South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Reveling in joy of reading

At Baghdad book fair, legions find a place far removed from politics

- By Jane Arraf

BAGHDAD — Protesters in Baghdad hold a sit-in demanding that U.S. troops leave Iraq. Counterter­rorism troops patrol streets. A federal court ponders whether to certify results of parliament­ary elections two months ago.

But at the Baghdad Internatio­nal Fair grounds, almost no one cares about all that.

Inside is the Baghdad Internatio­nal Book Fair. It’s not even the bigger book fair of the same name that the Iraqi government has sponsored for decades. But it’s a book fair nonetheles­s.

There, patrons savor the chance to browse aisles of paperbacks and hardcovers stacked on tables in pavilions from different countries. To pose for selfies in front of the fake volumes glued together and arranged to spell the word “book.” To revel in what to many Iraqis is the true, enduring character of Baghdad, far removed from political turmoil and security concerns.

“There is a big gap between the people in the street and the political elite,” said Maysoon al-Demluji, a former deputy minister of culture who was visiting the fair. “People in the street are not that interested in what happens in politics.”

Inside, the pavilions have offerings from printing houses across the Arab world and beyond. An Iranian publisher features luxurious coffee table books of the country’s cultural wonders.

At the stall of a Kuwaiti publishing house, Zainab al-Joori, a psychiatri­st, paid for books about ancient Mesopotami­a and a novel by Robert Louis Stevenson translated into Arabic. Most of the books at the stall were paperbacks.

“Reading is my therapy,” said Joori, 30, who works at a psychiatri­c hospital.

Paperbacks are a distant second to the feel and the scent of the old books that Joori loves best. But still, she looks forward to the book fair for months.

“Just visiting this place is satisfying even if I don’t buy any books,” she said.

Iraqis love books. “Cairo writes, Beirut publishes and Baghdad reads,” goes an old saying.

In the 1990s, my first reporting assignment­s to Baghdad were to a closed country. It was Saddam Hussein’s Iraq — difficult to get into and, once you were there, dangerous to explore beneath the surface.

The United States had just driven Saddam’s forces from Kuwait and the United Nations had imposed sweeping trade sanctions on Iraq. In a formerly rich country, the shock of sudden poverty gave the city and its inhabitant­s a harder edge.

But in those rare glimpses behind the closed doors of people’s homes, there were often books — in some houses, beautiful, built-in wooden shelves of them, all of them read and almost every book treated by its owner as an old friend.

Iraqis are proud of their ancient legacy as heirs to the world’s first known civilizati­ons, along the Tigris and Euphrates rivers. The earliest known form of writing, cuneiform symbols inscribed in clay, emerged in southern Iraq more than 5,000 years ago.

In the ninth century in Baghdad — at the time the biggest city in the world — translator­s at the Bayt al Hikma, or House of Knowledge, a huge library and intellectu­al center, were tasked with translatin­g all important works in existence into Arabic and furthering intellectu­al debate. Scholars from across the Abbasid empire, stretching from Central Asia to North Africa, traveled to the institutio­n, engaging in research and fostering scientific advancemen­t.

Twelve centuries later, on al-Mutanabi Street, the love of books and ideas lives on in the Friday market where sellers lay out used books for sale on the sidewalk in a tradition that is the beating heart of Baghdad’s traditiona­l cultural life.

At the Baghdad book fair, two bookseller­s sat under fairy lights draped from the ceiling, near a huge inflatable plastic snow globe with Santa Claus inside.

Hisham Nazar, 24, has a degree in finance and banking but works, by choice, at publishing house Cemetery of Books. Prominent on the shelves of the publisher’s offerings at the fair is “American Nietzsche,” about the German philosophe­r’s impact on the United States.

In the worst of times in Iraq, books have proved a comfort.

When the Islamic State militant group took over parts of Iraq in 2014 and declared the city of Mosul the capital of its caliphate, life as Iraqis knew it in the country’s second-biggest city essentiall­y stopped. Almost all books were banned, along with music. Women were essentiall­y confined to their homes. In the almost three years that the Islamic State occupied the city, many people stayed home and secretly read.

In the first reading festival after Mosul’s liberation from the Islamic State, thousands of residents came to the event in a park once used to train child fighters. Families with children, older people, young people — all hungry to be able to read openly again.

Nazar, the bookseller at the Baghdad fair, said that while many people now read digital books, he and many others prefer to hold books in their hands.

“When you open a paper book, it is like entering into the writer’s journey,” he said. “A paper book has the soul of the writer.”

 ?? LAURA BOUSHNAK/THE NEW YORK TIMES PHOTOS ?? People at the Baghdad Internatio­nal Book Fair in Iraq on Dec. 13. Iraq is home to literary traditions ancient and modern.
LAURA BOUSHNAK/THE NEW YORK TIMES PHOTOS People at the Baghdad Internatio­nal Book Fair in Iraq on Dec. 13. Iraq is home to literary traditions ancient and modern.
 ?? ?? Patrons browse aisles of paperbacks and hardcovers in pavilions from different countries.
Patrons browse aisles of paperbacks and hardcovers in pavilions from different countries.

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