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Showing posts with label Culture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Culture. Show all posts

Khmer Civilization

The Khmer or Angkor Civilization came into existence during the period from 802 to 1431 A.D. and stretched as far as the modern Thailand-Burma Border in the West and Wat Phou of Laos in the North during its peak.
Its emergence lies in the fact that the ancient Khmer rulers adopted a right political doctrine of its time, which enforce the unity among people. Moreover, they had developed an intelligent irrigation system to control the water of the great Mekong River for agricultures, which enhanced its prosperity. The Khmer Civilization had long been perished over 5 centuries ago, but it left outstanding monuments such as the great Khmer temples of Angkor Wat and Bayon and numerous unique sculptures like Apsara.
The word "Angkor" is derived Sanskrit, an ancient Indian language, of "Nagara" which means "City". Angkor Wat literally means "City of Temple" and Angkor Thom "The Magnificent City".
No doubts, the ancient Khmers were great masters of stone carving. As we can see today the unarguable evidences of various Angkor temples lying on the vast plain of Siemreap, or even beyond its present-day border to the Preah Vihear at Dangrek Mountain, Phnomrung and Phimai in Thailand and Wat Phu in Laos. All these were created and carefully crafts by the ancient Khmers in successive centuries. This seems to contradict with the normal and easy-going life of the local Khmer people and villagers of their time. What drive them to put such an extraordinary efforts and time will be explained in the next chapters.
The study of Khmer civilization in depth is not easy and pain-taking by the historians and archaeologists. Most of the writing, found after the excavation of Angkor, were carved in the stones which became the unperishable materials against time. Although these evidences are important for us to understand the basic constituency of Khmer society and its chronology, they were mainly concerned with religious rituals, King's praise, and literature of Indian epics of "Ramayana" and "Mahabharata". There were little things saying about the ordinary life of the local people.
Interestingly, we learn about the daily way of life of the ancient Khmers, not from the Khmer themselves, but from the Chinese annals. In the middle of 13th century during Chinese Yuan Dynasty, a Chinese ambassador named Zhou Daguan traveled to Angkor, stayed with the local villagers, and explored this empire for a year before his return. He wrote in his Chinese chronicle about this amazing empire, and explain vividly how the people lives with the clear portrayal of the Khmer society during those days.
The center of the Khmer Civilization is at the Angkor Wat area which is situated on the plain of present-day Siemreap province north of the Great Lake of Tonle Sap. Throughout the course of Khmer history, the kingship was frequently attained by violent means with bloodshed throne. There were successive capitals built by different kings in the region, not far from each others; these capitals are at area of Angkor Wat and Roluos with the different names such as Harihalara, Yasodharapura, Jayendanagari, Angkor Thom and a few unknown names.
Angkor Wat, Angkor Thom and several other Khmer temples are undoubtedly the relics of the past Khmer Civilization. In order to help travelers as well as readers to get a clearer picture of Cambodia and these temple complexes, we have put up several articles on Khmer Civilization which covers the historical background, successive eras from the beginning till the end, reasons of rise and fall of this civilization and a chronology.

A Hindu Wedding in Nepal

"You have been destined to live together as husband and wife from your previous lives," said the young priest in Kathmandu as Raj and Claudia sat down cross-legged in front of the altar where scores of sacrificial objects were spread out on small cups made of banana leaves held together with tooth-pick sticks.

Not all the stainless-steel thalis and Meissen porcelain would be ritually pure in comparison to the hand-made natural taparas for the Gods and Goddesses of the Hindu pantheon. And there they were, a German-Nepalese pair, out to receive the blessings of the Banaras-educated Sanskrit-reciting Brahmin priest. In civil-life he worked for the Nepalese government, but since he was a Brahmin and a jyotishi at that, he would be invited to carry out all forms of puja by the Hindu population of Kathmandu.

Long before they'd planned the journey to Kathmandu, Darjeeling and Sikkim, Deviji had consulted her house-bahun so that the time of the rituals could be coordinated with astronomically calculated time factors. An auspicious day for the wedding had been found, for the human being is a microcosm of the rhythm of the universe.

Claudia, Raj's German-wedded wife, sat near him full of expectation and excitement. A young daughter is treated as a holy person, even holier than the cows that you see in the streets of Nepal, Sikkim and India and a young daughter brings a lot of positive aspects or punya to her parents. Normally, the parents of the bride wash the feet of both bride and groom. The foot-washing is accompanied by the recitations of Vedic lore by the Bahun priest beckoned by the parents of the bride.

Since Claudia and Raj were already married in Freiburg (Germany) at the Standesamt, it was decided to skip the foot-washing and the kanyadan ceremony. Claudia was told by the brahmin to get up and accompany Neeta and her sister Geeta to the adjacent room to change clothes.

In the meantime, the brahmin performed a graha shanti jap during which Vedic prayers and sacrifices are made to the Hindu trinity of Brahma, Vishnu and Mahesh. The reason the graha-shanti ritual puja was performed was because Deviji s younger son had died two years ago, and she and her two daughters had mourned for a whole year in order to appease the departed soul. The priest had a lot of patience, and explained which Gods and Goddesses were symbolically represented by the figures and Raj translated it into German for Claudia.

After the graha-shanti ritual was over, the priest performed the bratha-bandhana ceremony during which Raj received the long sacred thread that Hindus from the higher castes wear across their bare chests. He had gone to Germany two decades ago "for further studies" having done his Bachelor's Degree in Zoology and Botany from Kathmandu's Tri Chandra College, and had met his Allemanic wife at the Freiburger University ballroom-dance. They'd realized that they were both passionate rumba-dancers, the queen of all the dances, and had a lot of things in common despite their different ethnic origins.

"And now I will give you a personal secret mantra which you can repeat whenever, and wherever, you are in the world, a mantra that will bring you peace and tranquility," said the priest. Raj had to repeat the mantra thrice and after that the ladies were beckoned into the altar-room. Neeta and Geeta had helped Claudia drape a sari.

Claudia appeared in a scarlet sari and blouse and traditional jewellery. Her brown and blonde hair was parted in the middle. She wore pearls on her ears, decorated with gold, and a shy smile on her face. She seemed to be enjoying the entire tamasha. She sat near Raj and the priest performed the ceremony with the rest of the family members, who received sacred threads on their right wrists after making a number of sacrifices to the Gods and Goddesses by sprinkling them with jamara and holy water. This was followed by the entire family chanting "Om jaya jagadisha hare" to the accompaniment of a small ritual damaru (drum), the chiming of a bell and the blowing of a conch.

Then came the actual swayamvara-ceremony with the sacrificial fire, which was made in the form of a quadrangle that enclosed the ritual article: the sacred altar with the fire in the centre.

Various offerings were made to the deities: Ganesh, Agni the God of Fire, the sky, wind, earth, water, and the Hindu trinity: Brahma, Vishnu and Shiva. Sacrificial rituals have been an essential part of the Vedic way of life. The sacrifice is simple, but its meaning can be complex.

That was followed by the sindur-potay ceremony. Raj had to place vermillion (sindur) as a sign of marriage on the parting of Claudia's hair. A Hindu bride is expected to apply the sindur as long as her husband lives. Claudia bowed her head and he placed the potay-necklace on her slender neck.

After that, they were obliged to walk around the sacrificial fire three times. In Hinduism, Agni is not only the God of Fire and ritual but also the fire itself and summons the power of the Sun God Surya to the sacrificial altar.

Now Claudia was extremely scared of fire, and Raj told the priest about her phobia. Since he was a tolerant Brahmin, he said they could improvise and do it fast. Claudia took a deep breath and ran like a hare. Neeta had never seen a bride wearing a red sari run around the fire so fast in her life. She'd told her once that she'd been the fastest girl in the 100 meter-sprint in the German Prefecture Baden W|rttemberg during her school days but this beat anything.

The ritual ceremony was over and Claudia was relieved and sat down next to Raj in the sofa for the family photographs. He looked silly with his Nepali topi which sat at an abominably rakish angle, and kept falling off his head because it was a wee bit too small for his cranium. Claudia had to wear a scarlet shawl over her vermilion-strewn head, as the bride has to hide the sindur on her head for the entire evening.

Claudia was the toast of Kathmandu in the days to come with her conspicuous scarlet-sindur and her yellow salwar-kameez, as she walked along Kathmandu's bustling Asan Tole buying Nepalese apples and papayas from the Terai. It had been great fun shopping with her and little Evelyn. Claudia had learned a bit of Nepali, after all she was an anthropologist, and it was cute to hear her and Neeta's niece say, 'dhanyabad, namaste, ramro chha' in Nepali.

And here she was visiting them in their German surroundings after a 8000 km flight that had lasted 12 hours.
Source here.

Weddings in Cambodia

This is the wedding season in Cambodia. Every day it is easy to ride past one or two, or even five or six, wedding banquets on the streets of Phnom Penh. They're hard to miss because the families of the bride and groom set up a large tent right in the street, sometimes cutting traffic down to a one lane or just a walkway, or even blocking the street completely.

A major reason this season is so popular for weddings is that the rainy season is soon to be upon us, and dry weather is a major asset when the common people hold their celebrations outside.

