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A Solo Stroll Through Baghdad

I am alone in Baghdad. After a farewell dinner and a visit to an Iraqi amusement park my travel companions have left for the airport. Our guards from the Interior Ministry have gone off to other duties and I'm staying unguarded in my hotel. I don't fly out until tomorrow.
I'm not supposed to leave the hotel. Guards are supposed to be with me at all times. While I understand why the government insists on this rule, I've found the guards annoying. They've often made me move on when I've wanted to linger at a place or continue a conversation, and I get the feeling some people didn't approach me because of their presence.
Now I finally have a chance to see Iraq without them. I'm not nervous about this. Well, not too nervous. My hotel is in a good neighborhood and I walked in Basra without a guard and had no trouble. Besides, the biggest risk here is from car bombs and I don't really see what a guard can do about that.
I don't have much of an area to explore. I can't go through a checkpoint alone. The best result I could get from that stunt would be a stern lecture and a police escort back to my hotel. The worst result is something better left unexplored. So my Baghdad tour is limited to one neighborhood circumscribed by police barricades.
The neighborhood is a good one by Baghdad standards, shops and apartment blocks and a few official buildings. The main landmark is the National Theater and a couple of swank hotels. It's considered an up-and-coming and reasonably safe area.
The only problem is that it's the last day of Eid al-Adha, a celebration of Ibrahim's willingness to sacrifice his son Ishmael, known in Christianity and Judaism as the story of Abraham and Isaac. It's one of the biggest holidays in the Muslim calendar and most places are closed.
I pound the pavement past rows of steel shutters. It looks like most people are taking the day off. A middle-aged man and his son come up and say hello. Their English is almost as bad as my Arabic and the conversation soon falters. What I want is to find a like mind, someone with open eyes, a good education, and good English who can explain his country to me. The National Theater seems a likely place. I head over there. Closed.
I continue on my quest. I have a few more "Welcome to Iraq" conversations, each time cut short due to language. I curse myself for not studying more Arabic. One young guy says he'd love to smoke some hash with me but he's all out. Yeah, pot paranoia on the streets of Baghdad. That would have made an interesting article.
Gallery: Walking through Baghdad
They invite me behind the counter and give me a glass of whiskey and some string cheese. String cheese. I kid you not. I didn't know they had string cheese. Yet another insight into Iraqi culture.
My two companions really, really want to leave Iraq.
"But business is good here," I say, eying the wad of bills in the cash drawer.
"Yes, but too many troubles," they say. "Sometimes Muslim militia come here, take bottles, and no pay."
I shake my head. A lot of the so-called Islamists are actually simple criminals grabbing an opportunity.
They ply me with questions about how to move to Canada, my home country. They're disappointed to hear that Canada wants people with money who can speak English but seem hopeful about the refugee angle. They're from one of Iraq's many persecuted minorities.
As we talk a steady stream of customers come through. None look at me. Muslims always have this guilty look on their faces when they buy booze. It's the same look Western guys get in porn shops. As a joke I start serving customers. My two buddies think this is hilarious. None of the customers bat an eye. Iraqis act nonchalant when stuck in a strange situation they're trying to size up. It's a survival technique. To show that you notice is to become part of the scene, and that's not always healthy.
One of the liquor store owners runs over to a nearby bakery and brings back some fresh, hot pita. Ah, Arab hospitality! This is followed by a second (third?) round of whiskey, another form of hospitality that isn't as rare in the Middle East as you might think. As they break out more string cheese I notice it's getting dark outside. My day of independence is ending. My one real chance to have an immersive experience in Iraqi culture ends with string cheese and an alcohol buzz in a liquor store.
It would have to be good enough. When I told a friend back in Spain that most of my interactions in Iraq were friendly but all too brief and superficial, he replied that Westerners and Iraqis need to have more friendly, superficial meetings. At least it's a start, he said.
Good point, but I wanted more.
Guarded group travel has insurmountable limitations that one day of partial freedom can't break. Those serendipitous experiences don't come on demand. You need time and luck. For me they came a few times on this trip – with pilgrims at the Shia holy shrines, with a child refugee in my hotel lobby, and with an artist on the tough streets of Nasiriyah. Each time these experiences could have – should have – turned into daylong interactions. Each time, though, the group agenda and my guards' concerns meant we had to move on.
Luckily the security situation is slowly improving and there's talk of individual travel opening up throughout Iraq like it already is in Kurdistan. Perhaps in a few years I'll be able to come back and explore Iraq the way adventure travel is supposed to be done – slowly, with no itinerary, and alone.
Don't miss the rest of my series, "Destination: Iraq," chronicling my 17-day journey across this strife-ridden country in search of adventure, archaeology and AK-47s.
Coming up next: "Ten Random Observations About Iraq!"
[Photo by Sean McLachlan]
Filed under: Learning, Festivals and Events, Food and Drink, Iraq, Middle East, Travel Security












Reader Comments (Page 2 of 3)
don burris Dec 17th 2012 6:43PM
Iraq. just another place where we gave up hundreds of young men and women for the life of people who don't really care...
The President of Iraq lets Iran fly over to Syria and the President there kills his own people and the dummies we have in DC give them Billions and please don't think that they love us...They would like to see us all dead.....
Ray Dec 17th 2012 10:21AM
Don, who is "they" who would like to see us all dead? Do you really believe that everyone in Iraq would like to see us all dead? That's a pretty broad brush, isn't it? Do you also believe that everyone in this country would just as soon see all Iraqis dead? That's simply not true.
metusmetu Dec 16th 2012 10:56PM
Well, what do you know, the U.S. invades, kills, destroys, and spends billions if not trillions of dollars, and it is no different there, or even worse. Another worthwhile accomplishment of the U.S. Govt........................
frank Dec 17th 2012 12:12AM
Somebody mention the long war between Shia and Sunni , what about the Jews and Muslims ??? same and it will not stop , not yesterday, today or tomorrow and you want to understand why not ?? that's the way the cookie ........... in our planet and then some.
