Robert Fisk: Snapshots of life in Baghdad
The dangerous face of ordinary life has been captured by Iraqis on their mobile phones – reaching the places Western photographers can no longer go. Robert Fisk reports
Wednesday, 18 June 2008
Three bodies lie beside a Baghdad street on a blindingly hot day. The one on the right is dressed in a white shirt and bright green trousers, his hands tied behind his back. Two others on the left lie shoeless, both dressed in check shirts, dumped – how easily we use that word of Baghdad's corpses – on a yard of dirt and bags of garbage. They, too, of course, are now garbage. The wall behind them, a grim barrier of dun-coloured brick, seals off this horror from two two-storey villas and a clutch of palm trees, the normal life of Baghdad just a wall away from the other "normal" life of Baghdad's sectarian killings. No one knows whose bodies they are and the picture – taken from a car window – was snapped in fear by an unknown Iraqi.
It is a cell-phone picture, for now only the cell phones of the Iraqi people can record their tragedy. Another shows a young man's body, taken from beside a car wing mirror, hands tied behind his back with his own shirt. Bombs explode across the Baghdad skyline, columns of smoke move into the air like sinister ghosts. Palm trees block off streets of fearful Iraqis. A car bomb blazes, the faint image of a US Humvee outlined against the trees. There are broken bridges, wounded friends, blood-soaked cloth.
But there are also families; even a Muslim family celebrating Christmas, all dressed in Santa Claus hats, and a graduation party where the girls wear Bedouin black dresses with gold-fringed scarves and the boys wear Arab headdress and white abayas – something quite foreign to the middle classes of what was once one of the most literate and educated cities of the Middle East.
But it is the cell phone that has captured this terrible, fearful, brave face of Baghdad. Western photographers can no longer roam the streets of the Iraqi capital – and few other cities in Iraq – and in south-west Afghanistan, the same phenomenon has occurred.
We Westerners need the locals to photograph their tragedy and their ragged, often fuzzy, poorly framed pictures contain their own finely calibrated and terrible beauty. The fear of the cell-phone snapper is contained in almost every frame. Most of the Iraqis are refugees-to-be, for the Dutch photographer Geert van Kesteren, who collected 388 pages of photographs for his book Baghdad Calling, wanted to catalogue the tragedy of the tens of thousands of Iraqis who are the largely ignored victims of our demented 2003 invasion and occupation.
Van Kesteren, an unassuming but imaginative journalist whom I met recently in Holland, noticed that refugees used their cell phones as family albums and decided, in the words of Brigitte Lardinois, formerly director of Magnum Photos in London, "to let the pictures of ordinary, non-professional photographers tell the story this time". Iraqi refugees in Jordan asked friends to send more pictures from Baghdad.
Some were rejected because of their suspect provenance – alas, we therefore do not see the picture of an American soldier, apparently firing a rifle from atop a donkey, but which might have been digitally edited – but others cannot be anything but the truth. The smiling families, hiding in their homes as the killers roam the darkness outside, the young men relaxing in the safety of Kurdistan, swimming in the lakes, revelling in the nightlife, the plump nephew of one of the anonymous cell-phone photographers sitting on a bright red sports car, have to be real.
It must have been hard for Van Kesteren, a news photographer in his own right, to have submerged his own work for this brilliant amateur collection. A few of Van Kesteren's own professional pictures appear in Baghdad Calling but they are taken in the safety of Syria, Jordan or Turkey and – save for a group photograph of courageous Iraqis captured after illegally crossing the Turkish border but still determined to escape from their country again – they lack the power and immediacy of the Iraqi snapshots.
The refugee statistics are so appalling that they have become almost mundane. Four million of Iraq's 23 million people have fled their homes – until recently, at the rate of 60,000 a month – allegedly more than 1.2 million to Syria (a figure now challenged by at least one prominent NGO), 500,000 to Jordan, 200,000 to the Gulf, 70,000 to Egypt, 57,000 to Iran, up to 40,000 to Lebanon, 10,000 to Turkey. Sweden has accepted 9,000, Germany fewer – where an outrageous political debate has suggested that Christian refugees should have preference over Muslim Iraqis. With its usual magnanimity – especially for a country that set off this hell-disaster by its illegal invasion – George Bush's America has, of course, accepted slightly more than 500.
This collection of pictures is therefore an indictment of us, as well as of the courage of Iraqis. The madness is summed up in an email message sent to Van Kesteren by a Baghdad Iraqi. "This summer," he wrote, "a workman wanted to quench his thirst by putting ice in his tea. A car pulled up, the driver stepped out and began to beat and kick the man, cursing him as an unbeliever. 'What do you think you're doing? Did the Prophet Mohamed put ice in his water?'
The man being attacked was furious and asked his assailant: 'Do you think the Prophet Mohamed drove a car?'"