Waiting for the arrival of the next guest The actual wedding ceremony takes place in the morning, usually at the bride's house, with just a couple monks and a few friends present. The real celebration is the evening banquet, also at the house. Here, early in the evening, the wedding party waits for the next guest arrival.
Wedding guests all dressed up Weddings are a fixed part of the culture. Invited people really must attend because in a country of poor people, the system requires that each guest offer a cash donation upon arrival. No other wedding gifts are given. It is especially bad for the young women. They are invited to many weddings of their friends, and for each they buy a new formal ($20), fix their hair, pay for a make-up session, and then contribute toward the cost of the banquet.
Collecting the guests' contributions After greeting the wedding party (first photo above), the guest next encounters this table where the envelope that contained her wedding invitation (and has her name on it) is placed in the silver bowl. The two men then record the amount in the red book behind the bowl, next to the guest's name. Only trusted family members are given this accounting task. Khmer people usually give about $10 per person. Foreigners are expected to contribute $20 or $25. Last week I went to weddings of DDP staff on Monday, Thursday, and Sunday evenings!
The banquet kitchen crew At the back of the lot, behind the house, a crew of professional wedding caterers prepares the meal. One company sets up the tent. Another brings the tables and chairs and serves the food.

JAPANESE TRADITIONAL WEDDING RECEIPTION

The usual procedures in traditional Japanese wedding receptions have a go-between introduce the bridegroom, bride and their family backgrounds. A Japanese wedding reception is a colorful affair, particularly with young friends of the bride attending in beautiful "Kimono".

Here the married sister of the bride is (seen on the left) wearing a tomesode kimono. The tomesode is a black formal kimono and is combined with a multi-color design on the skirt.

The traditional costume as worn by the bride is perhaps the highlight in the reception.

Here the bride is wearing a "Tsuno Kakushi" hood. This is worn to cover the brides "horns", thus showing her obedience to her new husband. You can also see the big "Kanzashi" ornaments in the bride's hair.

The bride is wearing a gorgeous white "Uchikake" gown, the wedding kimono. These are also known as the "Shiromuku". Below you can see a close up of the "Shiromuku" showing the great detail in patterns woven into the material. This is an example from Oriental Artifacts extensive range of kimono.


Nakodo

Nakodo

A "Nakodo" is a go-between who negotiates between both families.

Immediately after the marriage proposal has been accepted by the bride's family, there is a ceremonial exchange of drinks with the bride family and the Nakodo.

Go-betweens are often selected more for ceremonial purposes. They may be elderly couples known and close to either or both of the families to be united in marriage.

In the picture above the go-betweens can be seen one of each side of bridal couple, with the parents on the outside. This clearly indicates their historical importance.

Yui-no - Part of a Traditional Japanese Wedding

ObiOnce both families agreed in marriage, both families would meet at a formal dinner on an “auspicious” day in the Japanese almanac. “Yui-no" (engagement) gifts are exchanged. The main gift for a bride-to-be is an “obi” (a kimono sash), which represents female virtue. An example of an Obi can be seen on the right. Obi - available from Oriental Artifacts.

A "hakama" skirt is given to the groom-to-be in representing fidelity. In addition to the “obi” and “hakama”, the exchange of gifts may include as many as nine items, which traditionally symbolise happiness and fortune. These include:

  1. “Naga-Noshi” – abalone shell widely used in Japan to make crafts and gifts – to express sincere wishes from the giver

  2. “Mokuroku” – the list of gifts exchanged in the engagement

  3. Money

  4. “Katsuo-bushi” - dried bonito (a highly valued preserved food ingredient used to make soup stock) – to wish the couple a lasting marriage

  5. “Surume” - dried cuttlefish – it is given for the same reason as “katsuo-bushi”, to wish the couple a lasting marriage

  6. “Konbu” – known for its ability to breed – to wish the couple many happy and healthy children

  7. “Shiraga” or hemp – its strong fibres are used to symbolise the wish for strong family ties. "Shiraga" also means white hair. Hemp is therefore used to wish the couple many years to come

  8. “Suehiro” – a fan – it opens from end to end and is given as a wish for happiness and a bigger and better future

  9. “Yanagi-daru” - a wine cask – money may be given in place of the wine cask for the purpose of purchasing "sake" wine

  10. "Sake" casks – unlike usual sake casks which are usually made from "sugi" (cryptomeria), sake casks exchanged in the engagement dinner are made from "yui-no" (willow trees with tender leaves). “Yui-no” sake casks is meant to symbolise a pledge for obedience and gentleness in marriage

TRADITIONAL JAPANESE MARRIAGE CEREMONY

Mi-ai - Part of a Traditional Japanese Wedding

Traditional Japanese brideWhile it is true that more and more young men and women are united in marriage on their own will through love, the practice of "Mi-ai" is still widely observed to end in a happy married life for many. "Mi-ai" is an interview for a man and woman with a view to marriage, as arranged by their parents or a third party acting as a go-between. It is proposed with due consideration to social backgrounds and other factors of the prospective bride, bridegroom and their families. It is not compulsory on either of the parties concerned to accept such "Mi-ai" as a promise for marriage.

Prior to 1900's, the practice of "mi-ai" (an arranged meeting between a man and a woman with a view to marriage) was more a formality than an opportunity for a young man and woman to meet and get to know each other. Today, a matchmaker may be a family member or a friend who would arrange for an initial meeting between the young man and woman thought to be suited for each other in marriage. These initial meeting is usually arranged at a public place such as a restaurant or a theatre.

In the old days when "mi-ai" was a mere formality, a young man would be invited to the home of the young woman. If he were favourably impressed, he would leave behind a fan to indicate his acceptance to pursue the marriage. In the old days however, the bride-to-be had little say on the issue.

Hakama pants
Hakama pants (skirt)

Hakama pants are a gift to the groom as part of the Yui-no, the phase of the traditional Japanese wedding. For a wedding they would be black, but to emphasis the detail of the design we have shown a patterned style.

Geisha information

Geisha - Geisha information, Geisha pictures, where to see Geisha, Geisha and prostitution and Maiko - trainee Geisha.

Geisha (芸者 "person of the arts") are traditional Japanese artist-entertainers. The word Geiko is also used to describe such persons. Geisha were very common in the 18th and 19th centuries, and are still in existence today, although their numbers are dwindling. "Geisha," pronounced /ˈgeɪ ʃa/ ("gay-sha") is the most familiar term to English speakers, and the most commonly used within Japan as well, but in the Kansai region the terms geigi and, for apprentice geisha, "Maiko" have also been used since the Meiji Restoration. The term maiko is only used in Kyoto districts. The English pronunciation ˈgi ʃa ("gee-sha") or the phrase "geisha girl," common during the American occupation of Japan, carry connotations of prostitution, as some young women, desperate for money and calling themselves "geisha," sold themselves to American troops.

Trainee Geisha (Maiko) Kyoto Japan

The geisha tradition evolved from the taikomochi or hōkan, similar to court jesters. The first geisha were all male; as women began to take the role they were known as onna geisha (女芸者), or "woman artist (female form)." Geisha today are exclusively female, aside from the Taikomochi. Taikomochi are exceedingly rare. Only three are currently registered in Japan. They tend to be far more bawdy than geisha. Other public figures who contributed to the creation of the modern geisha were Oiran, or courtesans, and Odoriko, dancing girls. The Odoriko in particular influenced geisha to include dance as part of their artistic repertoire.

Maiko - trainee Geisha
A Maiko going to work in Gion Kyoto.

Geisha were traditionally trained from young childhood. Geisha houses often bought young girls from poor families, and took responsibility for raising and training them. During their childhood, apprentice geisha worked first as maids, then as assistants to the house's senior geisha as part of their training and to contribute to the costs of their upkeep and education. This long-held tradition of training still exists in Japan, where a student lives at the home of a master of some art, starting out doing general housework and observing and assisting the master, and eventually moving up to become a master in her own right (see also irezumi). This training often lasts for many years.

The course of study traditionally starts from a young age and encompasses a wide variety of arts, including Japanese musical instruments (particularly the shamisen) and traditional forms of singing, traditional dance, tea ceremony, flower arranging (ikebana), poetry and literature. By watching and assisting senior geisha, they became skilled in the complex traditions surrounding selecting, matching, and wearing precious kimono, and in various games and the art of conversation, and also in dealing with clients.

Once a woman became an apprentice geisha (a maiko) she would begin to accompany senior geisha to the tea houses, parties and banquets that constitute a geisha's work environment. To some extent, this traditional method of training persists, though it is of necessity foreshortened. Modern geisha are no longer bought by or brought into geisha houses as children. Becoming a geisha is now entirely voluntary. Most geisha now begin their training in their late teens.

Are Geisha Prostitutes?

Strictly speaking, geisha are not prostitutes. Because they entertain men behind closed doors in an exclusive manner, there has been much speculation about the underpinnings of their profession. The confusion that surrounds this issue has been complicated by Japanese prostitutes who wish to co-opt the prestige of the geisha image, and by inaccurate depictions of geisha in Western popular culture. Although a geisha may choose to engage in sexual relations with one of her patrons.

The first geisha was indeed a courtesan named Kako. Over time, she discovered that she had no need to engage in the red-light district. Kako was directly or indirectly to heir to many schools of Japanese art. She called herself a geisha ("arts-person") and confined herself to giving artistic performances.

