 

He slipped her his phone number and they spoke that very night, embarking on a 
romance that paid little attention to his Sunni background or her Shi'ite 
origins. 

The aching chasm that is Iraq's sectarian divide today was a relatively subtle 
distinction a decade ago, easily dismissed by a couple in love. "It was not a 
problem in 1999 for a Sunni man to marry a Shi'ite woman," recalled Fatima, 
speaking to the Institute for War and Peace Reporting on condition that her 
real name, and that of the man she wed, be concealed. "It was okay with my 
family as well as his." 

At the height of the conflict between the Shi'ite and Sunnis in 2006, the 
couple had two children and a house in the Yarmuk district of western Baghdad. 

When their neighborhood became a stronghold of the Sunni insurgency, the 
sectarian balance inside their family began to seem increasingly precarious. 

Tormented by death threats on the phone, Fatima eventually moved out, taking 
the children with her to Kadhamiya, a Shi'ite neighborhood where her parents 
had a home. 

Yasin stayed behind in Yarmuk. One day he collected the children, saying he 
would take them on a picnic, and did not return. 

"Within a week, I found out that he had taken the children to Syria," Fatima 
said. "His parents had convinced him that his marriage to me was a mistake." 

"They told him that even if I was a good person, my relatives were Shi'ite and 
might kill him at any time to avenge their community. They arranged a marriage 
for their son in Syria with a Sunni girl." 

High price 
The sectarian conflict that followed the United States-led invasion reshaped 
hundreds of neighborhoods and communities, reversing centuries of co-existence, 
but rarely did it divide the building block on which Iraqi society is built - 
the family. 

Its frontline ran not so much through households as through the districts where 
Sunnis and Shi'ites had lived in close proximity. 

Neighbors and colleagues became enemies, purging each other from boroughs and 
institutions where the boundaries of sect had been allowed to blur. 

Amid the carnage, structures such as the family and the tribe grew stronger 
because they were largely immune to sectarian division. 

In a land shared by Sunni and Shi'ite Arabs since the dawn of their faith, most 
marriages take place within the same sect. 

Fatima and Yasin are poignant exceptions - members of a sizeable minority whose 
marriage disregarded sectarian division. 

The two were reconciled after Yasin contacted Fatima and begged her 
forgiveness, saying he missed her. He rejected the match his parents had 
planned for him, instead inviting Fatima to Syria. The couple still lives 
there. 

"Sectarianism nearly killed me and cost me my family. I crossed the divide and 
I still feel the pain," said Fatima, speaking to IWPR during a recent trip to 
visit relatives in Baghdad. 

"I'm still paying the price by living in a foreign country," she said. Though 
the conflict has eased since 2006, Fatima said she had no plans to return - the 
"sectarian atmosphere" of Iraq could still corrode her marriage. 

No official figures are available for how many Iraqi couples have crossed the 
sectarian divide. Marriage certificates contain no record of sect and nor does 
the law permit divorce on sectarian grounds. 

Strain of violence
All the mixed-sect couples interviewed by IWPR asked for their real names to be 
withheld. Their stories bear several striking similarities, testifying often to 
the tenacity of love amid the tribulations of war. 

They also offer a window into a domestic environment where tensions can be 
stoked by topics as varied as the children's faith, visits from in-laws and the 
daily news of politicking, bombings and killings. 

"As long as my wife is not interested in politics, we do not have sectarian 
problems," said Ahmed, a Shi'ite man in his forties, with a job in the motor 
industry in Baghdad. "She was, and still is, a beautiful lady." 

He married Maysun, the daughter of a Sunni family in his neighborhood, despite 
some initial opposition from her brother. 

"He asked to talk to me alone, he was worried about his sister. We had a long 
conversation about all the religious issues and since then, he's been my best 
friend," Ahmed said. 

The couple's children have been brought up to follow their father's Shi'ite 
faith. Maysun said she adopted the Shi'ite way of praying when in the presence 
of her in-laws. 

"Sometimes I get annoyed when I hear his relatives criticize Sunni clerics whom 
they accuse of issuing edicts to kill the Shi'ite," she said. 

She added that Ahmed would usually dispel the tension by caressing her and 
teasingly saying such things as, "I love your terrorist's eyes." 

Ahmed said the years of sectarian fighting put a strain on all Iraqis. He 
guiltily recalled returning to his wife after the funeral of a friend who had 
been killed in a bombing in a Baghdad market. 

