It’s Springtime in Baghdad
| Monday April
28, 2003
Nadia Mahadeed, Arab News
War Correspondent BAGHDAD, 28 April 2003 — The blooming flowers and tall palm trees
in the thousands of nurseries along the roads of Baghdad are competing
for the attention of residents and visitors, away from the sights of
destruction. They are indications of the new life that is about to begin
for the Baghdadis and Iraqis in general. Abu Adnan, who runs a nursery in Al-Azamiyah in northern Baghdad,
talks about his love for the profession his father and grandfather have
practiced before him. “We don’t only sell flowers but we are also
specialists in landscaping,” he said. He doesn’t own the land where
his nursery is but rents it from the district council, which in turn
seized it from its owner — like many other properties in the past 35
years — whom he expects to return soon and claim ownership. Like many in his situation, Abu Adnan intends to talk with the
original owners of the land about the future of his nursery. They might
agree to continue to lease the land to him, or they might want it back.
Either way, Abu Adnan has no intention of abandoning his profession; it
is the only thing he knows how to do. There are about a dozen nurseries on the Al-Azamiyah road, each with
more than a thousand plants and palm trees. Selling the dates from the
palm trees is another source of income for the farmers. Not far from
them, in Al-Qurai’at area on the banks of River Tigris, is another
group of nurseries. There I met 46-year-old Sabah Abdullah who is angry
at the militarization his society has undergone in recent years.
“During my break from military service, which was no more than ten
days, I would hurry to spend time in the nursery among the flowers and
greenery to forget the sounds of cannon and gunfire,” he said. He takes good care of his plants, watering them from the river, which
is better for flowers and plants, according to his neighbor Abbas Al-Amiri
from Al-Amiri nursery. “Tigris water is better than the tap water from
the tanks,” he said. As for the red sand that covers Baghdad when the
seasonal khamasin winds blow, he said it does the plants no harm. “In
fact, it protects them from insects, because we can’t afford to buy
the pesticides or the proper soil.” The environmental effects of the missiles are another matter.
“It’s still too early to determine the extent of the damage to the
soil and the plants,” he said. “At least the water wasn’t cut off
as in 1991, so we were able to take care of our plants and trees
throughout this war,” said Abdullah. Al-Qurai’at is one of the most famous districts in Baghdad, and its
nurseries, almost a thousand of them, line the river on both banks,
creating a special atmosphere. It is bound to become a tourist
attraction again, especially when its famous restaurants reopen,
offering their specialty, almaskoof fish. However, it will take time
before these nurseries return to their full potential after being
neglected for more than two months. The Iraqis are still suffering emotionally, psychologically and
physically from the effects of the war and have just begun to reclaim
their lives. “Our children still can’t sleep without tossing and
turning all night, our dreams have turned to nightmares; we are still in
rehabilitation from Saddam’s rule,” said a gardener from Mustafa
nursery. Kazim, the owner of another nursery, thinks that even his
flowers seem liberated from the shackles of the former president.
“Believe it or not, since the disappearance of Saddam, my flowers have
been blooming as if they are happy about what happened,” he said.
“Flowers feel what the people who take care of them feel, and they are
happy because we are.” He seems to forget that it is probably spring
that has caused his flowers to bloom. Another thing that could be adding
to his happiness is that, with the fall of Saddam’s regime, he
doesn’t have to worry about his bills for now. |
Copyright 2014 Q Madp www.OurWarHeroes.org