Occasionally, a geisha may choose to take a danna (an old fashioned word for husband), which is typically a wealthy man who has the means to support a geisha mistress. Although a geisha may fall in love with her danna, the affair is customarily contingent upon the danna's ability to financially support the geisha's lifestyle. The traditional conventions and values within such a relationship are very intricate and not well understood, even by many Japanese. Because of this, the true intimate role of the geisha remains the object of much speculation, and often misinterpretation, in Japan as well as abroad.

Iraq's Culture of Violence

No Arab people have been so traumatized by dictatorial rule, foreign adventurism, and war as the Iraqis under Saddam Husayn. To a considerable extent, the cause has been the Iraqi regime's failure to build a national identity that includes all Iraqis. It was this absence of integration that contributed directly to the rise of Saddam Husayn, who emerged from Iraq's need for a power stronger than its divisions.

Saving the Iraqis from totalitarian rule and Iraq's neighbors from further depredations will therefore be no easier, but also no harder, than bringing to Iraq a policy of domestic inclusiveness. But is that possible or is Iraq doomed to repeat its wars? And if it is possible, to what extent does such inclusiveness depend on a new restructuring of the relationship between state and society?

Background: Needing a Tyrant

Iraq's politics are shaped by various factors, including its naval and strategic confinement and its geographic remoteness from involvement in the Arab-Israeli conflict. But by far the most central factor has been the government's failure to build a national identity that meaningfully incorporates all Iraqis. This helps explain Baghdad's inflexible position toward internal political reform and its aggressiveness abroad.

Iraq has a diverse population. It is 80 percent Arab, with its non-Arabic-speaking groups comprising Kurds (a significant 15 percent of the population), Turkomans, and Assyrians. Iraq's population is 97 percent Muslim, 65 percent of which is Shi‘a. (Chibli Mallat breaks down the population somewhat differently: 55-60 percent Arab Shi‘a, 15-20 percent Arab Sunni, and 20 percent Sunni Kurds.) Prior to 1920, these three groups had no shared experience of living together within a modern state system. While all shared Ottoman rulers, the Basra province was distinct from the Baghdad province, and the province of Mosul in the north remained a disputed territory claimed for some years by Turkey. Iraq was so fractured that when the Ottoman empire collapsed, neighborhoods in the southern city of Najaf separately declared their independence and wrote separate constitutions. In Mosul, civil strife erupted between neighborhoods.1

After the creation of Iraq as an independent kingdom in 1932, the monarchy adopted varied policies toward Iraq's ethnic and religious communities. On the one hand, it sought to maintain the status quo of Sunni dominance, prompting conflict between the Arab Sunni establishment and several minorities (such as the Assyrians and the Kurds). But the monarchy also sought solutions, compromises, and certain forms of elections and democratic expression. This resulted in part from the fact that it had roots in the Hashemite dynasty, whose link with Great Britain began in World War I and whose administration and leadership went back into the history of Arabia. The latter links were instrumental in conferring legitimacy and thus an ability to lead with less repression and coercion.

In contrast, the 1958 coup that overthrew the monarchy brought a military regime to power that consisted of rural groups that lacked the cosmopolitan thinking found among Iraqi elites. At the local level, the new leaders' exclusivist mentality produced tribal conflict and rivalry,2 which in turn called forth internal oppression and external adventurism—both of which buttressed the regime's power. Applied at the national level, this exclusivist political culture created fissures among Iraq's three major communities: Sunnis, Shi‘is, and Kurds. Those fissures, in turn, encouraged Baghdad's foreign adventurism, including its 1980 and 1990 invasions of Iran and Kuwait, respectively.

After the 1958 revolution, Iraq's ruling establishment created a state devoid of political compromise.3 Its leaders liquidated those holding opposing views, confiscated property without notice, trumped up charges against its enemies, and fought battles with imaginary domestic foes. This state of affairs reinforced an absolute leader and a militarized Iraqi society totally different from the one that existed during the monarchy.4 One indicator of this new power structure was that Iraq's elite families, which previously had married only among themselves, permitted their daughters to marry junior officers of modest backgrounds.5 The military became the new symbol of status, power, and respect, while property and urban-family backgrounds became more closely linked with the old regime. Within four years of the 1958 revolution, hundreds of thousands of Iraqis, though citizens of a rich oil producing nation, had fled their country, constituting the largest outflow in the nation's modern history. Those numbers have increased over time, to the point that, today, Iraqi emigrants number more than 3 million (leaving a population of 23 million inside the country).6

As a result of the disharmony, fragility, and constraint in Iraqi politics, which has been followed by severe mismanagement and alienation of both Shi‘is and Kurds, the authorities suffered several coups. Finally, in 1968, the Ba‘th took over. The regime subsequently sought to suppress chaos by elevating a dictator who would impose himself on every aspect of the people's affairs. The Ba‘th party and many Iraqis more broadly had the mistaken idea that a "benevolent" dictator could solve all their problems and rise above their divisions.

In this sense, the phenomenon of Saddam is planted deep in Iraqi social and political soil, a thesis supported by much evidence. In poetry and in the culture of politics, leadership along the lines of Stalin or Mao, Ho Chi Minh or Castro, has long been admired. Social discussions in the 1950s or 1960s revealed the longing of people (not only in Iraq but also across the region) for such a political savior. A leader who commanded great power and had a sense of mission and justice was the dream. A Saladin (the eleventh century Islamic hero who defeated the Crusaders) or even an Atatürk (founder of modern Turkey) was desired by the masses. In Iraq, it was felt, a single-minded authoritarian leader was especially needed, owing to the country's divisions, challenges, and problems.

Iraqis interviewed for this study and two studies previously published by the author, in 1997 and 19987, agreed that socioeconomic conditions contributed to the emergence of Saddam Husayn. The soil, according to these Iraqis, was fertile, and Saddam was well prepared to take advantage of it, his personality better prepared to thrive in such a ground. In the end, of course, the leader that emerged was different from what people had expected: Saddam contributed to the divisions of Iraq and became part of its problems.

Mismanaging the Three Communities

Many of Iraq's post-1958 troubles can be attributed to Baghdad's mismanagement of the country's three main communities: Sunni Arabs, Sunni Kurds, and Shi‘i Arabs.

Sunni Arabs. Sunni Arabs, though a minority, are in a position of superiority by virtue of their association with the dominant Arab Sunni population of the Middle East and their leading role in Iraq's history. The Ba‘th party, with a power base in the Sunni tribes, has exaggerated its nationalist and Arabist credentials and zealously pursued the goal of bringing more Sunnis into Iraq. Thus, the drive for unity with other Arabs, from Kuwait to Syria, is at its base a drive to keep Sunni Arab demographic strength in Iraq. Likewise, the conflict with the other Ba‘th in Syria reflects the conflict between the Sunni composition of Syria's population and the ‘Alawi nature of the leadership.

One must stress, however, that this non-democratic, non-representative policy in Iraq has also ended up mistreating many of the country's Sunnis. The regime attempts to divide and rule, conquer and rule, and to carry out occasional purges against the most powerful Sunni tribes and factions. Specifically, the more the regime depends on Sunnis, the more it has to fear the power of Sunni sectors and tribes that are positioned to acquire influence; thus, Sunni tribes that help the regime also face the state's ferocity. Those Sunnis who do not fit in with regime policies and priorities or do not show loyalty to the leadership of Saddam Husayn face house arrest, family prosecution, and execution.

The rumors and reports of purges of Sunni groups and tribes in the Iraqi army reflect this fact. For example, in May 1995, the regime brutally repressed an uprising of the large Dulaymi (Sunni) clan, outraged because the decapitated corpse of one of its leaders, an air force general, had been unceremoniously delivered from Baghdad to his relatives.8 Furthermore, the high-profile defections of Saddam's sons-in-law, Husayn and his brother, Saddam Kamil, in August of 1995, were followed by their killing in 1996 after they returned to Iraq in the expectation that they had received amnesty. Their house was attacked by security forces and the operation was led by ‘Udayy Saddam Husayn. Several other relatives, including their father, who had not defected, a third brother, and their sister and her children, also were killed during these attacks. This incident revealed much of the regime's nature like no other incident in the past. In fact, later in 2000, their mother was stabbed to death in Baghdad.

