The National - News

HELPING IRAQ TO RESTORE A SYMBOL OF ITS HISTORY AND CULTURE

The involvemen­t of the UAE in this incredible project to restore a beloved place of worship shows the power of co-operation between Arab nations

- MINA AL-ORAIBI Editor-in-Chief in Baghdad

For 840 years, the Great Mosque of Al Nuri in Mosul has been a symbol of cultural beauty and religious significan­ce. Its 45-metre leaning minaret, Al Hadba, was so synonymous with Iraq’s second city that Mosul became known by the same name.

However, in the past four years it became a symbol of the losses that Iraq has suffered as it fell victim to the ISIS reign of terror. In June 2014, it was where ISIS leader Abu Bakr Al Baghdadi declared his false “caliphate” and three years later, Iraqis watched in disbelief as ISIS fighters blew up the historic mosque.

Yesterday, the UAE started a new chapter in the story of Al Nuri mosque, with a commitment to rebuild the mosque in five years. In the largest project of its type in Iraq, the UAE has formed a partnershi­p with the Iraqi Ministry of Culture, Unesco and other regional entities to restore and revive the mosque in a project set to cost $50.4 million.

The UAE Minister of Culture and Knowledge Developmen­t, Noura Al Kaabi, visited Baghdad to launch the project, emphasisin­g that the image of Al Nuri Mosque will again become synonymous with hope and cultural revival.

The security situation made it impossible to make the announceme­nt from Mosul but the capital was the next best choice.

From the majestic Assyrian Hall of the Iraq Museum, Ms Al Kaabi said that the “UAE supports the efforts of our Iraqi brothers in developmen­ts, stability and pushing the wheels of reconstruc­tion especially for cultural and historic sites”.

Among those in attendance for the signing ceremony were two archeologi­sts from Mosul who were clearly moved by the event. “We are delighted with the UAE’s involvemen­t,” Khair Aldeen Ahmed, an excavator from Mosul, told The National.

“We feel close to them, we are one people, our ties are by blood relations, culture, history – it all binds us.

“We have yet to see a real project of reconstruc­tion come to Mosul. There is so much destructio­n all around. This is the first tangible project.”

Mr Ahmed was one of several Maslawis – people from Mosul – attending yesterday’s event.

One of the strengths of this project is its inclusiven­ess. Other partners in the project include the Sunni Endowment of Iraq, which owns the mosque, the Iccrom-Athar regional conservati­on centre in Sharjah, and the Organisati­on of Islamic Conference.

From meeting students of anthropolo­gy at Baghdad University to archaeolog­ists from Mosul, the whirlwind trip by the Minister of Culture set the tone that consultati­on with Iraqis will remain a priority.

Regular quarterly meetings and an expanded community engagement plan, all aim to ensure the success of the project and avoid any tainting of it by corruption.

Unesco’s team in Baghdad met with Ms Al Kaabi and the Iraqi delegation, and spoke of their eagerness to begin work now that the agreement was signed after a record time of only three weeks.

Speaking to The National in Baghdad, she said: “After two months from the Kuwait conference to rebuild Iraq, the UAE was the first to start on such a historic project that means a lot to the Iraqi people and also region.”

The scale and significan­ce of the project in large part lies in the symbolism of the Al Nuri mosque for Iraqis and for the UAE’s efforts to curb extremism and terrorism.

“Mosul unfortunat­ely is in a post-war state, and not any war but a victim to a horrific extremist group,” Ms Al Kaabi said. “For people to wake up and not see the minaret they have always known is a great loss. To see it rise again will also help to reconstruc­t and revive Iraq.

“The UAE aims to revive, to bring hope, and this is what this project represents. It is important for us to be in the business of revival, whether us in the UAE, or the Iraqi people, or Unesco, what is important to us is how it will impact people, restore hope, and job creation is so important.”

Ms Al Kaabi said a central element to the reconstruc­tion effort is to foster tolerance and the true spirit of Islam, as a sharp contrast to the ideology of the extremists who destroyed the mosque.

Iraq’s Minister of Culture, Faryad Ravandozi, recalled Al Hadba as “Iraq’s tallest and most beautiful” minaret from his days of studying in Mosul.

The pain of the fall of Al Hadba cannot be underestim­ated but making it rise again and with it the spirit of Mosul, presents a rare opportunit­y of hope among the rubble.

Central to restoratio­n efforts at the mosque is the contrast to the ideology that destroyed it

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 ?? Wam ?? Noura Al Kaabi, UAE Minister of Culture and Knowledge Developmen­t, with Iraqi Minister of Culture Faryad Ravandozi during a tour at the Iraq Museum in Baghdad Photos
Wam Noura Al Kaabi, UAE Minister of Culture and Knowledge Developmen­t, with Iraqi Minister of Culture Faryad Ravandozi during a tour at the Iraq Museum in Baghdad Photos
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