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  • Escapees From Iraq Hope Old Days Gone

    ESCAPEES FROM IRAQ HOPE OLD DAYS GONE
    By J.T. Morand, [email protected]

    Pioneer Press Online
    http://www.pioneerlocal.com/evanston/lifest yles/currents/1386054,on-iraqdocWEB-012209-s1.arti cle
    Jan 22 2009
    IL

    Dr. Edward Mkrdichian is keeping a closer eye on Iraq these days,
    like it's one of his patients.

    Only there's not much he can do if the condition worsens.

    The Glenview neurosurgeon and his wife Susie both escaped from their
    homeland Iraq during turbulent times. Now they're concerned any
    progress made in that country will go backwards if American troops
    pull out too soon. In his campaign for U.S. President, Barack Obama
    had said he'd like to withdraw troops by 2010, while George Bush was
    reluctant to set a date or timetable.

    Mkrdichian was in medical school in Iraq in 1971, when various factions
    were fighting for power of the country, and Saddam Hussein's star
    was rising as a leader in the Ba'ath Party.

    Christians, of which Mkrdichian was one, were constantly harassed,
    and his father, who was Armenian, was detained by authorities because
    they believed he was a spy with Jewish sympathies. Young doctors were
    being sent to the front lines to serve as medics. Some of Mkrdichian's
    friends were conscripted into the army, never to been seen again. Some
    were killed, some died early, some just disappeared.

    "You age rapidly because of the tension and stress," said Mkrdichian,
    "Some went into the army and never came back."

    In Iraq, he explained, high school students would take a test
    that often determined their future. Students who received the best
    scores were placed in a medical program at the country's colleges
    and universities. Law school students fall somewhere below medical
    and dental students, and no one wanted to be a lawyer in Iraq,
    Mkrdichian said.

    "Who are you going to fight? The government?" he laughed.

    Great escapes Mkrdichian was in his third year of medical school when
    his family left Iraq, but he was denied a visa. However, in 1971,
    he and an uncle made their way to Lebanon, and later entered the
    United States in December of that year.

    He rejoined his family in Chicago, where he achieved personal and
    professional success.

    While in medical school, he met and married Susie, the daughter of old
    family friends from Iraq, who also fled to the United States, in 1975.

    Susie's father worked as an accountant for the U.S. Embassy during
    the 1960s, which made him a person of interest to authorities.

    "We, as children, felt our parents were always living in fear," she
    said. "Secret service agents were always monitoring their moves. We
    feared our dad would be labeled."

    They were going to go to Iran, but tensions between the countries
    heated up and the borders closed. They changed course and traveled
    to Turkey, where they stayed for six months while they obtained the
    proper papers to travel on.

    They could not draw attention to themselves as they left their home
    in Iraq, so they each brought only one suitcase and left everything
    else behind.

    "Our departure (from Iraq) had to be very low key," Susie said. "We
    took a train, as if we were going on vacation."

    New life The couple had a daughter they named Joy. She is now in her
    second year of law school.

    "She had the freedom of choice," Mkrdichian said. "She wanted law."

    Mkrdichian attended University of Illinois at Chicago, went to medical
    school at Rush University Medical Center and did his residency at
    Northwestern, where he met Dr. Leonard Cerullo, his future business
    partner in the Chicago Institute of Neurosurgery and Neuroresearch.

    Cerullo sent Mkrdichian to Mayo Clinic to do a fellowship in
    stereotactic neurosurgery before they founded, with others, CNN.

    "I saw what a good doctor, what a good human being, what a good surgeon
    he was, and how loyal and dedicated he was," Cerullo said. "He had
    the characteristics I was looking for in a partner."

    Mkrdichian has performed more than 3,000 brain and spine surgeries,
    and is director of clinical neurosurgery at CINN and assistant
    professor of neurosurgery at Rush Medical College.

    "I was always intrigued by how the brain functions," Mkrdichian said.

    But, he hasn't figured out how it works when it comes to hate. The
    three largest populations in Iraq -- Sunni, Shia and Kurds -- don't
    get along, and if American troops pull out too soon, there will be
    civil war, he said.

    "It would be a mistake to come out now," he said. "If we pull out now,
    there'd be massacres."

    Killing goes against everything he believes in.

    "We (doctors) do everything we can to save one soul," he said. "In war,
    hundreds of people die."

    New hope The couple has never been back to Iraq since they left. Until
    Saddam Hussein was captured, a visit would have been too dangerous.

    "If I had gone back," Mkrdichian said, "I would have been prosecuted
    for sure."

    Susie, who is Assyrian, hopes to visit with Joy, if there is ever
    calm in Iraq.

    "I would love the opportunity for Joy to see where we came from,"
    she said. "I don't know if that will happen in our lifetime."

    Although Mkrdichian and Susie hate seeing American soldiers and
    Iraqis die, and share mixed feelings about going to war with Iraq in
    the first place, they are happy one cause of their flight from the
    country is gone.

    "I'm glad," Mkrdichian said, "we took Saddam and his entourage down."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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