Sunni Kurds. Modern Iraqi authorities have feared their Kurdish population and fought many wars against it.9 As a result, the Kurds have been left on the margins of national life and have been in a state of perpetual revolt.10

The history of Iraq's mistreatment of its Kurdish population is both poignant and complex. In 1946, during the first movement for a free Kurdistan, the Iraqi Kurdistan Democratic Party emerged and played a major role in the Kurdish resistance movement in Iraq. Though Iraq formally recognized the Kurds' rights to their national language and to self-rule, it broke the agreement and the Kurds rebelled.11 Until 1970, the Kurds formally had no rights to self-identity, suffering from continuous oppression. In the 1970s, a U.S. tilt toward Iran led to an Iraqi massacre of Kurds who were rising up against the regime, assisted by Iran. A decade later, during the Iran-Iraq war (1980-88), Iraq conducted military campaigns against the Kurds in both countries. In 1983, Iraqi soldiers abducted about 5,000-8,000 Kurds from the Barzani clan12. Later in 1987-88, Iraq initiated the Anfal campaign against the Kurds, in which about 50,000-100,000 Kurds were killed.13 At the height of this campaign, Iraq used chemical weapons against the Kurds, particularly in the Kurdish town of Halabja. In 1991, the Shi‘i revolt and U.S. calls to overthrow Saddam Husayn encouraged the Kurds to rebel again. As a result, 450,000 Kurds were forced to flee Iraq for Turkey and over a million went to Iran; thousands were killed by Iraqi troops.14

The Iraqi government has regularly used deportation and Arabization policies to oppress the Kurds. For example, it deported the Kurds to other parts of Iraq, confiscating their land and property, then replacing them with Arabs less likely to resist the regime's methods. Thousands of the deported Kurds live in tents or have no shelter at all.15 In 1997, a report by the United Nations secretary general stated that more than 500,000 Kurds were "internally displaced in the three northern Kurdish provinces."16

Shi‘i Arabs. Although Sunni Arabs control the decision-making apparatus, the Shi‘i Arabs, who live primarily in the south and in Baghdad, form a majority of the country's population. The roots of the Sunni power structure go back to the Ottoman Empire. Similarly, the roots of Sunni-Shi‘i confrontation in Iraq lie in the many conflicts between the (Sunni) Ottoman Empire and the (Shi‘i) Qajar dynasty of Iran. The city of Basra, for example, went back and forth between the two countries. This history adds to the minority troubles of Iraq, where Sunnis fear a Shi‘a dominated Iraq that excludes them and persecutes them.

This apprehension about Shi‘is is not unique to Iraq; it is a common characteristic of the Gulf states, with some governments fearing the establishment of an Islamist state along the Iranian lines. But reactions in Iraq to Shi‘i expressions of identity are far more extreme than anywhere else. As Gulf political culture has developed over the past decade, showing a more sophisticated approach to the Shi‘i issue, Iraq remains mired in old power struggles and conflicts over identity and destiny.

One source of Sunni-Shi‘i animosity goes back to the Shu‘ubiya movement of the early Islamic centuries, when non-Arabic-speaking Muslims refused to recognize the privileged position of Arabs in the world of Islam. In a modern version of this concept, regime-linked circles and Iraqis with Arab ultra-nationalist leanings have accused the Shi‘is of harboring loyalty to Iran rather than to Iraq—though any honest inquiry would find that Iraqi Shi‘is belong to Arab tribes loyal to Baghdad. Those of non-Arab backgrounds (mainly from Persian origins in Iran) are a minority, but they too have become effectively Arabized, with a culture and language in Arabic. (In this, they resemble the Sunni Circassians who settled in Arab territories.)17

Despite these facts, charges of Shu‘ubiya are hurled at any Iraqi who speaks of Shi‘i shrines in Iran or Iraq or who expresses an appreciation of anything Iranian; merely translating a poem of Iranian origin is readily condemned as evidence of Shu‘ubiya. To be on the safe side, an Iraqi must praise Arab nationalism and Iraq's nationalist credentials; the moment he shows any sympathy for Shi‘ism, he has crossed the threshold and will be seen as supporting irredentist sentiment, encouraging non-Ba‘th thought, and questioning the Arab and Sunni identity of Iraq. This phenomenon antedated Saddam Husayn; thus, already in 1962, the eminent historian ‘Abd al-‘Aziz ad-Duri discussed the invasion of Iraq by eastern peoples "who leave behind groups of people to remain there, and whose cultural roots are foreign."18 This was a subtle but direct way of referring to the Shi‘is living in Iraq.

Arguably, Iraq's worst mistake since the republican regime assumed power in 1958 has been to ignore the Shi‘i majority and its rights, alienating them despite their commitment to Iraq.19 This mistake can be seen in the regime's power base and its Sunni-oriented power structure. This mistake partially accounts for the rise in Shi‘i expression in Iraq (resulting from their alienation) and the outbreak of the Iran-Iraq war (due to regime fear of Shi‘i expression after the Iranian revolution of 1979). In many ways, Iraq found itself on the defensive, and while not able to go the democratic route for fear of losing power, it ended up going into another war over Kuwait in 1990.

The Iraqi Shi‘is' demonstrated their loyalty to Iraq during the awful eight-year Iran-Iraq war of 1980-88, when they tenaciously and consistently fought their fellow Shi‘is of Iran. This was not overlooked in Iran; when many Iraqi Shi‘is fled to Iran in 1991, following the Shi‘i uprising after the Kuwait war, they were mistreated there by Iranians who remembered how the Iraqi Shi‘is had fought them.20 Despite this, the regime in Tehran has questioned Shi‘i loyalty to Iraq as a means to foment problems in Iraq, and with success; the government in Baghdad continues to view its Shi‘i majority as less patriotic than the rest of its citizens.

This has at times taken brutal form. At the outset of the eruption of tensions with Iran in 1980, the regime expelled no fewer than 200,000 Iraqi Shi‘is, based on their having familial ties to Iran, sometimes as distant as five generations back.21 Iraqi Shi‘is have their own (Iraqi) religious authorities and have differed from the start with Ayatollah Khomeini's signature idea about the institution of the wilayat al-faqih (reign of the jurisprudent; i.e., rule by the mullahs). To many Iraqi Shi‘i religious leaders, wilayat al-faqih is an innovation that is not a legitimate part of Shi‘ism.22

Foreign Consequences

Iraq's failure to achieve internal harmony has contributed directly to its failure to establish peaceable relations with the outside world. This is no accident: just as the regime's internal strength is based on asserting Sunni supremacy based on tribes, so, too, is its primary face to neighboring countries a bellicose one. Because Iraq's leaders fear the Shi‘i majority, they have sought any means of increasing the proportion of the Sunni element. Toward this end, they have created a culture of annexation that seeks to absorb neighboring Sunni Arabs, in whatever way possible.

This idea has become ever more imperative over time. The platforms of Iraqi parties before 1925 sought to extract Mosul from the Turks (with success: Great Britain did award Mosul to Iraq in 1925). King Ghazi of Iraq expressed annexationist positions towards Kuwait as early as the 1930s. Rashid ‘Ali al-Kaylani, who led a coup against the king and the British in 1941 also expressed annexationist positions toward Kuwait. ‘Abd al-Karim Qasim, who led the 1958 coup, made a feint in 1961 to annex Kuwait. But none of these rulers went so far as to wage war.23 Each of them had a somewhat different justification, with King Ghazi seeking oil and territorial expansion in Kuwait, Kaylani promoting Arab nationalism and rebelling against the British, and Qasim attempting to compete with Gamal Abdel Nasser of Egypt over the uniting of Arab countries.

In sum, the culture of annexation has deep political roots in modern Iraq.

Saddam Husayn then came along and took this tendency to an extreme. His ambitions were limited by factors both internal (such as regime legitimacy, Shi‘i and Kurdish opposition) and external (opposition from the United States, Great Britain, Arab states, and Iran). He responded by occasionally generating crises to vent the pressures produced by these constraints. Prime examples are his invasion of Iran and attempt to annex the predominantly Arabic-speaking, Sunni province of Khuzistan in 1980; and his invasion and annexation of Kuwait in 1990.

From the regime's perspective, crises with neighbors—such as conflict with Iran or Kuwait or a foreign power—sensitize the Iraqi people to a common danger, which then justifies the imposition of even more control over the Iraqi people and bolsters the role of the military and security forces. Eventually, Saddam fell victim to the violence and fear that emanated precisely from this aspiration to rid himself of constraints. He found adventurous means to deal with these problems, but they always generated other, even bigger challenges. The net result is that Saddam finds himself today backed into a corner. And since he still harbors the same annexationist tendencies, he could easily make a drastic adventurous move on the Kurds, Kuwait, or Jordan.

The Kuwaiti Example

There was no consistent Iraqi claim to Kuwait before 1990. A look at the platforms of Iraqi movements and parties over many decades finds them devoid of references to Kuwait. None of the Iraqi parties during the British mandate ever mentioned a claim to Kuwait in their platforms. Rather, their general goal was to "preserve Iraq's complete independence within its natural borders," with no reference to Kuwait's being within those borders.24 There was no reference to Kuwait in the 1970 Iraqi constitution, or the provisional constitution of the 1980s, or in the 1990 draft for the permanent constitution of Iraq. Neither is there a mention of Kuwait's being part of Iraq in the Ba‘th Party's constitution or statutes. Not one Iraqi party conference from 1963 to 1990 alludes to Kuwait as a part of Iraq.25 Iraq's need to annex Kuwait went unmentioned through all this time because problems between the two countries from the 1930s on were always a matter of relations between neighboring states, touching on questions of power, rights of passage, borders, and influence. The Iraq-Kuwait question has never been an ideological-national one, on the order of avowedly split countries such as Korea, China, Yemen, or Germany. Their relations are better understood in the context of a dominant revisionist state in relation to a small weaker state; this explains such incidents as the Iraqi government's moving onto Kuwaiti territory in 1973, and the military maneuvers on Kuwait's borders whenever Iraq demands Kuwaiti financial assistance.

Why then, the sudden and overwhelming claim to Kuwait? Because Saddam, feeling the weight of the internal crisis after the Iraq-Iran war, and not least the fears of Iraqi Sunnis after a war that brought only misery and loss, found in Kuwait a solution to his problems. Kuwait appeared to be the ultimate solution to his constraints, a vehicle to carry him to a new regional and even global role. Saddam Husayn is obsessed with such matters as building his power, gaining total control of Iraq, winning a larger access to the sea, dominating the oil market, deploying weapons of mass destruction, and becoming a popular hero among the Arabic-speaking peoples. Kuwait offered all these.

