Reading returns to Iraq’s post-jihadist Mosul

Book enthusiasts browse a stall on a pavement in Mosul on January 12, 2018, six months after Iraqi forces retook the northern city from the Islamic State group.
/AFP

Literary cafes, poetry readings and pavement bookstalls – Mosul’s cultural scene is back in business, months after Iraqi forces ousted the Islamic State (IS)group from the city following three years of jihadist rule.

At the “Book Forum” cafe, men and women, young and old, sit passionately debating literature, music, politics and history.

Drinking tea, coffee and juice, some smoke nargileh water pipes while an oud player takes the stage to accompany a poet about to read from his work.

Opposite, the only wall not covered with bookshelves is instead host to a gallery of portraits — medieval Iraqi poet Al-Mutanabbi is pictured alongside Palestinian Mahmoud Darwish and a series of abstract paintings.

A few months ago, opening a mixed-gender literary cafe in Iraq’s second city would have been unthinkable — punishable by flogging or death under IS rule.

But with the jihadists gone, Fahd Sabah and his partner have set about realizing their dream.

“While we lived under the yoke of IS, I told myself that it was an absolute must to open this place,” Sabah said. “There was a need to inform people, to enlighten minds, to bring new ideas.”

Like many young graduates in Iraq, the 30-year-old engineer had few prospects of finding employment.

So as soon as the jihadists were driven out of Mosul, he set about finding a venue and preparing to open a cafe, putting his savings into the venture. Within a month, it was up and running.

It was worth the sacrifice, he said. His project aims to create “a new consciousness to overcome this terrible period and the damage left by the war.”

Reforming spirits
Iraqis are renowned in the Arab world for their literary culture. Mosul, capital of Nineveh province and sitting at the crossroads of ancient trading routes, long boasted a parade of booksellers along its famous Al-Nujaifi Street.

But IS methodically destroyed and burned books and destroyed libraries.

After the jihadists were evicted six months ago, a handful of activists set up the “Book Pavement” market outside the city’s battle-scarred university.

Ali Najam, 23, comes every Friday to scour the stalls of second-hand booksellers next to the concrete carcass of a building disemboweled by bombs.

Today, he has picked up an English edition of “Love in the Age of Cholera” by Colombian Nobel Laureate Gabriel Garcia Marquez.

“People badly need culture and to build their consciousness after the hardships they went through,” Najam said.

“There’s a need to rebuild people’s spirits, which is even more important than rebuilding the houses and the city.”

Yunis Mohammad, a 33-year-old writer, said that despite the destruction, “Mosul will be rebuilt thanks to the brains of its young people, its intellectuals.”

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