RDH53 Dec 17th 2012 12:28AM
Nice artical. I had a chance to wander around Baghdad in 2008 and found the people very friendly. I hope they can get their internal problems fixed soon, they have much to offer. I would have loved to have seen some of the ancient historical places like the Ziggurat and the Great Spiral of Samarra.
gary Dec 17th 2012 1:13AM
war ----- times of extreame quit and peace---- where the county has beauty and people have meaning. ------ and americas will drink and raise hell and someone will provide for the $$$$$$. now the other side you are scared shitless and only want to protect yourself and your units then back to above. ------------ middle east no different remember all people would like better for there kids bur hard to do in middleeast. shame humans can not get along oh well maybe next week
Jeff Hayes Dec 17th 2012 2:27AM
Hmmmmmmmm. Sounds like fun... at least a little. I think I wanna go to Iraq and drink free whiskey and eat hot pita bread with string cheese (bet all that goes IN way better than it comes OUT!)... But ONLY if AIM, or Huffpost, or whoever paid this guy to do this and write this rarely interesting and humorous column amongst the garbage heaps of drivel we usually wade through online will afford me the same luxury.
Yeah.
Right.
Pigs fly, too. Well, at least Pink Floyd made them do funny stuff that made them LOOK like they were flying at their concerts... 'nuff drugs and you didn't care or notice. :)
well Dec 17th 2012 4:23AM
will BUSH ever go to IRAQ for vacation. didt he brought freedom and democracy there ?
Falcon Dec 17th 2012 6:12PM
Everyone is entitled to their own opinion.
When I read the first few lines I was insulted that one could actually type the words -
"It's a place where few westerners have been, and while our writer traveled with a military guard, one afternoon stroll made him nervous".
And then to read the ho hum, gee aren't I special article that followed.
You know exactly where I am going with this, so I won't waste anyones time.
God bless our thousands of troops who also took that "Stroll Through Baghdad".
Charlotte Fontenot Dec 17th 2012 5:33AM
Sounds nice but I can NOT believe you have never heard of STRING CHEESE> We have it in U.S. A. in all our Grocery Stores. I feel sorry for the way they have to live everyday in life to worry if this is their LASt!!!! My friends went to clinb moutains over there & they said only nice things about the people there!!!!!!!
Anthony Dec 17th 2012 8:25AM
I thought muslim people arent supposed to drink alcohol ?
Grapost Dec 17th 2012 8:25AM
Perhaps in a few years I'll be able to come back and explore Iraq the way adventure travel is supposed to be done
And then maybe in a few years they will show where the WMD's are really hidden.
Ray Dec 17th 2012 10:21AM
I'm enjoying this story and want to comment on what your Spanish friend said about "friendly, superficial meetings." I couldn't agree more. I've long thought that it's just too easy for people to hate people they know nothing about. You can't do bus tours, driving through neighborhoods and calling it interaction. It needs to be more like what you are doing: stopping to say, "Hello." I believe that if there was more casual conversation that allowed each of us to appreciate our world neighbors as fellow human beings, we'd all have less inclination to blame and attack one another. I hope the rest of your story is as positive as this segment. Thank you.
OfAlaska Dec 17th 2012 10:45AM
The big difference between Islam and creeds like Christianity or Buddhism is that Mohammad was a warlord, a killer and a rapist of childrren his very self. Humm...
KCH Dec 17th 2012 10:45AM
What this person did was extremely irresponsible. People get kidnapped in the Middle East all the time, and then expect to get rescued by the U.S., putting the lives of our military in even further danger.
mitzi Dec 17th 2012 6:08PM
I wish all immigrants would move to Canada. come on move Canada offers free health care.
George Dec 17th 2012 11:32AM
Well, now I know what Eid is about. The story of Issac and his near human sacrifice is one of the most disturbing in the Bible and Quran. At a metaphoric level I understand the connection between the predicate story and the later tale of God sacrificing himself as Jesus. But along with the slaughter of the innocents in connection with Passover, I find it very difficult to reconcile the story of Issac's near murder with the notion of a God that is anything other than a sociopath. It is one of the main reasons I first started to refuse to accept any part of the Bible as literal fact. The willingness to teach this story as fact and celebrate or try to explain it away as God's will is perhaps the reason that ever nation that embraces western religion from Iraq to the United States should question some of the roots of our culture. Frankly, I'm a bit tired of giving away the lives of our children to ideologies, gods, guns or beliefs in the values of various schemes of social engineering.
johnwayne Dec 17th 2012 1:00PM
The people in iraqi are surpressed by their goverment and have no life outside their country not all the people are like the goverment but on average they are good people they are people that love their country but dislike their goverment but these people are held in bondage.You can't keep people in chains forever.Their goverment is afraid of the people that's why there are gaurds everywhere to keep their citizens in bondage.
beth walker Dec 17th 2012 1:00PM
i sure dont want AMERICAto end up this things keep up way they are it sure might
Miki Dec 17th 2012 1:07PM
I had co-workers who told me stories about Iraq and Lebanon in the late 60's and early 70's, they told me that these were beautiful places and that Beirut was consider the Paris of the Mediterranean. Made me want to visit these countries but now with the violence I won't go, just like Mexico years ago it was safe to go now not a chance I live in New Mexico and had co-workers who had family in Mexico and they won't go because of the violence.