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Angelina Jolie Visits Baghdad Refugees
UNHCR Goodwill Ambassador Angelina Jolie visited Iraq today to visit some of the Iraqis who have displace because of the war. The United Nations High Coucil on Refugees says there are hundreds of thousands of displaced Iraqis.
Angelina spent a day in Baghdad, visiting a makeshift settlement for internally displaced people in the Chikook suburb of north-west Baghdad where she met four families displaced from the district of Abu Ghraib, located to the west of Baghdad, and from the western suburbs of the capital.
Angelina said, "This is a moment where things seem to be improving on the ground, but Iraqis need a lot of support and help to rebuild their lives."
Angelina listened to many families' stories. Families complained that the war has made educating their children impossible. They also cannot pay for needed medical treatments.
"They are right to feel that it is not fair," said Jolie, who told refugees she would return again to Iraq. "I want to come back and find you in a better place and in a different situation. We hope that UNHCR and the government will support you in getting a piece of land. You need help not because you are poor, but because you are the future of Iraq."
This is Angelina's third trip to Iraq.
Posted on July 23, 2009
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Baghdad's Antique Dealers Fall on Hard Times
Baghdad's antique markets are full of fabulous treasures at reasonable prices, but because of the unstable security situation there aren't any tourists to buy their wares.
Recent history provides rich sources for Baghdad's antique market. After Iraq's 1990 invasion of Kuwait, goods from the neighboring country's wealthy homes and its national museum — famed for Islamic art and Quranic manuscripts — were hauled back here. More treasures came with the looting of Iraq's own national museum and Saddam Hussein's palaces in the lawless days after the American-led invasion of 2003.
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Some of the best evidence of better days can be found by climbing the shaky stairs to al-Khafaf's shop on a street along the River Tigris in Baghdad's old quarter. Sitting under a coat of dust on the shop's floor are silver-plated brass boxes in which wealthy women kept their toiletries and engraved water pitchers that the rich used to wash guests' hands after feasts.
Also on offer are floral-shaped silver candlesticks fashioned by Baghdad's renowned Jewish craftsmen, members of a religious community that went back more than two millennia and numbered upwards of 100,000 in the 1930s. Now it has been reduced to just a few people by the discrimination of ultra-nationalist governments and the lure of living in Israel.
"The Jewish craftsmen of Baghdad were at their best with silver and gold," said al-Khafaf, explaining a one-time informal division of specialization among artisans of different religious communities. "Muslims, on the other hand, were best with brass," said the 48-year-old, who has a day job as a veterinarian.
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In the downtown antique shops, there also are fine china tea sets bearing images of Faisal II, the last of Iraq's kings. Faisal II was murdered along with close family members in a 1958 military coup that heralded the start of years of political instability, genocide and human rights abuses. Complete sets can sell for $1,000.
Until the security situation improves and the global economy improves, this fabulous source of antiques will remain largely untapped.
Posted on July 19, 2009
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