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Full Circle

by: Dahr Jamail, t r u t h o u t | Perspective

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Free tea is served to Shiite Muslim pilgrims on the road from Baghdad to Karbala, Iraq on February 8, 2009. (Photo: AFP / Getty Images)

    Among things that have not changed in Iraq is one that I hope never changes. After a four-year-long absence, each of my meetings here with former friends and fresh acquaintances seems to suggest that adversity has taken its toll on everything except Iraqi hospitality and Iraqi generosity. I am awestruck to find the warmth of the Iraqi people miraculously undiminished through grief, loss and chaos.

    I first met A (name withheld) in 2004 during my second trip to Iraq. He had accompanied Sheikh Adnan, a mutual friend, when the latter came to visit me in Baghdad. Several visits had followed. The two men would come to my hotel laden with delicious home-cooked meals, of which the first morsel had to be eaten by me, as per their custom. Their visits and the times we spent together brought me an experience of love and brotherhood, the type of which I had rarely known before. More significantly, those occasions had healed and sustained me as I grappled with the guilt and raw horrors of the occupation the government of my country had subjected their land to.

    When A came to visit me this time we could not contain our joy as we greeted each other. "I have gifts for you habibi," he said, and pulled out two brand new leather jackets, one brown and one black, for me to choose from. It was only the first of many gifts he brought me.

    My compulsion to know the truth behind the invasion and occupation had brought me to Iraq. I had come nearly empty-handed from an enemy country and found acceptance among strangers. What I received here is best described in Emerson's words, "The greatest gift is a portion of thyself."

    It had not taken me long to grasp that habibi, which literally means "the one that is loved" in the Arab world, is not a mere form of address or a term of endearment. It encapsulates a way of life, an innate sense of an inclusive community, alien to the self-focused concept in the United States of so many, that of "the pursuit of life, liberty and happiness."

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    I had last seen A, along with Sheikh Adnan, two years ago when they visited me in Syria. Soon after, A had written to me:

Habibi,

It has been very long since I have written to you. I'm sorry. I was terribly busy. I have some very bad news. Sheikh Adnan was kidnapped by the members of al-Qaeda in Diyala 25 days ago and there is no news about him up to this moment. It's a horrible situation. One cannot feel safe in this country.

    It was many months later that A finally found a photograph at their local morgue to confirm the death of our friend.

    The absence of Sheikh Adnan made this meeting between A and me more poignant and precious.

    He was concerned about my safety and tried to dissuade me from stepping out, "While there is less violence, the bad people are still out there," he lamented. I managed to convince him that the area where I am residing is relatively safe, and we began to stroll down the sidewalk for some food.

    He was not too hungry, but custom bars him from allowing me to eat alone, so he joined me. Sitting in the pleasant warmth of the Baghdad sun with a mild cool breeze swaying the palm fronds around us, we ate and talked.

    I told him of my life since we last met in 2007. He talked of his wife.

    Roughly one year ago, he and his wife had a boy, their first child. At six weeks the baby had to be taken to a hospital. Readers familiar with my reportage of the collapsed health care system in Iraq are aware that the large-scale forced exodus of skilled and experienced doctors from the country has compounded the crisis of destroyed infrastructure. As a result, A's child became one among the countless Iraqis who have lost their lives in the absence of necessary medical care.

    A showed me the photograph of the newborn baby that he has not erased from his cell phone. I thanked him for sharing it with me. Still looking at the photograph, he nodded, smiled, and put the phone away. His wife, he said, is trying to reconcile with the loss and they are now trying to have another child.

    For a minute, the though crossed my mind that the barbarians the Bush administration had vowed to liberate nearly six years ago seem most unnaturally human.

    Finally, I broached the subject neither of us was too keen to breach. To my query about Sheikh Adnan's wife and three children, A told me, "You know, when the husband dies, the wife and children are left in a very bad position, because it is not common for women here to work, they must rely completely on the grandparents. It is a continuous struggle. The economic situation here is not getting better for most of us."

    After we washed down the meal with strong Iraqi tea, A went to wash his hands. My eyes gazed leisurely over to a man carving shawarma, the palm fronds swaying languidly, and behind them the cars rolling down the road. The color of the palm fronds constantly changed hue as the sun slid slowly across the sky.

    I knew without looking that A would have paid for the food. It is another Iraqi creed I have learnt not to question. Regardless of their status, no Iraqi worth their name will ever allow a guest to pay for refreshments. When A returned, I thanked him for his visit and for his generosity.

    As we walked back to my hotel I marveled at A's fortitude and poise. He, like others that I have met and will continue to encounter in this ravaged land, is a lesson in humanity, dignity and strength in the face of insurmountable odds.

