Gulf News

On the banks of the Tigris, a literary refuge for Iraqi youth

Fifth annual edition of book fair sees around 15,000 books collected and distribute­d for free

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Sitting in the green grass under a bright Baghdad sun, Iraqi men and women bury their heads in romance novels, essay collection­s and volumes of poetry.

It’s far from the image most have of the Iraqi capital, but for one day this weekend on the banks of the Tigris, Iraqi readers were able to find some respite from the country’s violence in the simple joy of losing themselves in a book.

Saturday’s ‘I’m Iraqi, I Read’ book fair was the fifth annual edition of the popular festival, which this year saw some 15,000 books collected and distribute­d to eager readers, for free.

Around long tables covered in red cloth, volunteers lay out books of fiction, technical manuals, religious tracts and volumes of verse pulled from cardboard boxes.

Hussain Ali, a 23-year-old law student, says it is his second year in a row stocking his library at the festival in Abu Nuwas park, named after the famed eighth-century poet known for his odes to wine and urban life.

“I hope this type of cultural event will continue, especially for young people,” said Ali, who like many bemoans the lack of cultural opportunit­ies for youth in Iraq, where some 60 per cent of the population is under the age of 25.

Enjoying the opportunit­y

Nearby, Raghed Nasser, a 22-year-old finance student, is also enjoying the opportunit­y to stock up on new reading material. “Our brains are like boxes that always need to be filled with new things,” she said.

Law graduate Tuqa Mohammad, 23, is browsing books at random, looking for the adventure of an unexpected read.

“It’s easy to buy a book, but to take a book that you didn’t choose... you see it in front of you, you take and read it, this is something nicer and more joyful.”

Not far away, dozens of festival-goers are writing messages in felt-tip markers on a huge signboard. One of them reads: “Read more and you will see further.”

Muntazer Jawad has come some 200km from his home in Diwaniyah to attend the festival. A would-be writer himself, Jawad has penned three novels but the 20-year-old with slicked black hair says that for young writers “it’s very difficult to get help in being published”.

Despite his passion, Jawad gave up his studies of literature to pursue a degree in management and administra­tion “to obey my family and because of the situation in Iraq”.

That “situation” — a neverendin­g cycle of violence that has ravaged the country and seen Baghdad hit by near-daily attacks — could not be entirely left behind at the fair.

 ?? AP ?? Ammar Hammasho, a refugee from Adlib in Syria who lives in Cyprus, kisses one of his four children after they arrived with his mother to a refugee camp in Kokkinotri­mithia outside Nicosia, the capital of Cyprus, on Sunday. Cypriot authoritie­s brought...
AP Ammar Hammasho, a refugee from Adlib in Syria who lives in Cyprus, kisses one of his four children after they arrived with his mother to a refugee camp in Kokkinotri­mithia outside Nicosia, the capital of Cyprus, on Sunday. Cypriot authoritie­s brought...
 ?? AFP ?? War-weary residents choose literature that wiill help them forget the violence at an annual literary festival held at Abu Nawas street, along the Tigris river in Baghdad, on Saturday.
AFP War-weary residents choose literature that wiill help them forget the violence at an annual literary festival held at Abu Nawas street, along the Tigris river in Baghdad, on Saturday.

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