La Fidele Posted November 23, 2003 A professor of mine took a sabbatical earlier this semester to travel back to Iraq (he conducted his doctoral research there). He's accompanied by two graduate students, and the wonderful thing is that they send journal entries through an email network. I find the stories really amazing, considering this allows us a different perspective of what's happening in Iraq, besides what the nightly news covers. The first entry's a bit long, but a really funny read. If there's enough interest, I'll post more entries as I receive them. I hope you guys find as much insight as I have. Salaamo! P.S.-just to be fairly citing this original work, the author is David Romano, professor of political science at McGill University. The graduate students are Mike and Kariim ------------------------------------------------- Oct.11-Oct.14 Hello Everyone, Well, we finally made it to Iraq. We waited in Olympos (on the Turkish Mediterranean coast the most pleasant place I could think of to wait for anything) 10 days for permission from the Turkish Foreign Ministry to cross from Turkey to Iraq. As they had promised (they said it would take 10 days), word came in that we had our permission. So we took a somewhat hellish 26 hour bus ride to Silopi/Habur, the main crossing point on Turkish-Iraqi border (and also about 50 km from the Syrian border). The following morning, we hired a Turkish-Kurdish driver who took the 8 km to the border, and who would cross with us and take us another 10 km on the Zakho, the nearest Iraqi Kurdish town. Like on our previous attempt to cross (Sept.26), the first step was getting approval from a junior Turkish intelligence official, posted in a little mobile home office beside the bridge that takes us over the Zab river into Iraq. Waiting in line ahead of us was an Iraqi Kurd who lives in Dollard Des Ormeaux, the Montreal neighbourhood I grew up in. Our turn came and this time we were on the list (although at first the official said we were supposed to have ID cards from the NGO we are working for and a fax from Ankara in our possession, I would have none of it Take out the list, effendum!). He found our names, called his commanding officer on the little red phone, and informed us that we could now proceed to the passport police for our exit stamps. At the passport police office, I gave over our three passports and that of our driver. They were plenty friendly with us, but also asked our driver if he was going to bring them a package of tea: Driver: Uh, no, I dont have tea. Police: ARENT you going to bring some tea? Driver: Uh, yes, of course, be right back. I then collected our passports and found our driver outside, who promptly declared that he would be damned if he was going to bring them tea. The next stop was the army search. The career military corporal in charge looked in the back of the car and told us to take all our bags out and place them on the searching table. Mike, who was showing another soldier our exit stamps on our passports, hadnt heard the request. I relayed it too him, so he went to the car to get his bag a little after Kareem and I, where the driver told him to screw it and leave his bag in the car no one noticed and Mikes bag did not get looked at. I wish it was my bag that got left in the car, however as it happens, the soldier found amongst all my papers a document in French which described a French language school located in Erbil, Iraqi Kurdistan. Now although the corporal did not speak French, he sure as hell could recognize the word Kurdistan. I know from experience that it is not a popular word in Turkey, so I had taken the precaution of crossing out Kurdistan in the three instances that it appears on that document. I thought that would be sufficient to indicate that I was not interested in political irredentism or offending Turkish officials, on the off chance that they find that one document out of the many I had in my possession. Big mistake. Apparently there is still a word that Turkish officials can not hear, like the Knights who say ni^ in Monty Pythons film, the Holy Grail. For Turkish officials, that word is Kurdistan. The corporal who found the document didnt even pronounce the word he just said whats this? and promptly brought the paper over to the intelligence officials in the mobile home. The intelligence officials also asked, whats this? I explained that it was a publication put out by a Kurdish-Franco association about a French language school in Erbil, northern Iraq, and that I was not the one who had written the document and invoked the word that can not be mentioned adding that I had, in fact, crossed out the forbidden word. At no point was the word pronounced during this exchange. They asked us to wait outside. After a few minutes, the intelligence official asked again if we had ID cards from our NGO. I repeated that we did not, but we had introductory letters from the organization. I was asked to fetch