Having such needs, Saddam then ransacked the historical record and found what suited his intended policy. In 1990, days after invading Kuwait, he had many articles published in Iraq's government-controlled press on Kuwait and its annexation. He also published a statement made by Iraq's President ‘Abd al-Karim Qasim, in 1961, days after Kuwait's independence, in which Qasim, after threatening to invade Kuwait, claimed its territory and considered its emir as governor of "Kuwait Province."26 But this was no long-standing grievance; indeed, the publication of Qasim's statement in 1990 was the first time since 1968 that the Iraqi press had run a positive item about him; it was also the first time (decades after his death) that his titles of prime minister and president had been invoked.27 This tells us how suddenly Iraqi politics can shift and how controlled the state media and its positions are. It also shows how these changes and sudden announcements need not conform to a logical order. They rise and disappear with limited notice.

Changes Ahead?

Today's political and social situation in Iraq was shaped largely by the war against the international coalition in winter of 1991 and the Kurdish and Shi‘i uprisings that followed. Those events made two points clear and not much has since happened to change them. First, Saddam had taken measures to immunize himself against the kind of coup d'état that had preceded his rule. He is programmed and equipped to persist, to renew himself, and to reproduce his power.28 Second, the center's power is so supreme that it would be difficult and perhaps even unrealistic to attempt to partition Iraq.

In addition, after the Kurdish and Shi‘i uprisings were repressed, the regime took a series of steps to prevent their recurrence. To appease the Shi‘a, it pardoned deserters and appointed Sa‘dun Hammadi, a Shi‘i, as prime minister. To split the Kurds' ranks, sandwiched as they are between Turkey and the Iraqi regime, it opened negotiations with Mas‘ud Barzani, leader of the Kurdish Democratic Party, and was about to sign an agreement with him when another Kurdish leader, Jalal Talabani of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK), came into conflict with Barzani. While nothing happened immediately, this paved the road for Saddam to invade the Kurdish autonomous region in August 1996, with the help of Barzani, and to destroy the Irbil base of Talabani's opposition and of the Iraqi National Congress, the leading Iraqi opposition group. The invasion also ended the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency's involvement in the Kurdish regions as well.

In these ways, the regime showed it possessed the means to maneuver even under severe constraints; in fact, it even turned those constraints into a source of strength, temporarily at least, in controlling Iraqi society. The regime blamed outsiders for all the country's economic problems and focused on security priorities. Each attack and counterattack may have deepened the regime's crisis, but they also prolonged its life, as it waited to be rescued by the same political and geographic circumstances that had served it in the past, namely new crises and confrontations and wars.

Yet the ability of Saddam to continue to rule Iraq is in question. His style appears to have a limited future in the Middle East, despite what appear to be temporary surges of popularity but are really expressions of Arab sympathies towards the Iraqi people under sanctions and Saddam Husayn. Many Iraqis are aware of the price they are paying for the dictatorship, cult of personality, and ideologically guided leadership of Saddam Husayn. More than ever, they realize that as long as Saddam is in power they will live under repression and at war with the outside world. This realization means that although Saddam's regime appears to be strong, it is, in reality, weak and fractured; it appears stable, but its stability could be shattered overnight.

There is reason to hope that the terrible experience of the Iraqis over the past two decades may contribute to the rise of a pragmatic school of thought and leadership in Baghdad. The Iraqi intifada of 1991 showed the extent of anger in Iraq when the regime is weak; people rebel immediately. When it is strong, they do their best to survive its iron fist. Yet resistance by people in the north and the south has not stopped.

Iraqis in exile who have recently fled their home country tell of a lessening ideological climate, as well as an alienation from the Ba‘thist ideology that has caused the country so much grief. Even members of the party are now eager to change course and begin the rebuilding of Iraq.

This fits into a larger context, as the Arab world is becoming increasingly inhospitable toward leaders who single-handedly make decisions that put the entire country at risk of poverty, sanctions, and isolation. Such leaders today have fewer followers than in the past, and their style is being discredited and undermined. The situations resulting from Libya's conflicts with the major powers, Sudan's internal and external conflicts, and the civil war in Algeria make strong cases for those in the Arab world who argue for democratization, openness, and a change in the way Arab states are run.

In their public discourse, many Middle Easterners still blame the West for many things that have gone wrong, including the suffering of the Iraqi people. But when Arabs discuss politics behind closed doors, they are fully aware of the crisis in leadership in the region. A historical experience with conflict, mistakes, and lost opportunities makes them more pragmatic and realistic than ever before. Behind the surface rhetoric and slogans, there is a deeper discourse that is at least beginning to come to terms with reality.

Models for the Post-Saddam Era

The ultimate causes of Iraq's woes are communal and have to do with the relation between the country's three main religio-ethnic groups. Therefore, before the country can become healthy, this fundamental issue will need to be addressed. It is the prime challenge of the post-Saddam era. Unless this is faced, Iraq will not resolve the decades-long tensions between minorities and majorities, between Sunni, Shi‘is, and Kurds, between rulers and ruled, and between Iraq's national needs and the adventurism that undermines those needs.

How can a post-Saddam government address this issue? How can it be inclusive and alleviate longstanding grievances among the country's communities? This is not an unusual task. One finds many examples of inclusive states all over the world, from Latin America to eastern Europe, and some of them have dealt successfully with inclusion. South Africa, for example, provides an example of power-sharing and the ending of racism. Most of eastern Europe avoided Yugoslavia's route of conflict. Iraq's experience can similarly escape civil strife and war, for the past need not haunt the future. In fact, a negative past can in itself be a motivating force to bring about positive changes; note the German and Japanese examples. Iraqis are fed up with being victims of their government's actions. They are fed up with poverty, isolation, and repression. They want to visit other countries; they want not to be treated like outlaws.

The far-reaching changes that Iraq requires can be done only from within – not by exiles or an external power. Yes, the agents of change need international support and Iraq's outside opposition is an important factor, but domestic forces are the key. An Iraq that goes through a truly meaningful change must find the sources at home, not abroad.

If tyranny is a way to manage a diverse population fractured by longstanding animosities, what are the alternatives? History is not exactly replete with examples, but it does offer possibilities that spark hope for the emergence of a tolerant and inclusive Iraq.

Post-Civil War United States. The civil war of 1861-65 was healed because each side accepted the claim of the other that the war was essentially a noble endeavor. Northern and Southern veterans who began meeting in the 1890s acknowledged that both sides had been motivated by lofty ideals. The veterans might not have agreed with the ideals of the other side, but they recognized that the ideals were there, and this let the healing begin. These shared beliefs were the seeds of what might be called the mythic solution to intercommunal hatred.

Welsh and Scottish acceptance of the English. Along similar lines, the Welsh came to terms with English rule in part because of mutual respect (and the myth of King Arthur); the accession of Welsh-born King Henry VII to the throne in 1485 also helped. Likewise, the 1603 crowning of James I helped English relations with Scotland by unifying Britain under one crown; here the mythic solution was blended with a legal one, and this pairing of laws and narrative creating accommodation appears to take place more often than not.

Switzerland. The synergy of legal and mythic solutions also worked in the Swiss state which, paradoxically, was fused by the emergence of autonomous localities. These permitted coexistence between the German- and French-speaking peoples that previously had hated each other. The role of local autonomy in the Swiss state suggests that the key to a tolerant democratic Iraq resides in the development of some kind of federated system that permits the Shi‘i and Kurdish minorities a form of local control.

Yugoslavia. Tito's creation, in contrast, provides a case study of how hatred can be both healed and obscured by a mythic and legal solution. Tito's method involved a concentration of power in the hands of the central government and party, and he ruled Yugoslavia through a combination of anti-Stalinist and anti-Russian nationalism, plus the universalizing ideology of communism. This system was held together by Tito's will and dominance and its dissolution began (not surprisingly) soon after his death. One can easily see how Iraq might similarly be pulled apart by centrifugal forces subsequent to the end of Saddam Husayn.

Conclusion

Unless Iraq succeeds in redefining group relations so that they are based on coexistence and sharing, tensions will continue to be a permanent part of Iraq's political life.

Unfortunately, the regime has a vested interest in the present formula of exclusion and repression, meaning that only a change of leadership can lead to an improvement in the present sad reality that prevails in Iraq. Of course, the path to that improvement may well involve new tribulations, such as civil war and another reign of terror.

Iraqi hopes in the past have been shattered by difficult realities such as the murderous end of the monarchy, the terrible life under the revolutionary regimes, the horrors of the Iran-Iraq war, and the devastating results of invading Kuwait. One round of suffering (for example, the Iraqi intifada of 1991) always seems to lead to another one, such as the ongoing sanctions and repressive regime in power. To escape this unhappy fate requires Iraqis to close their present chapter of external conflict and internal repression. This involves a change in leadership, to be sure, but also much more. (Amnesty for most of those complicit in the present regime - except those who have committed the worst crimes - is an unfortunate but necessary prelude to starting a new chapter.) To a large extent, Iraq's future rests upon the ability of its people to address their country's structural problems and to address problems in a democratic and federal context.

