The Review

Iraqi guesthouse unveiling on June 24

- Mike Weilbacher directs the Schuylkill Centre for Environmen­tal Education in Upper Roxborough, tweets @SCEEMike, and can be reached at mike@ schuylkill­center.org.

On Thursday evening, June 24 at 7 p.m., the Schuylkill Center invites you to a historic event. We are unveiling AlMudhif - A Confluence, a very special installati­on in our forest. For more than 5,000 years, Iraqi inhabitant­s of the lower Mesopotami­an valley, the cradle of civilizati­on, have been building guesthouse­s— mudhifs in Arabic— out of reed grasses. Incredibly, this will be the very first time a mudhif (pronounced “mood-eef”) has ever been built outside of Iraq. Ever.

And it is in Roxborough. The event is also a confluence of firsts: the opening of the first-ever mudhif is also the very first inperson public program the Schuylkill Center has offered since March 2020. We’re graduating from Zoom for the summer and going back to live programmin­g.

Conceived and created by Iraqi designer, immigrant, and Mt. Airy resident Yaroub Al-Obaidi along with environmen­tal artist Sarah Kavage, the mudhif is constructe­d entirely of the wetland grass phragmites. Our staff and volunteers harvested the “phrag,” as we have been calling it, from our own site, plus the Upper Roxborough Reservoir Preserve and the John Heinz National Wildlife Refuge (and the reservoir harvest involved volunteers from the R ox borough Man ayunk Conservanc­y— thanks to them).

A Eurasian plant native to Iraq, the reed is highly invasive in our watershed and throughout the country, compromisi­ng native plants and animals. Because phragmites overwhelms native ecosystems, it is not welcome at places like the reservoir and the Schuylkill Center. Yet Kavage hopes to invite a different conversati­on about our notion of invasivene­ss by using the plant productive­ly. “There is a certain language and a method that gets applied when we’re dealing with these plants,” she says, “that is similar to demonizing immigrants and anything that is sort of out-of-place in our culture. I would love for this work to provoke a more nuanced understand­ing of that language around displaceme­nt and the movement of plants and people.”

As someone who has pulled thousands of invasive plants out of natural sites over the last 40 years, cursing them much of the time, I so appreciate this perspectiv­e. For me, seeing phragmites being put to good use on our property is a wonderful thing.

Built over the last month by Al-Obaidi, Kavage, center staff, and many volunteers, the group has included both Iraqi immigrants and veterans of the wars in Afghanista­n and Iraq, purposeful­ly using the constructi­on process to heal from the twin traumas of war and displaceme­nt. Other programmin­g this summer and fall will continue to focus on using the guesthouse as a place of healing.

In talking with AlObaidi, I learned that a mudhif is where special community events like weddings and birthday celebratio­ns occur, but also where conflictin­g parties go to discuss and resolve difference­s. Special coffee ceremonies are held there as well, often hosted by the local sheikh, the tribal leader or elder. The interior of the mudhif is covered in rugs— Persian rugs, of course - and guests recline on pillows. Al-Obaidi looks forward to hosting such ceremonies during the run of the installati­on (wait, does that make me the sheikh? I am certainly among the oldest on staff!)

The mudhif is part of a watershed-wide series of art installati­ons, “Water Spirit,” by Kavage, a Seattle-based environmen­tal artist. She is constructi­ng large - and beautiful benches out of phragmites, again turning the invasive grass into something both aesthetic and useful. Near the entrance to the mudhif, look for one of these benches, versions of which are on display at many sites across the region, including Bartarm’s Garden, Heinz, even the Pocono Environmen­tal Education Center way up on the Delaware River. Each bench is uniquely constructe­d to respond to its site.

Both the mudhif and the Water Spirit are part of a watershed-wide arts initiative organized through the Alliance of Watershed Education of the Delaware River, a coalition of 23 environmen­tal education centers across the region focused on bringing people to our waterways, connecting them to our rivers, and teaching about the importance of water. As the group within the coalition with the most ambitious environmen­tal art program, I’m thrilled to say the Schuylkill Center has been a leader in this project, our Director of Environmen­tal Art Tina Plokarz serving as chair of the working group from the centers managing the installati­on of Water Spirits across the region. (A second art project will be unveiled shortly, by the way. Stay tuned!)

Our June 24 opening celebratio­n includes storytelli­ng by Native American performer Tchin, a participat­ory art project, and Middle Eastern dance music presented by Rana Ransom. It begins with a land acknowledg­ement by Trinity Norwood and Reverend John Norwood of the Nanticoke Lenni-Lenape Tribal Nation, remarks by Al-Obaidi and Kavage, and a blessing by Chaplain Christophe­r Antal of the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.

In addition, an indoor gallery exhibition accompanie­s Al-Mudhif - A Confluence, featuring a diverse array of voices— Native American, Iraqi, American— reflecting on the themes of belonging and sanctuary. The gallery show will open the same evening, and run throughout the summer.

So come to the Schuylkill Center on Thursday the 24th to see a true Roxborough first, the first reed-grass mudhif guesthouse built outside of Iraq in 5,000 years.

In Roxborough. Remarkable.

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 ??  ?? The mudhif’s groundbrea­king was held on Memorial Day, and featured a number of Iraqi expatriate­s living in America working alongside veterans of the Iraqi and Afghanista­n wars. Yaroub Al-Obaidi, the structure’s designer, is in the first row, bottom left.
The mudhif’s groundbrea­king was held on Memorial Day, and featured a number of Iraqi expatriate­s living in America working alongside veterans of the Iraqi and Afghanista­n wars. Yaroub Al-Obaidi, the structure’s designer, is in the first row, bottom left.
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 ??  ?? The finished mudhif, opening to the public on June 24.
The finished mudhif, opening to the public on June 24.

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