the letters from the car, along with other IDs besides our passports. I showed him the letters, along with our McGill University ID cards (my post-doc supervisor, Prof. Rex Brynen, has used a McGill ID card to get past an Israeli check-point, and I used one in 1994 to avoid getting arrested in the no-mans land on the Greek-Turkish Cypriot border, so why not to get us into Iraq?). He wanted more documents. So with some hesitation, I also pulled out a letter of introduction from the Canadian Department of National Defence, which is funding my post-doc research in Iraq, and for good measure, my business card. The junior official did not speak English or French, however, so he had someone else waiting for permission to cross into Iraq orally translate the NGO letters for him (I guess a translation from me was likely to lack objectivity i.e. her Majesty the Queen of England, the Pope, and Jean Chretien ask that David, Kareem and Mike be allowed into Iraq actually, the Queen does ask that, as Mike later found the following passage on the back of our passports: The Minister of Foreign Affairs of Canada requests, in the name of Her Majesty the Queen, all those whom it may concern to allow the bearer to pass freely without let or hindrance and to afford the bearer such assistance and protection as may be necessary.). Anyhow, he then called the commander on the red phone and then had another junior intel official drive the documents over somewhere (presumably to the commander). We waited and waited, and I began chatting with the corporal who had originally found the paper. He first asked why we werent going to Palestine, where there is also a war (I refrained from pointing out that Palestine is not the name of a state as of yet, much like Kurdistan). I then again pointed out that this document was not a big deal, and that I had not tried to hide the document, but rather crossed out Kurdistan because I knew how they felt in Turkey about the word. When I pronounced the word that can not be said, he actually flinched a bit and said tehilekeli (dangerous) and I thought to myself, is it a dangerous word, or is it dangerous to say, or both?. I said, Look, I know you had a big problem in Turkey with the PKK, and I understand your feelings on the issue, thats why I crossed the word out. Corporal: A big problem? No, a little problem. Turkey is a huge, powerful state, and these guys [points south, towards Iraqi Kurdistan] are not a problem. Me: Yeah, of course youre right. (Meanwhile thinking to myself, Well, if it was such a little problem for you, why this whole thing about the word that can not be said, and why was most of the southeast of Turkey under martial law throughout the 1980s and 1990s, and why are two-thirds of Turkeys 600,000+ armed forces continually deployed in the southeast, and why did the government tank the countrys economy with out of control military budgets, and why the thousands of destroyed and evacuated villages in Turkish Kurdistan, and why all this effort to restrict foreigners access to northern Iraq, and why all the human-rights violations and restrictions on Kurdish language and statements that might threaten the territorial integrity of the Republic, etc). But the corporal and all the other Turkish officials at the border were being quite courteous and polite during this process, and I also wanted their permission to cross to Iraq, so I continued to keep my wise-cracks to myself (which was difficult, since if a political science degree is good for something, knowing enough to point out the inconsistencies in someones arguments has to rank near the top of the list). Besides, I hope the Turks do come around to the point of view that the Kurds are not a big problem, and allow Kurds in Turkey (as well as Iraq) much more autonomy (in whatever political form everyone can settle for) and the freedom to revel in their identity, so perhaps I didnt fundamentally disagree with the corporal. In any Oase, a new intelligence officer arrived while I was talking to the corporal, with about 20 minutes worth of more questions about the document, who gave it to me, what this school in Erbil was, and what I planned to do in Iraq. I had learned my lesson well enough to stress that our mandate with Caritas was for all of Iraq, and that we had no extra interest in Erbil or Suleimaniya (i.e. the Kurdish part of the country). Like the others, he was polite and courteous, explaining that there was actually no problem, they were just collecting information I said to him, Look, you know they use this word a heck of a lot in northern Iraq this isnt knew to you or anything. Yeah, we know, we know, he replied. Meanwhile our driver was pacing around like the energizer bunny, Mike was chain-smoking, and Kareem just looked a little puzzled. It would have been just too agonizingly frustrating if, with the exit stamp already on our passports, if they changed their minds and said we couldnt cross As the new