Sunday, October 15, 2006

Where is Riverbend?

Riverbend is a woman who has been living in Baghdad, Iraq since the start of the Iraqi war. She has extensively archived her accounts while in Iraq on her blog called 'Baghdad Burning' and now.....she is amongst the missing. Her last post was in August 2006. Here it is:

Baghdad Burning


... I'll meet you 'round the bend my friend, where hearts can heal and souls can mend...

Saturday, August 05, 2006

Summer of Goodbyes...

Residents of Baghdad are systematically being pushed out of the city. Some families are waking up to find a Klashnikov bullet and a letter in an envelope with the words “Leave your area or else.” The culprits behind these attacks and threats are Sadr’s followers- Mahdi Army. It’s general knowledge, although no one dares say it out loud. In the last month we’ve had two different families staying with us in our house, after having to leave their neighborhoods due to death threats and attacks. It’s not just Sunnis- it’s Shia, Arabs, Kurds- most of the middle-class areas are being targeted by militias.

Other areas are being overrun by armed Islamists. The Americans have absolutely no control in these areas. Or maybe they simply don’t want to control the areas because when there’s a clash between Sadr’s militia and another militia in a residential neighborhood, they surround the area and watch things happen.

Since the beginning of July, the men in our area have been patrolling the streets. Some of them patrol the rooftops and others sit quietly by the homemade road blocks we have on the major roads leading into the area. You cannot in any way rely on Americans or the government. You can only hope your family and friends will remain alive- not safe, not secure- just alive. That’s good enough.

For me, June marked the first month I don’t dare leave the house without a hijab, or headscarf. I don’t wear a hijab usually, but it’s no longer possible to drive around Baghdad without one. It’s just not a good idea. (Take note that when I say ‘drive’ I actually mean ‘sit in the back seat of the car’- I haven’t driven for the longest time.) Going around bare-headed in a car or in the street also puts the family members with you in danger. You risk hearing something you don’t want to hear and then the father or the brother or cousin or uncle can’t just sit by and let it happen. I haven’t driven for the longest time. If you’re a female, you risk being attacked.

I look at my older clothes- the jeans and t-shirts and colorful skirts- and it’s like I’m studying a wardrobe from another country, another lifetime. There was a time, a couple of years ago, when you could more or less wear what you wanted if you weren’t going to a public place. If you were going to a friends or relatives house, you could wear trousers and a shirt, or jeans, something you wouldn’t ordinarily wear. We don’t do that anymore because there’s always that risk of getting stopped in the car and checked by one militia or another.

There are no laws that say we have to wear a hijab (yet), but there are the men in head-to-toe black and the turbans, the extremists and fanatics who were liberated by the occupation, and at some point, you tire of the defiance. You no longer want to be seen. I feel like the black or white scarf I fling haphazardly on my head as I walk out the door makes me invisible to a certain degree- it’s easier to blend in with the masses shrouded in black. If you’re a female, you don’t want the attention- you don’t want it from Iraqi police, you don’t want it from the black-clad militia man, you don’t want it from the American soldier. You don’t want to be noticed or seen.

I have nothing against the hijab, of course, as long as it is being worn by choice. Many of my relatives and friends wear a headscarf. Most of them began wearing it after the war. It started out as a way to avoid trouble and undue attention, and now they just keep it on because it makes no sense to take it off. What is happening to the country?

I realized how common it had become only in mid-July when M., a childhood friend, came to say goodbye before leaving the country. She walked into the house, complaining of the heat and the roads, her brother following closely behind. It took me to the end of the visit for the peculiarity of the situation to hit me. She was getting ready to leave before the sun set, and she picked up the beige headscarf folded neatly by her side. As she told me about one of her neighbors being shot, she opened up the scarf with a flourish, set it on her head like a pro, and pinned it snuggly under her chin with the precision of a seasoned hijab-wearer. All this without a mirror- like she had done it a hundred times over… Which would be fine, except that M. is Christian.

If M. can wear one quietly- so can I.

I’ve said goodbye this last month to more people than I can count. Some of the ‘goodbyes’ were hurried and furtive- the sort you say at night to the neighbor who got a death threat and is leaving at the break of dawn, quietly.

Some of the ‘goodbyes’ were emotional and long-drawn, to the relatives and friends who can no longer bear to live in a country coming apart at the seams.

Many of the ‘goodbyes’ were said stoically- almost casually- with a fake smile plastered on the face and the words, “See you soon”… Only to walk out the door and want to collapse with the burden of parting with yet another loved one.

During times like these I remember a speech Bush made in 2003: One of the big achievements he claimed was the return of jubilant ‘exiled’ Iraqis to their country after the fall of Saddam. I’d like to see some numbers about the Iraqis currently outside of the country you are occupying… Not to mention internally displaced Iraqis abandoning their homes and cities.