    We thanked one another profusely for our individual reasons.

    "I feel grateful to have you as my friend Dahr," he said as we bid goodbye.

    I have no words for the gratitude that overflowed my heart, not for this one friend alone, but at my sheer fortune at having been gifted generous portions of so many lives, to have the humility to receive it, and the sense to appreciate it.

    Our meeting was a full circle for me. It has enabled me to close out the experience of having lost my friend Sheikh Adnan. For both of us, it has been an unstated acknowledgment of that loss, backed by a fresh resolve to continue with life ... a carrying forward.

    I bring you but a single instance of loss. Estimates reveal at least 1.2 million such instances in Iraq. Each life lost emits ripples of grief across not just Iraq, but the globe.

  

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Dahr Jamail, an independent journalist, is the author of "The Will to Resist: Soldiers Who Refuse to Fight in Iraq and Afghanistan," (Haymarket Books, 2009), and "Beyond the Green Zone: Dispatches From an Unembedded Journalist in Occupied Iraq," (Haymarket Books, 2007). Jamail reported from occupied Iraq for nine months as well as from Lebanon, Syria, Jordan and Turkey over the last five years.

Comments

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What a beautiful message of

What a beautiful message of friendship, humanity and fortitute to continue the struggle for a better life. Gerard from Spain

And so, with the help of

And so, with the help of Dahr Jamail, we learn about Iraq's people, one or two at a time. We get the big picture, and the "zoom in". Thanks. So, how do we get the troops out and pay reparations to those families whose lives the government of the US has messed up? (My word skills are not good enough to do better than "messed up". My apologies.)

So right, Dahr! I am moved

So right, Dahr! I am moved to tears. I'm an ignoramus when it comes to having such comfortable comradery with a people so wronged. I don't know how you do it except it is because you have traveled the world extensively (compared to me) and have spent so much time with such wonderful Muslim people. I have not traveled the world, virtually at all, because I've never financially had the privilege. I applaud you for being there in the midst of so much death and yet being able to honestly testify of such Semitic love overflowing from people who one would think would be mostly full of unforgiveness and hatred; because, if what was and continues to be done to them was done to us, that is the way most such-wronged Americans would be. Keep up the wonderful work, and I pray that Iraqis and yourself will be spared cancer(s) from the great deal of depleted uranium in the air there. With much love from just one of your many American friends, Wolf

Thank you for your courage

Thank you for your courage to return to Iraq and your courage to keep your heart open as well. May the madness which the US invasion triggered soon end.

I met you at the University

I met you at the University of Toledo and so appreciate the work you do in bringing the stories of the Iraqi people that have lived this horrific war for years on end. I am so ashamed of our country for bringing this upon them but thank you for being our hands and hearts.

Why did we invade this

Why did we invade this country, again? And we wonder why other nations around the world despise us.

Thank you Dahr Jamail for

Thank you Dahr Jamail for this very heart rendering story. I've heard you speak live and know of your work and am in awe of your understanding and compassion. I remain embarrassed that our nation has been the source of so much suffering. I do despair however that as gracious as people you speak of are that the women in this culture are still so disrespected. There has got to be a change in this direction for us to be able to respect their culture. What a quandary, what a quandary!

I have been reading your

I have been reading your articles for several years and want to thank you for being brave enough to continue bringing the truth to those interested in seeing/reading it: as opposed to the lies and propaganda served up as truth by far too many western journalists. The Iraqi people have had to endure years of suffering..brought about by the American-led illegal immoral war against them..and the unfair sanctions imposed before that. I am still waiting for the US to apologize for creating this quagmire that is now Iraq..for the slaughter and destruction..the disrespect..the rape and disregard for Arab/Muslim law and custom. As for the poster expressing concern for the rights of women in Iraq..perhaps she/he is unaware that the women of Iraq were doing quite fine before the horrific illegal American-led war brought rape, slaughter, and horror to their homes. Arabs have long been respected for their generosity and treatment of visitors. Sadly..none of this comes across in the American media and Hollywood portrayal of Arabs. So..again..thank you for reporting the truth..and reporting it so brilliantly.

How fortunate we are to read

How fortunate we are to read your words. They should be required reading in every school worldwide the day after you write them. As for Bush, Cheney, and the lot of them - only being dropped into the cities of Iraq to receive their justice & freedom seems fitting. Many Thanx

Hospitality, generosity-----

Hospitality, generosity----- can people who don´t FEEL or give these things LEARN how to ?? The Iraquis---the Arabs, have them in their very nature.I am an American living in Southern Spain and I feel the warmth & generosity of spiit here. ..Can it be taught in school....in America, in England, in Germany ???....It should start in PRESCHOOL !