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Decline of an industry that was Iraq’s pride

In her third report from post-ISIS Iraq, Sofia Barbarani hears about a passion to keep family businesses alive

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Every year, come rain or shine, Hajji Hassem would cram his car full of boxes of Iraq’s finest dates and embark on a threeday drive to Makkah. There, he gifted the fruits to other joyful pilgrims undertakin­g Hajj.

His most vivid memories, dating back to the 1980s, elicit a smile as he recounts road-tripping the almost 2,000 kilometres to the holy city. The journey was a safe one in those days and Iraq’s worldrenow­ned dates industry was thriving.

“The Saudis always used to ask us to bring dates from here, it was the best gift someone could take,” says Mr Hassem. “They thought it was a holy fruit.”

He owns a wholefoods fruit and vegetable shop in the heart of Fallujah’s main bazaar but Mr Hassem, now 60, finds himself weighed down by the decades of turmoil.

He prays on a chair rather than on the floor, given his large frame – the same chair he sits in sipping water, as he chronicles the golden years for Iraq’s 350 varieties of dates.

“All of the Arab countries knew in the 1980s and 1990s that Iraqi dates were the best,” he says. Quality combined with quantity: a 28 kilogram box would sell for less than $1 because the fruit was so readily available.

Even the American invaders who came in 2003 loved the dates. “Most bought the Zahdi types,” says Mr Hassem, referring to a dry kind of date. “They would just come in and stuff their pockets.”

Years of sanctions, conflict and displaceme­nt, coupled with a precarious economy, culminated in a decline in the production and quality of the fruit. While global output of dates increased exponentia­lly between 1978 and 2008, Iraq’s fell progressiv­ely.

In the 1990s the industry was affected by the sanctions imposed against Iraq after Saddam Hussein’s invasion of Kuwait.

In 2000, about 1 million metric tonnes of dates were produced – an increase of 748,900 tonnes from 1984, when fighting in the Iran-Iraq war was at its heaviest. In the past 18 years, however, there has been a precipitou­s slump in Iraqi date production. By 2007, at the height of Iraq’s sectarian violence, it plummeted to 350,000 tonnes annually.

“Due to the years of war and hardship the dates industry has gone through a decline,” says Hameed Al Naef, a spokesman at the Ministry of Agricultur­e. “We used to have 30 million palm trees, but now it has dropped to 16 million.”

Seeking to protect the local industry, the central government in recent years banned imports from neighbouri­ng countries. Possibly as a result, production rose to between 650,000 and 850,000 tonnes a year. Companies and individual­s continue to import dates illegally, says Mr Al Naef, smuggling dates across the Iran-Iraq border, alongside contraband food, livestock, tobacco and even vehicles.

Back in the 1980s foreign dates were uncommon and not well regarded. Today Mr Hassem sells Iranian, Saudi and Iraqi dates, but “what we get the most are Iranian dates”, he says dryly. “And they’re no good.”

In an effort to rebuild Iraq’s ailing agricultur­e, in 2011 the central government envisioned a $150 million (Dh550m) project to triple the number of date farms by 2021. But the plan was interrupte­d with the rise of ISIS in late 2013.

The impact was dramatic. In the leafy town of Karma, just 28km north-east of Fallujah, 600 of Dr Adnan Al Jumaily’s 1,000 palm trees were burnt during clashes between ISIS and the Iraqi military. Drought piled on the agony.

During the terrorists’ three-year rule, ISIS cut off the irrigation canals that branched from the Euphrates to provide water to farms.

They did this during the 2014 elections to flood and disable the road between Baghdad and Fallujah, says Dr Al Jumaily, a tall man whose manicured thick, black moustache pokes out from a handsome face and piercing eyes.

But the original problem dates back to the Iran-Iraq war, when the farms in the southern city of Basra were wrecked by warring factions. “It affected most of the farms, they were destroyed.”

Beyond the war, Saddam drained the south’s swamps and chopped down palm trees in the thousands.

Younger generation­s do not see the fields as a way to make a living. Despite having large areas of arable land, more and more Anbaris are turning away from agricultur­e, searching instead for government jobs – still seen as the best and most secure employment available.

Lack of water and pesticides make farming a less appealing path. Local sheikhs criticise the central government for not providing Anbaris with farm equipment for food production.

Flanked by hundreds of towering palm trees that his father and grandfathe­r planted in the 1970s and 1980s, Dr Al Jumaily proudly walks between overgrown shrubs in sandals and a white thawb, the flowing robe of rural Iraqi men, carefully inspecting the charred logs.

But with no one to tend to it, the farm is wild in its disrepair. The seven employees he once had fled Karma when ISIS took over. His home is empty too, after fleeing ISIS fighters and Shiite militias looted his furniture.

“We’re repairing step by step,” says Dr Al Jumaily, standing against a backdrop of palm trees and a small murky lake.

Regardless of present difficulti­es, a sense of mission remains. Cultivatin­g dates is a passion he inherited from his family, not a job, he says, and he is intent on restoring the family’s farm to its glory days, along with Iraq’s date industry.

“Dates have three benefits,” he says. “They are free for everyone, they are food for birds and they provide shade.

“People come and go but palm trees remain.”

The Saudis always asked us to bring dates from here, it was the best gift. They thought it was a holy fruit HAJJI HASSEM Fruit and vegetable trader in Fallujah

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 ?? Photos Sofia Barbarani / The National ?? Hajji Hassem has boxes of Saudi and Iraqi dates in his shop in Fallujah, Anbar province, top, but he mostly sells Iranian dates, below. Iraq is trying to regenerate date farms, like Dr Adnan Al Jumaily’s in Karma, also in Anbar, left
Photos Sofia Barbarani / The National Hajji Hassem has boxes of Saudi and Iraqi dates in his shop in Fallujah, Anbar province, top, but he mostly sells Iranian dates, below. Iraq is trying to regenerate date farms, like Dr Adnan Al Jumaily’s in Karma, also in Anbar, left
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