intelligence officer went to call the mysterious commander again, our driver came and gave me hell: You know how they are! Why the heck did you have that piece of paper with you? I really wish you had thrown it away in Silopi! He was right of course I have to try to reign in my fondness of testing the borders of ridiculousness. Anyhow, after calling the commander one last time, the intelligence officer handed me back all our documents and passports, wished us a bon voyage, and waved his hand towards the bridge. Our driver was so excited to get out of there he nearly ran over my foot by starting the car moving before I was completely in it. On the other side a Welcome to Kurdistan region of Iraq sign, KDP (Kurdish Democratic Party) officials and about a 1 minute interview accompanied by sickly sweet tea, (names, fathers names, grandfathers names, reason for visit) and bang, welcome to Kurdistan. As we left the border post towards Zakho, we got our first sight of a U.S. soldier sitting alone just inside an office-like building, M-16 across his lap, eating some chips, looking very relaxed. In Zakho we met with someone who used to work as a contractor for our NGO (part of our job here involves collecting advance information for projects, needs assessment, etc), and then hired a driver he knew to take us to Erbil. The fastest route to Erbil, however, passes through Mosul, which has become a largely Sunni Arab pro-Saddam city since the 1970s and 80s, and which has had its fair share of unrest since the Americans arrived. In short, we were a little nervous about Mosul, but hey, were just passing through, so no sweat, right? Wrong. Our 15 year-old BMW broke down right near the center of Mosul, beside one of Saddams former palaces. Our 21-year old Kurdish driver, probably on his first drive some foreigners for way too much money stint, kind of panicked and just kept trying to turn the ignition again and again. Then he just sat there wondering what to do, not really answering Kareems questions about our plan of action (seeing as we have left Turkey and now entered Iraq, Kareem has become official translator and I kind of just enjoy the scenery, which in this case was passing cars and strange looks from the locals). Eventually our driver decides hes gonna run off and find another car says he has a Volvo with some friends in Mosul. So we kind of sit there, trying to look like locals (we had Mike lie down in the back seat, and I sat in the front with Kareem, ready to try to get the car started one last time in case we saw trouble coming.), and feeling very nervous as every passing heavily-armed American patrol carefully eyed us to make sure we werent a roadside suicide-car bomb. Kareem kindly pointed out to us that the Arabic graffiti on the wall of Saddams adjacent palace said: Long live Saddam and free Iraq. The driver eventually came back with no Volvo, played with the ignition a few more times, got us going just enough to block oncoming cars on the highway for 5 minutes, and then again just long enough to get us back to the side of the road 50 meters further up. Then he announced he was going off again to find a new car good idea we all thought, just make it fast. After a lot of sweat on our part and what felt like ages, but was probably no more than 30 minutes, he came back with a Kurdish taxi-driving friend of his. As blackhawk helicopters hovered nearby and yet another American patrol passed by, Mike, Kareem, our two Kurdish drivers, and some local 20 year-olds they asked for help, pushed the car into a vacant lot, while I guarded the new taxi (how I would have guarded it from anyone who wanted it in a place like Mosul is beyond me, but whatever). The locals, who were quite recalcitrant about helping push the car, eyed Mike with expressions ranging from who the heck are you to what the hell are you doing here. Kareems non-local Arabic was also a likely source of puzzlement. They pointed at Mike and suspiciously asked Ruskie?, at which point Mike promptly became Russian, smilingly mumbling Da, da! They all trotted back over to the car, and as Mike sat in back and the new driver got behind the wheel, Kareem, the previous driver, and I, argued about who got to sit where in our new, somewhat too-small-for-five-people-and-baggage car. Mikes pleading of lets get the hell out of here, plus some large-caliber gunfire in the distance, settled the issue we would sit wherever it was quickest to reach, and continue our drive to Erbil without further delay. On the way out of Mosul, we passed a Sunni-Arab Iraqi police manned roadblock, beside a temporary bridge which replaces a concrete bridge blown-up by Saddams Fedayeen right after the war. A few kilometers after that, a Kurdish Iraqi manned roadblock, controlling access to the Kurdish areas of Iraq and staffed by the KDP (one of Iraqi Kurdistans two principal militias). Once in Erbil we were received extremely well friendliest people one could wish for