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Another view of Iraq: Love, peace, tolerance

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  • Another view of Iraq: Love, peace, tolerance

    The Toronto Star
    September 1, 2006 Friday

    Another view of Iraq: Love, peace, tolerance
    by Nicholas Keung, Toronto Star


    As an elementary school teacher in Baghdad, Janet Irmya used to take
    her students to both mosques and churches to teach them about
    tolerance and celebrate the rich diversity of Iraqis.

    Irmya is ethnically Armenian, with a different mother tongue,
    religion and culture from her Assyrian husband, Simon. But their
    differences don't matter to the couple, who both speak Arabic and
    proudly share the same homeland.

    "Whether you were Turkomans, Kurdish, Arabs, Sunnis or Shiites, we
    were all very mixed together and we respected and appreciated our
    differences," Irmya recalls of the days before she and her family
    moved to Toronto in 1981. "It's sad to see Iraqis fighting Iraqis,
    and we still ask the question why people have forgotten the peace and
    harmony that we grew up with in Iraq."

    While members of the 20,000-strong Iraqi-Canadian community are in no
    mood to celebrate what's going on in their homeland - where daily
    violence is driving deep wedges between the nation's ethnic and
    religious groups - they believe they still have something invaluable
    to show to their countrymen and other Canadians.

    Volunteers from various Iraqi ethnic groups have together planned a
    three-day Iraqi Heritage Festival that starts today at the
    Scarborough Civic Centre, showcasing their culture.

    "We all come from the same land and we share the same identity as
    survivors," explains Ghina Al-Sewaidi, president of the Iraqi
    Canadian Society of Ontario. She refuses to talk about Iraqi politics
    and emphasizes that the group is social, not political, in nature.

    "There is the misconception that the Iraqis are divided and we don't
    get along with one another, which is not true," adds the Toronto
    criminal lawyer, an Arab, who arrived Canada in 1988. "We want people
    here and in Iraq to see that the Iraqis are one united community,
    that we are one people and we all love peace."

    Essentially, the festival is a reminder of the racial harmony that
    existed in Iraq before Saddam Hussein seized the reins of the Sunni
    Muslim Baath Party in 1979 and began pitting Iraq's ethnic and
    religious groups against one another for political advantage.

    Despite their obvious differences, Toronto's various Iraqi groups
    have much in common. By and large highly educated, they fled their
    homeland for the peace and freedom Canada offered.

    "It's a small community (of 7,000) in Toronto and we have to count on
    each other," says Najiba Al-Jaddou, a Turkoman landscape designer
    from Kirkuk. A Sunni, she's married to a Shiite.

    But it wasn't until Saddam Hussein's downfall more than three years
    ago that Canada's Iraqis began to feel safe from the watchful eyes of
    the regime and started to mingle again.

    "The community has had a really low profile out of fear. It just
    wasn't active," says Yelimaz Jawid, a Kurdish-Iraqi. "When I joined
    the (Iraqi) society, there were only 20 members at our annual
    meeting. This year, we had 261 members there."

    In fact, the Iraqi Heritage Festival was initiated in 2004 as a
    celebration, a hopeful gesture marking what might have been a new
    beginning for Iraq.

    "It was a sensitive time and we picked the timing deliberately. But
    it wasn't really a celebration. There's no happiness to it, because
    people there and here both were suffering from the war in Iraq," says
    festival volunteer Buthina Ezat, who is a Mandean - a tiny gnostic
    sect with roots going back to the time of John the Baptist.

    "We just wanted to let people know how we used to live together and
    remind them of our good old days. The bottom line is we are all
    Iraqis," she notes. "Iraq is the home where we all belong. We should
    be celebrating each other's differences, like we do in Canada."

    The festival - from 6 to 9 p.m. today and Sunday, and tomorrow from
    noon to 9 p.m. - will showcase Iraqi handicrafts, literature and
    poetry, ethnic fashion and arts, as well as traditional dances, music
    and films. Admission is free.

    GRAPHIC: Carlos Osorio toronto star Najiba Al-Jaddou wears her
    mother's abaya, a traditional garment that will be showcased at the
    three-day Iraqi Heritage Festival. Organizers hope the event will
    show Torontonians that Iraqis of different backgrounds live together
    in peace.
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