A federal approach does not imply a change in borders; Iraq is likely to retain something like its current shape: a north dominated by Kurds, a middle dominated by Sunnis, and the Shi‘i in the south. But the Kurds will have to have a special status—an autonomous region in the north. This will be a normal development given that the Kurds have been autonomous for the last ten years. As for the prospect of the country's being divided into Shi‘i and Sunni states: this is hard to imagine given how much the two populations are intermixed. But respect for regional autonomy on a federal basis will help the Iraqis in different areas—experience, respect, and equality. To have local elections for local councils, a regional house of representatives in each part of Iraq that reflects regional needs and aspirations, will help Iraq move from the present failed experiment.

The region also has a responsibility to participate actively in helping Iraq recover. The Gulf states in particular must re-embrace Iraq and help it rebuild after Saddam. To take one example: Iraq's huge debts could be paid into a fund for development that would be jointly owned by Iraq and the states of Kuwait and Saudi Arabia.

U.S. Policy

The Arab summit in March 2001 revealed two key aspects of Iraq's policy. First, Iraq's undermining of the Arab position during the summit to ask the U.N. Security Council to lift the sanctions shows that Baghdad does not in fact want the sanctions lifted. Sanctions benefit the regime in several ways, winning it sympathy in Arab circles and allowing it to control the Iraqi people. Lifting the sanctions that hurt the people of Iraq while keeping the military sanctions and the U.N.-controlled escrow account would open a dynamic the regime could not control. Second, Iraq continues to harbor negative intentions towards Kuwait. This became clear when Iraq's representatives in the summit refused a clause that obliges Iraq to guarantee Kuwait's security and sovereignty.

This is the backdrop against which Washington needs to attend to the Iraqi dilemma, something it must do; for not to challenge the status quo in Iraq permits Saddam Husayn again to challenge the status quo in the region around him.
Shafeeq N. Ghabra, a professor of political science at Kuwait University, is currently director of the Kuwait Information Office in Washington D.C. His most recent book is Isra'il wa'l-‘Arab: Min Sira` al-Qadaya ila Salam al-Masalih (Beirut: Mu'asassat ad-Dirasat li'n-Nashr, 1997.)
1 Muhammad Jabir al-Ansari, Takwin al-‘Arab as-Siyasi wa-Maghaza ad-Dawla al-Qutriya (Beirut: Center for Arab Unity Studies, 1994), pp. 105-108.
2 Sa‘d al-Bazzaz, Ramad al-Hurub: Asrar ma Bad Hurub al-Khalij, 2d ed. (Beirut: al-Mu'assasa al-Ahliya li'n-Nashr wa't-Tawzi‘, 1995), p. 22.
3 Ibid., p. 37.
4 Hani al-Fakiki, Awkar al-Hazima: Tajrubati fi Hizb al-Ba'th al-‘Iraqi (The Den of Defeat: My Experience in the Iraqi Baath Party) (London: Riad Alrayyes, 1993), pp. 120-21, 126.
5 Fakiki, Awkar al-Hazima, p. 134.
6 Bazzaz, Ramad al-Hurub, p. 29.
7Shafeeq Ghabra, "Kuwait and the Political Future of Iraq Al-Kuwayt wa-Mustaqbal al-‘Iraq al-Siyasi," Shu'un Ijtima'iya, 58 Summer 1998, pp. 9-35; idem, "Kuwait and Iraq: The Borders (al-Kuwayt wal Iraq: Qadiyyat al-Hudud," Shu'un Ijtima'iya, Winter 1997, pp. 59-81.
8 George Church, "The Borgias of Baghdad," Time (Canadian ed.), Aug. 28, 1995, pp. 22-23.
9 Edmund Ghareeb, The Kurdish Question in Iraq (Syracuse, N.Y.: Syracuse University Press, 1981), p. 2.
10 Elie Kedourie, The Chatham House Version and other Middle­Eastern Studies (New York: Praeger Publishers, Inc. 1970), pp. 236-282.
11 Michael M. Gunter, The Kurds of Iraq (New York: St. Martin's Press, 1992), pp. 9-10.
12 "The Middle East: The Kurds—A Regional Issue," Dec. 1995, at http://www.unhc~ch/refworld/country/writenet/wrikurd.htm.
13 Samir al-Khalil [pseud. of Kanan Makiya], Republic of Fear (New York: Pantheon Books, 1989), p. xiii.
14 Michael M. Gunter, The Kurds of Iraq: Tragedy and Hope (New York: St. Martin's Press, 1992), pp. 53-54.
15 Iraq Country Report on Human Rights Practices for 1998, sect. 1.9 (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of State, Feb. 26, 1996) at http://www.state.gov/www/global/human_rights/1998_hrp_report/iraq.html.
16 The Report of the U.N. Secretary General (New York: United Nations, 1997), S/1997/685.
17 ‘Abd al-Karim al-Arzi, Mushkilat al-Hukm fi'l-‘Iraq (London: n.p., 1991), pp. 235-54.
18 Quoted in Arzi, Mushkilat al-Hukm fi'l-‘Iraq, p. 259.
19 Ibid., p. 271; see also Yitzhak Nakash, The Shi‘is of Iraq (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1994), p. 278. The Nakash study, it bears noting, was translated into Arabic and published in Damascus in 1996, even though it is by a scholar of Israeli origins.
20 Interview with ‘Abd al-Majid al-Khu'i, president of the Imam Abu al-Kassem Khoey Charitable Foundation, London, Sept. 1996. Abdul Majid is the son of the late Abul Qasim al-Khoey. Khoey¹s older brother was assassinated by Iraqi intelligence.
21 Elaine Sciolino, The Outlaw State: Saddam Husayn¹s Quest for Power and the Gulf Crisis (New York: John Wiley and Sons, 1991), p. 95.
22 The absent messiah, who appears as a savior, is a central concept of Shi'ism. No one may usurp the duties of the messiah - but this is exactly what the wilayet al-faqih is supposed to do. Thus does Khomeini's wilayat al-faqih challenge the idea of the absent messiah by, in his absence, putting his powers in the hands of the faqih. This point was made by Imam Abu'l-Qasim al-Khu'i, the leading cleric in Iraq until 1992, and by his successor Muhammad as-Sadr, who was assassinated in 1998 by the Iraqi intelligence. On this theological basis, they both opposed the wilayet al-faqih.
23 Hasan al-A‘lawi, Aswar at-Tin (Beirut: Dar al-Kanuz al-Adabiya, 1995), pp. 16-19. It is worth mentioning that Iraq did not stand against India's attempts to annex Kashmir or Morocco's attempts to annex western Sahara.
24 Ibid., pp. 23-24.
25 Interviews with ‘Abd al-Husayn Sha‘ban, president of the London-based Iraqi Human Rights Commission, London, Sept. 1997; and with Walid Khadduri, editor of the Middle East Economic Survey (Jordan), Jan. 1996.
26 At the time Iraq claimed that Kuwait was a province of Iraq and opposed its independence. But in 1965 it signed an agreement of recognition of Kuwait and its independence. This agreement was signed between the prime minister of Iraq, Ahmad Hasan al-Baki, and prime minister of Kuwait, Sheihk Sabah as-Salem as-Sabah and lasted until 1990.
27 Interviews with Sha‘ban and Khadduri.
28 See Khalil, Republic of Fear,

Iraq Culture

CULTURE

In ancient times the land area now known as modern Iraq was almost equivalent to Mesopotamia, the land between the two rivers Tigris and Euphrates (in Arabic, the Dijla and Furat, respectively), the Mesopotamian plain was called the Fertile Crescent. This region is known as the Cradle of Civilization; was the birthplace of the varied civilizations that moved us from prehistory to history.

An advanced civilization flourished in this region long before that of Egypt, Greece, and Rome, for it was here in about 4000BC that the Sumerian culture flourished . The civilized life that emerged at Sumer was shaped by two conflicting factors: the unpredictability of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, which at any time could unleash devastating floods that wiped out entire peoples, and the extreme richness of the river valleys, caused by centuries-old deposits of soil. Thus, while the river valleys of southern Mesopotamia attracted migrations of neighboring peoples and made possible, for the first time in history, the growing of surplus food, the volatility of the rivers necessitated a form of collective management to protect the marshy, low-lying land from flooding.

As surplus production increased and as collective management became more advanced, a process of urbanization evolved and Sumerian civilization took root. The people of the Tigris and the Euphrates basin, the ancient Sumerians, using the fertile land and the abundant water supply of the area, developed sophisticated irrigation systems and created what was probably the first cereal agriculture as well as the earliest writing, cuneiform - a way of arranging impression stamped on clay by the wedge-like section of chopped-off reed stylus into wet clay. Through writing, the Sumerians were able to pass on complex agricultural techniques to successive generations; this led to marked improvements in agricultural production.

Writing evolved to keep track of property. Clay envelopes marked with the owner's rolled seal were used to hold tokens for goods, the tokens within recording a specific transaction. Later on, the envelope and tokens were discarded and symbols scratched into clay recorded transactions such as 2 bunches of wheat or 7 cows. As writing evolved, pictures gave way to lines pressed into clay with a wedge tip; this allowed a scribe to make many different types of strokes without changing his grip. By 3,000 BC, the script evolved into a full syllabic alphabet. The commerce of the times is recorded in great depth. Double entry accounting practices were found to be a part of the records.

