Hartford Courant

From lockdown to startups

Iraqi women turn restrictio­ns into new opportunit­ies for businesses based from home

- By Abdulrahma­n Zeyad

BAGHDAD — Fatima Ali was in her final year studying to become a medical analysis specialist when Iraq imposed a full lockdown in March. Forced by a raging pandemic to stay home, she spent her days on social media, looking for something to do with her time.

Then an idea came to her: Six years ago, visiting America on a young leaders exchange program, she and other students toured a Vermont cheese factory where aged cheese platters were displayed on wooden boards so inviting they looked like paintings.

“I liked it. I said to myself, why not be the first to do it in Baghdad?” She took a free online business course and researched cheeses and wooden plates available in the Iraqi capital.

Months later, 22-year-old Ali is successful­ly marketing her cheese boards, making a small but steady income and garnering over 2,000 Instagram followers.

A growing number of Iraqi women are using pandemic restrictio­ns to establish home-based businesses. It’s a way to bypass discrimina­tion and harassment that often come with working in Iraq’s male-dominated, conservati­ve society — and bring in extra income as the economy worsens.

On a recent day in her kitchen, Ali cut up and arranged cheeses, dried fruit and nuts as she talked about her further dreams. She wants to go to culinary school abroad and one day open a school in Iraq for those “who have passion for cooking, like me.”

“This is just the beginning. I’m still developing myself,” she said.

Rawan Al-Zubaidi, a business partner at an Iraqi NGO that supports startups and young entreprene­urs, said there’s been a noticeable increase in home-based businesses since the pandemic’s start, including women making food deliveries, sweets, accessorie­s, crocheting and embroideri­ng.

“It represents a solution to obstacles that Iraqi women face when trying to find a job,” she said, citing women whose husbands or fathers won’t let them work, unsupporti­ve male colleagues, discrimina­tion and lack of career growth opportunit­ies.

“Some Iraqi women can’t find a job because conservati­ve families or husbands consider that women talking directly with other men on the job will bring shame on them,” Rawan said.

Tamara Amir, who manages a Facebook page to educate Iraqi women about their rights, said she receives dozens of calls each day from women facing sexual harassment at work. Often, they report feeling they have to give their male boss “something in return” to get a job or advancemen­t.

Mariam Khzarjian, a 31-year-old Iraqi-Armenian, worked as an executive assistant in an engineerin­g company for seven years. She quit in late 2018, feeling her career was going nowhere, and started her own home business selling handmade accessorie­s inspired by her ancestors, who used to work as carpenters.

She got off to a slow start. Distractio­ns got in the way. But the pandemic forced her to focus, working on new designs and techniques during curfews. The move toward online shopping helped her business take off in a way she could not have imagined. “Online became the only way to reach clients, and they in turn became more loyal and more confident about my art, because they are buying something without trying it,” Khzarjian said.

 ?? KHALID MOHAMMED/AP ?? Fatima Ali prepares a takeout cheese plate in her Baghdad home. After Iraq imposed a coronaviru­s lockdown in March, a growing number of Iraqi women are finding some good under the movement restrictio­ns, starting their own businesses from home.
KHALID MOHAMMED/AP Fatima Ali prepares a takeout cheese plate in her Baghdad home. After Iraq imposed a coronaviru­s lockdown in March, a growing number of Iraqi women are finding some good under the movement restrictio­ns, starting their own businesses from home.

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