really, and a bustling city with absolutely no palpable tension whatsoever. Its amazing to be here again in Iraqi Kurdistan Im too excited really. We have free and open political discussions so many times a day, with so many different people, that 2 days here is worth a months reading on Middle East politics. Today, our Assyro-Chaldean barber (a short, thin, mustached, dignified looking man in his early 50s) and his friend, for instance, discussed with us how Islamists blew up his house because he was Christian (this was before their bases near the Iranian border were smashed by a cominbined US-Kurdish assault last March), and gave us the memorable comment that When Saddam was a baby, he didnt drink milk he drank blood! His Sunni half-Turkmen half-Kurdish friend (a shortish, pudgy, jovial fellow whose eyes always look like he just though of a funny joke, and whose family was expelled from Kirkouk by Saddam in 1989) told us how immediately after the recent war, robbers invaded his fathers house, shot and wounded his father, and stole most of their belongings. The robbers were caught by the Kurdish authorities and brought to court and sentenced to prison, but because they were friends of a high ranking KDP official, they only stayed in jail 2 days. The three of us got haircuts and shaves for $2, and chatted with both of them for the better part of an hour. Also, our hotel lent us 200 Iraqi dinars until we could change money the following day. The hotel is one of the nicest in the city, with satellite TV, large clean rooms, and a staff whose service, professionalism and helpfulness puts to shame any $200 a night hotel Ive visited in the West at the very reasonable price of $25 U.S. a night for the three of us Yes, everything is very cheap here (including the ice cream we bought today Mike asked the price of the wonderful multi-flavoured soft stuff coming out of the machine and was told 3 dinars (roughly 25 cents). He got his ice cream and handed over the 3 dinars. When Kareem and I got our ice creams, we then tried to also hand over 3 dinars. Some confusion then ensued, with the ice cream vendor getting ompatient with us seems the price was 3 dinars for 3 ice creams, and unlike the vendors we had met in Syria, this guy never heard of ripping off foreigners). We may well have a great 7 months here (although there is one potential problem everyone appears to be convinced that we are American military people we even sometimes get saluted military-style on the street and in the hotel, by Kurdish peshmerga and regular folk, and when we tell them were here to teach English, their reaction is, yeah, sure you are with a smile even our barber today thought we were Pentagon or something we probably need a woman or two to join us or something, so its not three young foreign guys with short hair-cuts walking around). Oh last two anecdotes now: the other night (our first night in Erbil), we learned that the Saudi channel on our TV was showing The Big Lebowski (my favourite film, and a film that Mike and Kareem have also seen several times) in English with Arabic subtitles, at 11 p.m.. So at 10:50 we decided we needed to buy some snacks to eat while watching the film in our room, and that something bought from the store would be even cheaper than in the hotel (I guess when you go to the store to pay 50 cents for a coke instead of 75, youre getting kind of pathetic, but whatever, its the principle). We stepped out onto the street in front of the hotel, and things were pretty dark, quiet, and closed in all directions. Mike asked if there was a curfew in Erbil, to which I replied not to my knowledge. Just then two pickup trucks full of armed peshmerga (Kurdish soldiers) and a Mercedes with some high-ranking KDP official pulled up in front of the hotel. As they all pile out of their vehicles, Mike tells Kareem to ask one of the guys with an AK-47 machine gun if any nearby stores are open. Oblivious, Kareem approaches the closest person, which happens to be the KDP official theyre all guarding. As about a dozen heavily armed guards stop what theyre doing and alertly look on, the strange-looking foreigner with a slight Morroccan hint to his Arabic says to the official: Do you know where we can get some soft drinks and chips? The official looks surprised for only about a second, then smiles broadly and points at the hotel were all standing in front of, at which point Mike and I burst into laughter, followed by Kareem, the official, and, with a bit of a delay to see if their leader was indeed laughing, 12 overly-armed guards. So a good chuckle was had all around and we got our soft drinks and snacks in the hotel. (I should add that Kareem was already drinking prodigious amounts of Fanta in Turkey here, however, he has discovered an excellent Saudi Fanta-like drink called Miranda, and to the amusement of all the hotel staff, he drank 4 at dinner, and is still drinking more now I expect that he will soon explode