"I hated all Sunnis at that moment," he said. "My wife consoled me and said, 
'God will bless your friend.' I responded, saying He would not bless the Sunni 
terrorists." 

"She looked at me, astonished, but did not say a word. I wanted to apologize to 
her but I did not." 

'Blood and tears' 
The routine violence and the fractured politics of modern Iraq seem to 
continually test mixed-sect relationships. 

Neda, a Shi'ite accountant in her late thirties, met her husband, Salim, a 
Sunni security guard, at a friend's wedding. 

"I loved his pride and wanted to talk to him," she said, laughing. "But back 
then, we never talked about politics or religion like we do now." 

Neda said she and her husband have argued over the names to assign their 
children. "I want Shi'ite names and he wants Sunni names," she said, adding 
that they managed to agree on a "compromise" name for their eldest daughter, 
which was popular with both sects. 

The couple has yet to decide on what sect to instruct their three children to 
follow. "Whenever we talked about the issue, it led to a quarrel," she said. 

"We will probably adopt a sectarian quota like our politicians, so one child is 
Sunni, the other Shi'ite, and so on," she laughed, referring to the system by 
which powerful posts are allocated by Iraq's parliament. 

In the recent election, the couple disagreed over whom to vote for, each one 
favoring the front-runner most closely identified with their sect. Neda said 
they eventually struck a deal to both vote for a lesser-known candidate whose 
name they picked at random. 

"We have crises but we overcome them because we are a family, we have kids. It 
is not easy to break such a relationship," she said. 

Some mixed families have tried to reduce conflict by avoiding any mention of 
sect whatsoever. 

Fatima said she wanted her children to choose their own sect when they were 
older, and resented visits from her in-laws, who insisted on making the entire 
family pray in the Sunni manner. 

She said some arguments with her husband had been triggered by remarks made by 
in-laws. Her parents tended to blame Sunnis for any bombings. 

On the other hand, she said her husband had once told her massacres against the 
Shi'ite were justified, after hearing that his cousin had gone missing in a 
Shi'ite neighborhood. 

"I hardly slept that night, and I regretted my marriage," she said. 

Despite these incidents, Fatima said she believed the survival of her 
relationship was proof that sectarianism could be overcome. 

"Blood and tears have been shed in the name of sect but this can be avoided if 
people make a choice," she said. 

Social function 
Alia, a 40-year-old civil servant from Baghdad, found that choice very 
difficult. The daughter of a Shi'ite scholar, she said she never considered her 
sect until her brother was abducted and killed by Sunnis three years ago. 

"A Sunni suitor proposed to me," she said, but the offer was rejected. "Things 
have become complicated. My family cannot forget the spilt blood of their son." 

The number of mixed-sect marriages is believed to have fallen sharply during 
the recent conflict, from the levels it enjoyed during the relatively secular 
government of Saddam Hussein. As a calm of sorts returns to Iraq, some 
observers say such relationships are making a comeback. 

"Most people don't prioritize sect in marriage," said Salem al-Mousawi, a judge 
and member of a government committee looking into social affairs, adding that 
alliances between tribes sometimes trumped sectarian differences. 

Fadhil Kamil, a professor of sociology at Mustansariya University in Baghdad, 
said the popularity of mixed-sect relationships increased in times of 
stability, indicating that they may serve a useful social function. 

"In a torn community, marriages help overcome the hatreds of the past," he 
said. 

Religious leaders from both sects said there was no official ban on marriages 
between their followers. 

Sheikh Mohammed al-Ghreri, a senior Sunni cleric, said mixed unions posed no 
threat to the country's sectarian demography. 

"There are Shi'ite men who marry Sunni women and there are Sunni men who marry 
Shi'ite women, so there is a balance," he said. 

Sheikh Hamdallah al-Shehani, a Shi'ite cleric allied to the anti-American 
preacher Muqtada al-Sadr, confirmed there was no ban on marriages between sects 
and added that there is also no obligation for spouses to convert. However, he 
cautioned Shi'ite against marrying Sunni who did not respect their faith. 

Abeer Mohammed is IWPR's senior local editor in Baghdad. IWPR-trained 
journalist Hind al-Saffar also contributed to this story from Baghdad. 

(This article originally appeared in Institute for War and Peace Reporting. 
Used with permission)

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