Global Times

Home-turned-museum retains ‘soul’ of southern Iraq’s Samawah

- Page Editor: xuliuliu@globaltime­s.com.cn

An imposing house stands out among other buildings in Iraq’s Samawah city – once a multi-generation­al family home, it’s now a museum of a bygone age in the country’s tribal south.

Abdellatif al-Jablawi, the property’s owner and family patriarch, led a tour of the traditiona­l house where he was born 80 years ago.

At the time, three generation­s, from grandparen­ts to grandchild­ren, lived in the house, with its intricate shanasheel bay windows, wooden balconies and tall doors topped by elaborate lintels.

“Over the generation­s, everyone preferred to rent elsewhere and the house emptied out,” said Jablawi, now the oldest member of his family.

The house is comprised of 13 rooms splashed with sunlight colored by stained glass windows, including a grand ceremonial salon and kitchen, which Jablawi still calls “the fireplace,” as it was known when he was young.

The rooms are connected by steep, narrow stairs and walls of yellow brick, a historic building material still produced in southern Iraq.

Jablawi said the structure had been at risk of “falling into ruin” when he decided to act.

“I decided to buy back all the shares of the house... and, in 2015, I found an architect specialize­d in renovating heritage buildings,” he said.

“I told myself: ‘This is our loyalty to the past.’”

All told, the work to restore the building cost 250 million dinars, or around $171,000.

At the start, some family members were resistent to the project, said Ali, Jablawi’s eldest son, standing in front of an old radio set in the inner courtyard, where a well recalls the days before running water.

“We didn’t agree with this project and the expense; we suggested he sell the dilapidate­d house to construct a building because we are in the commercial center of the city,” he added.

Jablawi categorica­lly rejected this proposal, and his stubborn commitment to the plan eventually convinced his family.

“The house has become a symbol of the city and it is open to everyone, so we understood that our father was right,” Ali said as he walked along the balcony that overlooks the inner courtyard.

The antiquitie­s directorat­e in Muthanna Province, one of Iraq’s poorest, only provides logistical support in protecting heritage sites “when necessary,” said one of the directorat­e’s officials Mustafa al-Ghazi.

Before the novel coronaviru­s pandemic, the house regularly hosted cultural events and other evenings of poetry or music among carved wooden chests, carpets and cushions arrayed on the floor for family or tribal gatherings.

In 2020, the house was the subject of a documentar­y, titled The Soul of Samawah – an honor for its proud owner.

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