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Copyright 2008 Independent News and Media Limited

Comments
32 Comments
Stephen's comments are absurd. Robert Fisk wrote an article based on photographs taken by native Iraqis and you complain about "distorted impressions"?. Ludicrous.
Posted by Keith Connolly | 04.07.08, 12:55 GMT
So, now we know what it was all about.
The four major oil companies will after 36 years of banishment from Iraq be once again regain thier grasp on the Iraq Oil Fields.
MISSION ACCOMPLISHED.
Never, never ever forget our fearless leaders brilliant stratigical thinking term of " collateral damage ".
Sadly, that is all that these poor millions of dead and displaced people are/and have become thought of by this administration.
All rnds justify the means by this motly crew and i am sorry to say it has been this way for decades, but this bunch has been the most open and blatent with their arrogence about how they got their way.
Forget not that they created their very own Reichstag fire, their very own contrived "new pearl harbor" to launch not one but two illegal wars of aggression against countries that did nothing to ours.
Now they have entered into agreements with five ME countries to assist them becoming nuclear as well.
Is this rational?
Posted by alan1111 | 20.06.08, 02:32 GMT
We are solving the Iraqi problem the good olefashioned way, the way we solved the Native American problem here and the way Israel is solving the Palestinian problem. We will chase them off and kill them off and beat them down until they are no longer a problem. Mission nearly accomplished. Oil profits at all time highs, a national debt unpayable, elite few in control of virtually all means of production, economy totally dependent on perpetual war based consumption, individual American citizen's debt (dependence) at all time high, military stretched beyond the breaking point and deployed abroad, executive privelege near monarchical, the media an abosolute pawn of the state, the industrial base of the nation(ours and Iraq's) destroyed and no end in site. Our rulers have accomplished what no foreign power could ever have hoped to accomplish. They have destroyed our nation and turned a thriving independant republic into a fledgling fascist state, an ammoral corporatocracy.
Posted by Tom Tvedten | 19.06.08, 21:54 GMT
It's good to hear about the REAL Iraq through the eyes of every day Iraqis. Hopefully we'll get a current picture. All you hear here is the spin about the 'surge working', violence is down, political reconciliation, etc. Reporters are still embeds. We in the states get practically nothing on how the general population gets on. We would know nothing about the SOFA if not for you and Patrick. The sad truth here is that whenver there's stability here amnesia will gain ascendancy in the debate in the US, and the end will justify the means. I thought Nuremberg dictated that there are consequences for nations' collective actions. Only for losers, of course! My unfortunate pessimism leads me to think as we didn't learn much from Vietnam we won't learn much from Iraq. Terrorism will triumph in the aftermath of this debacle, as the international order has failed and 'justice' is dictated by force
Posted by Irwin | 19.06.08, 17:30 GMT
Mr. Fisk,
you are not only a brave and well-informed correspondent; you are a truly patriot in so far your work can help those westerners interested in the lost dignity to rescue it. Thanks a lot.
Posted by Artur | 19.06.08, 15:42 GMT
Mr Fisk,
I want to thank you for your courage. Americans living overseas know more about what America is up to, thanks to you and other investigative reporters that have not sold their souls, than those that read their local papers in America.
History repeats itself, most unfortunately;but the real issue seems to be that those in power at the present time, haven't learned much from the repetition of the past. That does not bode well for the future.
American soldiers now in Iraq and Afghanistan are the children of those troops that were in Vietnam. Have they forgotten everything?????The one difference; they were most often drafted at that time; only the truly naive and just plain stupid signed up then. Amazing how that can all be forgotten in such a relatively short time. Combine a floundering economy with effective brainwashing and a cowboy attitude=invade Iraq.
Thank you for telling us the truth. The world needs to know about this.
Posted by judith m night | 19.06.08, 13:15 GMT
I have commented
Posted by jonwoosnam | 19.06.08, 10:16 GMT
Mr. Fisk you speek to thousands in the US. about the ME. Do you think you will speak in England? Thank you for having brought the ME situation to my attention in the first place and continuing to be honest about your reporting. I love your books. Keep up the great work!
Posted by pauline russell | 19.06.08, 09:19 GMT
The western powers did not go there to liberate iraq from saddam. They went there to occupy and slaughter iraqis and steal their oil.
More than 2million iraqis have died as a direct result of the sanctions and the occupation. Getting clean drinking water and running electricity is a challenge for everyday life. now. One wonders why the bush regime bombed every structure and purposefully destroyed civilian infrastructure.
The British did the same to indians.. looting india's wealth for generations.. read about the bengal famines..
Posted by Sam | 19.06.08, 03:35 GMT
Greg,
What a pity you forget all the wars the western societies have inflicted upon themselves and the world... still doing so today...
Speaking of semitic mind sets being the type to carry on wars since Babilonian times... is very selective and racist to say the least.
Posted by Mlalpin | 19.06.08, 01:28 GMT
32 Comments