I sometimes wonder if we’ll ever know just how many hundreds of thousands of Iraqis left the country this bleak summer. I wonder how many of them will actually return. Where will they go? What will they do with themselves? Is it time to follow? Is it time to wash our hands of the country and try to find a stable life somewhere else?
- posted by river @ 12:38 AM

She was saying goodbye in this last post, but it appears to me that she was saying goodbye to her friends in Iraq who were leaving the country to get the hell out. So, where is she? It breaks my heart, but at the same time, this is the world we live in now. The Bush Regime doesn't want any truth getting about their illegal occupation in Iraq and someone like Riverbend was doing just that. She's not the first journalist or concerned human being to be saddened and outraged by the effects of Bush's decision long ago.

I hope Riverbend is safe but my instinct tells me she's not.

8 Comments:

Blogger Chase Cooper said...

We must have hope.

Sunday, 15 October, 2006  
Blogger clif said...

There are tens of thousands of people just like Riverbend in Iraq. But just like her wishes and voice has been ignored, so have all of them. The neo-cons wanted a war, and the islamic extremists wanted a war, thus everybody else's wishes just have to wait until the children pretending to be grown up adults get take out of the seat of power and put in time out. Hopefully timeout,complete with bars, and long sentences. Maybe even side by side, so they can continue to argue with each other with out endangering the rest of us.

Sunday, 15 October, 2006  
Blogger clif said...

Osama Bin Laden is an Islamic extremist; he goes from country to country, because he has NO legitimate base, GET a clue about reality son.

Bin Laden wanted WAR with the west, and Bush and the neo-cons wanted war in Iraq, each has gotten what they wanted, to the detriment of the rest of the world. And those he sent out to hijack planes to attack this country were just his call to battle.

I do not disagree with what you website says, just you asinine assertion there are NO Islamic extremists. Just because HE was not in Iraq before 9-11-2001, or 3-17-2003, does not mean He is not there now trying to ferment more Jihad. And he definitely is attempting to gain control in the Muslin world to gain POWER just as the Bankers and rich use money as a base for power here.

Both Bush and the people he serves and Osama are about gaining power for them. To use to ferment their version of what the world should look like;

Osama wants a seventh century caliphate.

Bush wants a return to the Gilded Age of robber barons controlling all and using the masses for their profit.

Both are willing to lie, deceive their followers and kill as many people as required to achieve their ends. Both will use everything at their disposal and have no reservations about bringing complete fiascos upon this planet. Osama in countries like what Afghanistan had become, and Bush in Iraq, they both have created hells on earth to further their goals, and are willing to hijack real tragedies to fulfill their plans.

Osama hijacked the resentment of the Muslim world and Bush hijacked 9-11.

Both have a religious certainty about what they do, thus a deluded idea that they are doing Gods work here on earth.

Realize that by asserting something that is easily disprovable that you leave yourself open to attacks of the reichwingnuts which are all about the goals you describe on your website.

Sunday, 15 October, 2006  
Blogger KayInMaine said...

That's right Clif....once a guy like Osama has followers, even if he dies, those followers will still take on the cause! Islamic terrorism is a very small part of the Islamic religion and unfortunately, Bush's illegal invasion and occupation of Iraq has fueled the fire in the bellies of Osama's followers! Thanks Bush, you imbecile.

My heart aches for Riverbend. I hope she's okay.

Sunday, 15 October, 2006  
Blogger Mike said...

Hey Kaye, I posted RiverBends blog and associated book in here and on Lydia's blog last week, its a really interesting blog, is that what gave you the idea to write about it, or did you find it on your own also, just curious???

Monday, 16 October, 2006  
Blogger KayInMaine said...

Actually Mike, I'm part of a group called AmeriVoice and one of the members posted one sentence stating that Riverbend hadn't been heard from since August of this summer. I hadn't thought about her for awhile and when I read it my heart ached!!!! I'm not surprised, though, that you were talking about it too. I went to Technorati to see what else was being said and wow!.....she is very missed.

I don't think she's okay. That's my gut feeling which really stinks.

I haven't been to Lydia's blog lately because it no longer exists! I've been meaning to email Clif/Larry to have them give me her new one and it's address.

Thanks so much for posting on my blog Mike. You're every informative and passionate which is fantastic!!! :-)

Monday, 16 October, 2006  
Blogger Mike said...

http://www.lydiacornell.com/blog.html

Monday, 16 October, 2006  
Blogger KayInMaine said...

Thanks Mike. :-)

Monday, 16 October, 2006  

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