This remarkable innovation has been used to this day, as a standard for record keeping. It was the custom for all to pay for what they needed at a fair price. Royalty was not exception. The king may have had an edge on getting a "better deal", but it wasn't the law as it was in Egypt where the Pharaoh was the "living god" and as such, owned all things. It seems that everyone had the right to bargain fairly for his or her goods. Unlike their Egyptian neighbors, these people were believers in private property, and the kings were very much answerable to the citizens. In Egypt, all things, including the people and property, were owned by the pharaoh. Sumerians invented the wheel and the first plow in 3700 BC.

Sumerians developed a math system based on the numeral 60, which is the basis of time in the modern world. Sumerian society was "Matriarchal" and women had a highly respected place in society. Banking originated in Mesopotamia (Babylonia) out of the activities of temples and palaces, which provided safe places for the storage of valuables. Initially deposits of grain were accepted and later other goods including cattle, agricultural implements, and precious metals.

Another important Sumerian legacy was the recording of literature. Poetry and epic literature were produced. The most famous Sumerian epic and the one that has survived in the most nearly complete form is the epic of Gilgamesh. The story of Gilgamesh, who actually was king of the city-state of Uruk in approximately 2700 BC, is a moving story of the ruler's deep sorrow at the death of his friend Enkidu, and of his consequent search for immortality. Other central themes of the story are a devastating flood and the tenuous nature of man's existence, and ended by meeting a wise and ancient man who had survived a great flood by building an ark.

Land was cultivated for the first time, early calendars were used and the first written alphabet was invented here. Its bountiful land, fresh waters, and varying climate contributed to the creation of deep-rooted civilization that had fostered humanity from its affluent fountain since thousand of years. Sumerian states were believed to be under the rule of a local god or goddess, and a bureaucratic system of the priesthood arose to oversee the ritualistic and complex religion. High Priests represented the gods on earth, one of their jobs being to discern the divine will.

A favorite method of divination was reading sheep or goat entrails. The priests ruled from their ziggurats, high rising temples of sunbaked brick with outside staircases leading to the shrine on top. The Sumerian gods personified local elements and natural forces. The Sumerians worshiped anu, the supreme god of heaven, Enlil, god of water, and Ea, god of magic and creator of man. The Sumerians held the belief that a sacred ritual marriage between the ruler and Inanna, goddess of love and fertility brought rich harvests.

Eventually, the Sumerians would have to battle another peoples, the Akkadians, who migrated up from the Arabian Peninsula. The Akkadians were a Semitic people, that is, they spoke a language drawn from a family of languages called Semitic languages; a Semitic languages include Hebrew, Arabic, Assyrian, and Babylonian (the term "Semite" is a modern designation taken from the Hebrew Scriptures; Shem was a son of Noah and the nations descended from Shem are the Semites). When the two peoples clashed, the Sumerians gradually lost control over the city-states they had so brilliantly created and fell under the hegemony of the Akkadian kingdom, which was based in Akkad (Sumerian Agade).

This great capital of the largest empire humans had ever seen up until that point that was later to become Babylon, which was the commercial and cultural center of the Middle East for almost two thousand years.

In 2340 BC, the great Akkadian military leader , Sargon, conquered Sumer and built an Akkadian empire stretching over most of the Sumerian city-states and extending as far away as Lebanon. Sargon based his empire in the city of Akkad, which became the basis of the name of his people.

But Sargon's ambitious empire lasted for only a blink of an eye in the long time spans of Mesopotamian history. In 2125 BC, the Sumerian city of Ur in southern Mesopotamia rose up in revolt, and the Akkadian empire fell before a renewal of Sumerian city-states.

Mesopotamia is the suspected spot known as the "Garden of Eden." Ur of the Chaldees, and that's where Abraham came from, (that's just north of the traditional site of the Garden of Eden, about twenty-five miles northeast of Eridu, at present Mughair), was a great and famous Sumerian city, dating from this time. Predating the Babylonian by about 2,000 years, was Noah, who lived in Fara, 100 miles southeast of Babylon (from Bab-ili, meaning "Gate of God"). The early Assyrians, some of the earliest people there, were known to be warriors, so the first wars were fought there, and the land has been full of wars ever since. The Assyrians were in the northern part of Mesopotamia and the Babylonians more in the middle and southern part.

The Raw Deer

Russian people eating raw meat
People of Russian North know that eating food raw, as it is, or better to say as it was in nature, can be very beneficial to your health.

The only problem that the only food during long polar nights available in raw state in these lands is meat and blood - the flesh of the freshly killed deers they breed. So, they eat it as it is - raw and uncooked. People say, that this is the only source of vitamins, especially vitamin C for them, and due to this habit they maintain to survive in severe Northern climates for hundreds of years.

Children participate in such bloody lunches since the early age and perceive the taste of raw flesh and blood in no other words as “Tasty! Delicious! Awesome!” or even “The best thing to eat in whole life”.

The Mughal Empire

The great grandson of Tamerlane, Babar, who on his mother's side was descended from the famous Genghiz Khan, came to India in 1526 at the request of an Indian governor who sought Babar's help in his fight against Ibrahim Lodi, the last head of the Delhi Sultanate. Babar defeated Lodi at Panipat, not far from Delhi, and so came to establish the Mughal Empire in India. Babar ruled until 1530, and was succeeded by his son Humayun, who gave the empire its first distinctive features. But it is Humayun's son, Akbar the Great, who is conventionally described as the glory of the empire. Akbar reigned from 1556 to 1605, and extended his empire as far to the west as Afghanistan, and as far south as the Godavari river. Akbar, though a Muslim, is remembered as a tolerant ruler, and he even started a new faith, Din-i-Ilahi, which was an attempt to blend Islam with Hinduism, Christianity, Jainism, and other faiths. He won over the Hindus by naming them to important military and civil positions, by conferring honors upon them, and by marrying a Hindu princess.

Rejoicing at birth of Prince Salim (Jahangir). Mughal, c. 1590.

(Click for a large image view.)

Akbar was succeeded by his son Salim, who took the title of Jahangir. In his reign (1605-1627), Jahangir consolidated the gains made by his father. The courtly culture of the Mughals flourished under his rule; like his great grand-father, Babar, he had an interest in gardens, and Mughal painting probably reached its zenith in Jahangir's time. Jahangir married Nur Jahan, "Light of the World", in 1611. Shortly after his death in October 1627, his son, Shah Jahan, succeeded to the throne. He inherited a vast and rich empire; and at mid-century this was perhaps the greatest empire in the world, exhibiting a degree of centralized control rarely matched before. Shah Jahan left behind an extraordinarily rich architectural legacy, which includes the Taj Mahal and the old city of Delhi, Shahjahanabad. As he apparently lay dying in 1658, a war of succession broke out between his four sons. The two principal claimants to the throne were Dara Shikoh, who was championed by the those nobles and officers who were committed to the eclectic policies of previous rulers, and Aurangzeb, who was favored by powerful men more inclined to turn the Mughal Empire into an Islamic state subject to the laws of the Sharia. It is Aurangzeb who triumphed, and though the Mughal Empire saw yet further expansion in the early years of his long reign (1658-1707), by the later part of the seventeenth century the empire was beginning to disintegrate.

Aurangzeb remains a highly controversial figure, and no monarch has been more subjected to the communalist reading of Indian history. He is admired by Muslim historians for enforcing the law of the Sharia and for disavowing the policies pursued by Akbar; among Hindus, laymen and historians alike, he is remembered as a Muslim fanatic and bigot. In the event, Aurangzeb's far-flung empire eventually eluded his grasp, and considerable disaffection appears to have been created among the peasantry. After Aurangzeb's death in 1707, many of his vassals established themselves as sovereign rulers, and so began the period of what are called "successor states". The Mughal Empire survived until 1857, but its rulers were, after 1803, pensioners of the East India Company. The last emperor, the senile Bahadur Shah Zafar, was put on trial for allegedly leading the rebels of the 1857 mutiny and for fomenting sedition. He was convicted and transported to Rangoon, to spend the remainder of his life on alien soil.

The Mughal Empire, 1526 to 1707
Source: F. Robinson, Atlas of the Islamic World since 1500 (Oxford, 19822), p.59.

CULTURE OF INDIA

The term culture refers to a state of intellectual development or manners. The social and political forces that influence the growth of a human being is defined as culture.

Indian culture is rich and diverse and as a result unique in its very own way. Our manners, way of communicating with one another, etc are one of the important components of our culture. Even though we have accepted modern means of living, improved our lifestyle, our values and beliefs still remain unchanged. A person can change his way of clothing, way of eating and living but the rich values in a person always remains unchanged because they are deeply rooted within our hearts, mind, body and soul which we receive from our culture.

Indian culture treats guests as god and serves them and takes care of them as if they are a part and parcel of the family itself. Even though we don’t have anything to eat, the guests are never left hungry and are always looked after by the members of the family. Elders and the respect for elders is a major component in Indian culture. Elders are the driving force for any family and hence the love and respect for elders comes from within and is not artificial. An individual takes blessings from his elders by touching their feet. Elders drill and pass on the Indian culture within us as we grow.

