Kuwait Times

Iraq’s top musicians play on despite unpaid wages

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In a dusty Baghdad dance studio, conductor Mohammed Amin Ezzat tries to fire up the musicians of Iraq’s National Symphony Orchestra, whose enthusiasm has been dampened by eight months without pay. An ageing air conditione­r fights to beat back the summer heat in the cramped space at the capital’s School of Music and Ballet as the 57-year-old maestro leads the group through a rehearsal of Modest Mussorgsky’s “Night on Bald Mountain”.

The shaggy-haired Ezzat and the 40 musicians surroundin­g him are gearing up to perform at Baghdad’s National Theatre on Saturday, but the group’s morale is at an all-time low. The ensemble has lost more than half its members since the start of the year, when the government issued a directive barring state employees with two jobs from receiving two salaries.

The anti-corruption measure was suggested by the World Bank and should affect only about a third of the orchestra’s musicians, but because of delays in carrying out the reform wages have been withheld from the entire group. “The orchestra is in great danger,” Ezzat said. “Some don’t have enough money to come, and others are disappoint­ed by the impact of politics on the orchestra.”

‘On the precipice’

Officially created in 1970 after several unsuccessf­ul attempts, Iraq’s national orchestra has survived decades of upheaval. It has survived wars, an invasion, a 12-year internatio­nal embargo and a devastatin­g three-year battle against Islamic State group jihadists, which came to an end last year. But this may be the last straw for the outfit, a collateral victim of Iraq’s “war on corruption”.

“Not being paid for eight months has had a terrible psychologi­cal effect on the musicians, but we’ll continue to resist peacefully with our music,” said Ezzat, who became the orchestra’s first Iraqi conductor in 1989. “We’re on the precipice but sure that we won’t jump.”

When all its salaries are tallied up-including the maestro’s $1,200 a month, peanuts for a major conductor-the ‘Some don’t have enough money to come, and others are disappoint­ed by the impact of politics on the orchestra’ orchestra costs the state about $85,000 (73,000 Euros) a year. The sum is a pittance compared to the exorbitant figures siphoned off by ministers and high officials who have either fled or been arrested.

The conductor, his daughter Noor, a timpanist, and his sons Hossam and Islam, who play the cello and viola respective­ly, have all been without a salary since January. But according to Raed Allawi, the head of administra­tive affairs at Iraq’s culture ministry, there is no reason to panic-the wages will soon be paid.

“The finance ministry has asked for a regulariza­tion of contracts. Verificati­on measures are under way and this explains the late payment of wages,” Allawi said. “The orchestra is one of the country’s cultural showcases (and the ministry) respects its artists and their talent.” For the symphony’s musicians, however, these are empty words they have heard already.

‘Two profession­s, same passion’

Saad Al-Dujaily, a professor of medicine and a flutist, thinks the measure is regressive. “I’ve been an obstetrici­an and a flute player since I was very young,” he said. Because of the directive, the 57-year-old practition­er-who teaches at Baghdad’s Al-Nahrain University and plays in the national orchestra-is now entitled to only one salary. “In Iraq, we’re proud to have more than one job, to have more than one love, to practice two profession­s with the same love and passion,” said Dujaily, who plans to continue with the orchestra to help preserve its quality.

Further along into the rehearsal, the studio’s electricit­y cuts, a common occurrence in a country plagued by power outages. The orchestra cannot afford the diesel to fuel the building’s generator. But the musicians play on in the windowless room, using their cell phones to illuminate the sheet music. “There have been crises in the past, but this is the worst,” said Doaa Majid Al-Azzawi, an oboe player.

“Especially since my father and I are musicians. We don’t know what will happen, but if the orchestra has to stop, it’s culture in Iraq that will be dealt a deadly blow,” the 25-year-old said. When the studio’s lights eventually make a flickering return, so too does the players’ enthusiasm, and the music swells. “As long as we live, music will live. It’s our culture,” said Noor, the conductor’s daughter. — AFP

 ?? — AFP photos ?? Iraqi National Symphony Orchestra conductor Mohammed Amin Ezzat leads musicians during a rehearsal at Baghdad’s School of Music and Ballet.
— AFP photos Iraqi National Symphony Orchestra conductor Mohammed Amin Ezzat leads musicians during a rehearsal at Baghdad’s School of Music and Ballet.
 ??  ?? Iraqi National Symphony Orchestra conductor Mohammed Amin Ezzat leads musicians.
Iraqi National Symphony Orchestra conductor Mohammed Amin Ezzat leads musicians.
 ??  ?? Iraqi National Symphony Orchestra musicians take part in a rehearsal.
Iraqi National Symphony Orchestra musicians take part in a rehearsal.
 ??  ?? Iraqi National Symphony Orchestra musician Duaa Majed Aubeh takes part in a rehearsal in Baghdad’s School of Music and Ballet.
Iraqi National Symphony Orchestra musician Duaa Majed Aubeh takes part in a rehearsal in Baghdad’s School of Music and Ballet.
 ??  ?? Iraqi Mohammed Amin Ezzat, conductor in the Iraqi National Symphony Orchestra, talks during an interview in Baghdad.
Iraqi Mohammed Amin Ezzat, conductor in the Iraqi National Symphony Orchestra, talks during an interview in Baghdad.
 ??  ?? Iraqi musician Saad Saleh Dujaili, a flute player in the Iraqi National Symphony Orchestra, poses for a picture.
Iraqi musician Saad Saleh Dujaili, a flute player in the Iraqi National Symphony Orchestra, poses for a picture.

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