Victims of Arabization

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Wahab Mashoor Muham­mad and his sons © 2002 Christo­pher Allbritton

BINISLAWA DISPLACED PERSONS CAMP, Iraqi Kur­dis­tan — The day is hot, damn hot. It’s the mid­dle of July, and the air is dry and thirsty with the ther­mome­ter bump­ing against the 45 degree Cel­sius mark. Lit­tle dust dev­ils curl up around my heels as I walk. Yet inside a tent that 11 peo­ple call home, the water is cold and refresh­ing and the hos­pi­tal­ity is gen­uine.
Abdul­lah Salam, my guide from the Kur­dis­tan Demo­c­ra­tic Party, and I have come here to Bin­is­lawa where thou­sands of tent homes are set up and tens of thou­sands of peo­ple wait for relief from … some­one. As we approach one tent, Wahab Mashoor Muham­mad, 49, greets us and wel­comes us into his home.
It’s not much, to be hon­est. The floor is poured con­crete and the walls are cin­derblocks packed with mud to hold them in place. Poles sup­port the can­vas “roof” which is all that pro­tects them from the winds and the cold of win­ter. There is no heat or run­ning water. But it’s clean, and Wahab’s wife and daugh­ters arrange pil­lows for us to sit on. Another daugh­ter brings me a glass of water from a plas­tic cooler.
He’s been here since July 18, 2001, almost a year to the day that I visit. He’s from Kaz­na­far, a vil­lage out­side Kirkuk, the largest Kur­dish city in Iraq, where he was a taxi dri­ver. He was forced to leave his home with a few blan­kets, some kitchen items and his fam­ily when he refused to change his nation­al­ity from Kur­dish to Arab under a pro­gram called “Ara­biza­tion” that Sad­dam Hussein’s regime has been engag­ing in since the 1970s. In other parts of the world, it would be called eth­nic cleans­ing.
“I’m a Kurd,” he says. “How can I be an Arab or change my nation­al­ity? It’s wrong for a man to deny his nation­al­ity.“
Ara­biza­tion has been going on since the 1920s, ever since the King­dom of Iraq was cre­ated out of the ashes of the Ottoman Empire by the United King­dom. But it was inten­si­fied after 1975 after the Alger­ian Agree­ment between Iran and Iraq, under which the Shah cut his sup­port for Kur­dish rebels in Iraq. Kurds are forcibly evicted from their homes in Kirkuk, Mosul and other oil-rich regions of north­ern Iraq unless they agree to have their reg­is­tered nation­al­ity changed to Arab. If they refuse, which many do, they are expelled from their homes, usu­ally with only a few hours to gather their pos­ses­sions and turned north, to the Kur­dish enclave in the north. Arab fam­i­lies are lured from the south to the vacant Kur­dish homes in the north with money, land and pickup trucks, all con­fis­cated from the dis­placed Kurds. It is esti­mated that more than 8,000 fam­i­lies live in Bin­is­lawa. That’s more than 50,000 peo­ple.
NATO went to war in 1998 – 99 in Kosovo and Yugoslavia to pre­vent this kind of stuff.
But chang­ing his eth­nic­ity isn’t all Wahab was expected to do. The Iraqis demanded he join the elite Jerusalem Brigade, which now holds posi­tions about 20 km out­side of Arbil. So named because Sad­dam has said this fight­ing force will be the one to lib­er­ate Jerusalem from the Jews, the Kurds say that the road to Jerusalem runs through Kur­dis­tan. Wahab was being told he must be pre­pared to make war on his own peo­ple.
Since he refused all this, he was expelled, along with his wife, his mother and his eight chil­dren. Now they all live in a tent, and they might be con­sid­ered the lucky ones.

  • In 1983, 8,000 Kurds were “dis­ap­peared” by the Iraqi regime.
  • In 1987 – 88, 180,000 peo­ple dis­ap­peared or were exe­cuted under the Anfal Cam­paign. “Anfal” is a prin­ci­ple from the Koran and it allows the loot­ing of a non-Muslim pop­u­la­tion when Mus­lims con­quer them.
  • In 1988, Hal­abja became a night­mare when Sad­dam used chem­i­cal weapons against women and chil­dren, killing 5,000 peo­ple in about 15 min­utes. More than 10,000 peo­ple were injured and the region suf­fers from lin­ger­ing health prob­lems. In all, more than 200 vil­lages were gassed and no one is sure how many peo­ple died. There have been no stud­ies on the after-effects of the chem­i­cals on the pop­u­la­tion or the environment.

So, Wahab is under­stand­ably anx­ious to see Sad­dam go. “If Sad­dam is over­thrown, I would run back to Kirkuk!” says Wahab. “My fam­ily has been liv­ing there for 300 years.“
He may get his wish come February.

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