“Respect one another” is another lesson that is taught from the books of Indian culture. All people are alike and respecting one another is ones duty. In foreign countries the relation between the boss and the employee is like a master and slave and is purely monetary whereas in Indian culture the relation between the boss and the employee is more like homely relations unlike foreign countries.

Helpful nature is another striking feature in our Indian culture. Right from our early days of childhood we are taught to help one another in need of help and distress. If not monetary then at least in kind or non-monetary ways. Indian culture tells us to multiply and distribute joy and happiness and share sadness and pain. It tells us that by all this we can develop co-operation and better living amongst ourselves and subsequently make this world a better place to live in.

Even though India is a country of various religions and caste our culture tells us just one thing 'phir bhi dil hai Hindustani '.

The History of India's culture: Ancient civilization in India reveals marvelous facts about our heritage. It is a eye opener as to how kingdoms ruled and how people went about life in a logical way. Though medieval, it is actually amazing to find how people transacted and went about building dams and tended to the chief occupation which was agriculture. Dance and rituals were always a part of Indian culture and this was the chief mode of entertainment.

Indian culture is also about respecting elders, honoring heroes and cherishing love. It is a land of aspirations, achievements and self reliance. Indian culture has a very high level of tolerance and hence the advent of so many external cultures was not restricted. Adaptation to any culture or embracing a religion was always the democratic culture. Indian history is about war heroes during Indus valley civilization and the initial time when currency was coined. Indian history talks a lot about self reliance especially in terms of food and agricultural produce. This was the great effort put in by the farmers and support received through irrigation. The modern agriculture also shows a lot of indigenous methods of preserving the produce. The Chola dynasty, the great King Emperor Ashoka and the secular era of Emperor Akbar will always be green in our memory. Several books are written on the rich Indian culture wherein the saints preserved the Vedas and scriptures.

There are shlokas and mantras i.e. chants that can evoke positive energy and revoke enthusiasm in life. The rich culture of yoga as a part of life and the goodness of ayurveda has now got an universal lifestyle approach. Our roots are strong and despite the westernization and access to technology, the distinct Indianness is still maintained whilst celebrating Diwali or observing the Shravan fast. This is also believed to be a land of Lord Rama which is Ayodhya or the birthplace of Sri Krishna is considered as Mathura. The birth of Sikh religion and the reverence felt by all Indians is still intact. Indians are extremely secular and especially in the metros there is seamless blending of Indians during Xmas and Id.


Attires in Indian culture : Ethnic charm is exuded in simple outfits in India. The tropical climate is well adapted to the range of muslins and cottons. The mixed variety in cotton goes from viscose, polycot and also cotton silk which has a sheen of its own. Attires are very much about the region and climate. The Himalayan costume is suited for the environment where the dress is a blanket wrap in red and black secured with a ethnic pin. The ornaments or jewelry is a festive adornment with a big red bindi to complete the outfit.

The sari happens to be the most versatile drape with its amazing styles of draping and design. The sari is the traditional dress of India which also modifies as per material, drape and style with each region. This has also gone up to international drape style followed by ranking designers on the ramp shows. The chungari sari of the south has the tie and dye pattern that finds its counterpart in the bandhi print of Gujarat. There are embroidery types that seem to be the intrinsic talent of certain regions.
The cardigans and shawls are hand-woven from the North especially the Himachal and Arunchal belt. This displays the rich handicraft culture of India. The modernization in winter wear is seen with details like pockets, zippers, blends of fabrics and easy feel wear. The gota work of Rajashtan and Punjab is skilled golden zari strips woven or fixed on to the main garment like a sari or the dupatta. The most comfortable dress is the salwar kameez that radiates Indianness and is also comfortable.

The south Indian Kerala set-saree is the beautiful print in cream and golden which can be teamed with colored blouses. The navvari sari or the nine yard drape of Mahrasthra is usually found in leaf green color that is symbolic of the newly married bride. The colors also seem to be in mauve, red or blues and the sarees happen as Narayan peth, paithani and various other Belgaum prints.
The padavai is the ghagra choli for young girls in the south that is incomplete without the gold jewelry especially the kaashi gold chain and jhumki earrings. This is also modified as ghagra choli is simple cottons for daily wear in the villages and designed as the lehenga choli in designer wear in the metros.


Values in India : Tradition in India is about values that transcend down generations automatically. These are genetic traits and simplicity is the main ingredient. Ancient culture believed in a lot of dogmas and rituals that can be termed as false beliefs and Indians are an intelligent lot to traverse these paths and modify the social requirements. Indians are highly flexible in the sense they would like to imbibe the changes dictated by western influence and yet clearly affirm their belief in traditions.

It is customary to respect elders and touch their feet as to seek their blessings. Occasions or festivals demand a lot of participation in terms of rangoli drawing, diyas and an array of yummy treats made in the authentic variety as per the caste and geography. Hindu rituals are a lot about song and dance and each family has a natural way to adjust to these formats. It is a ritual to pray to the Goddess of learning Ma Saraswathi to achieve success. Similarly business people always insist on drawing the Swastika which marks prosperity and worship the Goddess of wealth.

With the advent of technology and women emancipation there is a trend to mingle free with the western concepts of dress, belief, work and also get into a secular concept. But one can feel a distinct Indianness and most of our brethren abroad miss their homeland. Indians all over the world are known for their hospitality and high level of tolerance. Their adaptation power is high and hence they are able to scale heights in the international arena. Putting oneself on the global map, Indians are seeking new vistas of communicating their beliefs and tradition. The gift of health and well being through yoga and meditation is a great source of Vedas in the rich Hindu tradition which has actually benefited the world.

The values in India is about living life with a zest and observing the belief that there is one God prevailing despite so many religions.
Respecting elders, understanding cross culture traditions, free mingling to accommodate tolerance, staying interested in rural welfare are the values of India. The artifacts, cuisine handicrafts, attire and lifestyle of the rural folks is still followed and preserved by Indians.


Family Culture of India : Family is about joy and sharing. In India, the family culture is all about love and patience. A girl weds into a family and adjusts herself seamlessly to the rituals, routine and cuisine. Of late, one can see a lot of love marriages i.e. cross border mingling which is also being accepted by the elders in the family. Association with religious beliefs and sects is also followed by families as many families believe in a particular Guru or saint who guides them in their spiritual path. Families are also getting nuclear owing to independent lifestyle preference and also the concept where in both husband and wife is working and has demanding careers. This is quite common in metros where families are independent in their upbringing and yet love and respect the elders who reside separately. The earlier homes housed themselves together in very large families where one can actually see three or four generations put up together.

Certain families observe a matriarchal concept i.e. the groom resides in the house of the bride or also follows a tradition as per the bride’s ancestors. Generally India is patriarchal in the sense the children get the surname of the father and the wife changes her surname to follow that of the husbands. It is also a tradition in certain families that the wife changes her maiden name but again this concept is also changing. Indian families are very accommodating and willing to accept change. It is a concept to observe the karva chauth or the raksha bandhan with great aplomb. There is an occasion for gifting and seeking the blessings of elders. It is important to respect and hold certain family traditions which are unique in terms of cooking, rituals and beliefs. Families give a lot of importance to lighting the diya in the evening and also each person in family has a habit of doing the puja in his own way.

Metros are also seeing a lot of family value in celebrating birthdays and anniversaries by observing the rituals and also entertaining outdoors. The Indian culture has imbibed the right mix of western influence and yet maintaining the ethnic family tradition. There is more love in every family while blowing candles on the birthday cake and also lighting the diya to observe an Aarti for the birthday person.


Dance forms in India : Folk music and tradition is the rich heritage of modern India. Despite the advent of technology, open communication and developments in all fields, the area of fine arts still gives a proud picture of our India. Dance is a part of celebration and is the intrinsic part of Indian glory. There are folk dances which are distinct and distinguished as per the geography. This also calls for a lot of make up talents and attire which only enhances the beauty of the dance and song.

Indian dance forms have traveled internationally and there are many academies of Indian dance forms abroad. The participation is a great impetus to the tradition of India and a boon for the NRI’s who love associating themselves with Indian culture. Bharatnatyam is the most renowned form of dance from the South. Kept alive by sincere efforts of traditional gurus and the allegiance of many students, this is a dance form which is almost a religion to many who revere it.

The Bharatanatyam dance is usually done with bent knees in a forward position and has the opportunity of display the Nav Ras or the emotions. The make up style and attire is very typical and hence allows a lot of expression. Kuchupidi is a characteristic dance form again from the south. Kathakali and has a lot to do like enacting a play and the use of mask, gear and get up. There are many schools that impart training and seeking this form of dance knowledge is a journey by itself.
The ghumar dance of Rajashtan is a lot about rotation and typical palm movements. The ghungrus and the ghungat impart more style to this type of dance. The Lavani of Maharasthra is now being revoked by sincere people and the type of dance is now again getting traditional in its concept without being polluted by other influences. The gharba dance which was a form of raas by the gopis and Krishna is now being followed in all parts of India. There is enough commercialization in the 9 day festival in metros and the participation is done on a wide scale.

The Manipuri and Oddissi dance is very ethnic in its concept. There are a number of folk dances which still happen in the villages where the authentic lifestyle of rural India is displayed. Dance is the main form of artistic entertainment along with folk songs and other influences that is brought in by cinema. Acknowledging the subtle distinguishing points, the essence of Indian dance form is pure and unique.