in a toxic-orange carbonated cloud and we will have to continue on without his translating skills). As we took the elevator up to our room to see the movie, one of the peshmerga got in with us he was about 6 feet tall and 250 pounds, middle-aged, mustached and dark, wearing desert-storm camouflage and sporting both a full-sized Kalachnikov assault rifle and an additional side arm pistol. He pressed the button for his floor with the assault rifle and we suppressed our chuckles. When the door wouldnt close fast enough on the next floor, he then used the rifle to press the button that rings the alarm bell (I assume he sought the button that closes the door, which that elevator lacks), at which point I failed to suppress my chuckle. Seeing that I apparently enjoyed the bell, he then also chuckled and pressed it two more times for good measure. Just before we reached our floor, Mike said to me in French: Look at his pistol I looked, and the hammer was cocked back. It appeared to be a semi-automatic pistol, and seeing as the safety was also likely to be off, a good sneeze on his part and one of us could lose a foot (most likely him, however). Incredulous, we went off to our room to watch the movie. About The Big Lebowski Ive seen it around 7 times back home, and know it better than any other movie. The Saudi censors edited the thing down do death apart from cutting out any remotely sexual scene (including one where a man licks his bowling ball before rolling it), they also cut out any scene that referred to one of the characters (Walter, played by John Goodman) as being Jewish (and they say theyre anti-Israel but not anti-Jewish), as well as a scene that referred to a group of German nihilists (I suppose that religious/ideological option is also too explosive for the censors), and a couple of other scenes that Im not sure why they deleted (perhaps the scissors and black markers just got out of control). In any case, Ive surpassed myself with the longest write-up yet, Mike and Kareem have been asleep since 3 hours, and we have to wake up at 7 a.m. tomorrow morning (technically this morning its 3 a.m., but I had no time before to write, and dont expect to have any time tomorrow either) to go to Suleimaniya and meet the university officials there. Ill try to send this off tomorrow from the University of Suleimaniya, seeing as no one but my Mother has heard from me since we made it to Iraq (I promised Mom, without fail, one phone call on this trip as soon as I made it to Erbil, and Im a dutiful son). Cheers, Dave P.S. The following evening we played billiards in the hotel with most of the high officials guards they taught us some Kurdish in the process, and the big fellow who presses elevator buttons with his assault rifle turned out to be pretty Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Raage Posted November 24, 2003 To tell u the truth walaal i couldnt be bothered reading all that writin Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
La Fidele Posted November 25, 2003 It seems like I tend to overestimate the attention span of Somalia Online readers. Shame on me....or is it? :confused: Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Dhimbil Posted November 26, 2003 Jazeera, Actually i read this two days ago, its funny, they should count their blessings for surviving the car break down in mosul & the elevator incident lol, but didn't respond to the thread cuz of lazyness, so a lot of nomads could be doing that too, read & move on, ya know. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Libaax-Sankataabte Posted November 26, 2003 Jazeera, we all read it but the topic wasn't "flaming" enough for everyone to reply. It is the kind of article you just appreciate to read and move on. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
rudy-Diiriye Posted November 26, 2003 i wanna know if jaziira ever talks about the problems in somalia! i just dont understand why we nomads give a hooth about Jaziira and the likes. do they helps no! do they give a damn about us no! so what gives! u tell me nomads!!!!!! :confused: i say to hell with jaziira and the likes of it! it aint our keen!!!!!! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
La Fidele Posted November 27, 2003 Oh, thanks for making me feel better Illmatic and Libaax And Rudy, boy I don't know whatchu been smokin' but...you definitely got me laughing! And I didn't know that I was considered some non-human entity, referring to me as "it"...one second of INTENSIVE research (you know, click on the profile!) may solve your perplexing grammatical issues next time, all right? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Libaax-Sankataabte Posted November 27, 2003 Is rudy talking about Al-Jazeera the channel? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
rudy-Diiriye Posted November 27, 2003 right on bro, get on de the negro bus and diz the camel jokeys! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites