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The Cradle of Civilization
Alwash, 52, a citizen of Iraq and the United States, is a hydraulic
engineer and the director of Nature Iraq, the country's first and only
environmental organization. He founded the organization in 2004 together
with his wife Suzanne, an American geologist, with financial support
from the United States, Canada, Japan and Italy. His goal is to save a
largely dried-up marsh in southern Iraq. In return for giving up his job
in California, Alwash is now putting his safety and health at risk.
Nowadays he spends a lot of time flying from one continent to
another. Four days ago, he traveled from Fullerton, California, where
his family lives, to Amman, Jordan to meet with former Iraqi Prime
Minister Ayad Allawi. Then he flew to Basra to attend a conference, and
now he is back in the marsh. His next stop is Baghdad, where he has an
appointment at the Environment Ministry. After that, he will travel to
Sulaymaniyah in northern Iraq, where, for security reasons, Nature Iraq
has its headquarters. After that, he has meetings scheduled with donors
and advisers in the Italian cities of Padua and Venice. Other men have a
mistress, says Alwash - he has the marshes.
Of course, this isn't just any old marsh. Alwash is fighting for a
marsh which Biblical scholars believe is the site of the Garden of Eden,
and which some describe as the cradle of civilization. The
Mesopotamians settled in the fertile region in the fifth century B.C.,
and within a few centuries it had become the site of an advanced
Sumerian civilization. Scholars believe that cuneiform was invented in
the region, as were literature, mathematics, metallurgy, ceramics and
the sailboat.
Only 20 years ago, an amazing aquatic world thrived in the area,
which is in the middle of the desert. Larger than the Everglades, it
extended across the southern end of Iraq, where the Tigris and Euphrates
rivers divide into hundreds of channels before they come together again
near Basra and flow into the Persian Gulf. For environmentalists, this
marshland was a unique oasis of life, until the Iraqi dictator Saddam
Hussein, a Sunni, had it drained in the early 1990s after a Shiite
uprising.
Turning the Garden of Eden into Hell
The official explanation was that the land was being reclaimed for
agriculture. The military was sent in to excavate canals and build dikes
to conduct the water directly into the Gulf. The despot, proud of his
work of destruction, gave the canals names like Saddam River and Loyalty
to the Leader Canal.
In truth, Saddam was not interested in the farmers. His real goal was
to harm the Madan, also known as the Marsh Arabs. For thousands of
years, the marshes had been the homeland of this ethnic group and their
cows and water buffalo. They lived in floating huts made of woven reeds
and spent much of their time in wooden boats, which they guided with
sticks along channels the buffalo had trampled through the reeds. They
harvested reeds, hunted birds and caught fish.
When the fishermen backed a Shiite uprising against the dictator, the
vindictive Saddam turned their "Garden of Eden" into a hell. He had
thousands of the Marsh Arabs murdered and their livestock killed. Any
remaining water sources were poisoned and reed huts burned to the
ground. Many people fled across the border into Iran to live in refugee
camps, while others went to the north and tried to survive as day
laborers. By the end of the operation, up to half a million people had
been displaced.
Within a few years, the marshland had shrunk to less than 10 percent
of its original size. In a place that was once teeming with wildlife -
wild boar, hyenas, foxes, otters, water snakes and even lions - the
former reed beds had been turned into barren salt flats, poisoned and
full of land mines. In a 2001 report, the United Nations characterized
the destruction of the marshes as one of the world's greatest
environmental disasters.
'Wait Until You See the Marshes'
On June 18, 2003, only three months after the American invasion, Alwash
flew from Los Angeles to his native Iraq. He knew what to expect.
"Nevertheless, it was a shock," he says. "I remembered water and green
vegetation as far as the eye could see, but what I saw was nothing but
desert, dust and the ruins of settlements."
At that point, Alwash had not stepped on Iraqi soil in exactly 24
years and 341 days. He had gone to the United States to study and
eventually became an American through and through. He had an American
wife, two young daughters with whom he did not speak Arabic, a house in
Long Beach and a well-paid job as a hydraulic engineer. "It was the
perfect American dream," he says today.
But he couldn't forget the marshland, his childhood paradise. His
father, who had worked in Iraq's Water Ministry until the early 1980s,
had often taken him along when he was traveling in the marshes for work
or hunting geese in the reeds. Sometimes his mother and his two sisters
came along on their extended outings in the boat. Alwash had promised
himself that one day he would show his wife and his daughters the
"Garden of Eden" of his childhood. "This is nothing," he would often say
when they were hiking or canoeing in California. "Just wait until you
see the marshes!"
'This Marshland Is the Holy Grail'
It was this promise that prompted Alwash to return to Iraq and raise
funds for his plan, which involved the controlled flooding of former
marshland. He and his collaborators called their ambitious plan the
"Eden Again" project.
Curtis Richardson, an ecologist at Duke University in Durham, North
Carolina, was part of the project from the very beginning, making
research trips to the region between 2003 and 2007. "I've studied
wetlands for my entire professional life," says Richardson, "but this
marshland is the Holy Grail - the Garden of Eden."
Soon, however, Richardson was forced to realize how naïve his
enthusiasm had been. He spent many a sleepless night on the floor of his
hotel room in Basra listening to the sound of gunshots outside. Heavily
armed guards had to escort him during his field work. "You do feel a
little strange when you're holding a pH monitor in your hand while
everyone else is carrying a machine gun," he says.
Once, when Richardson went into the water near the Iranian border to
take some samples, his translator, who was standing on the shore,
suddenly began shouting and waving his arms wildly. "I had walked into a
minefield," he recalls. That was the moment that Richardson decided to
abandon his field work.
"Azzam is fighting a courageous battle, but he needs help," says
Richardson. The United States has canceled its financial support for
the project, and now most of its funding and scientific advice comes
from Italy. Richardson estimates that no more than 30 to 40 percent of
the former marshland can be transformed into a functioning ecosystem in
the long term. But even that would represent an enormous improvement,
not just for nature but also for Iraq's future.
Influencing the Climate
Because they retain the water from the rivers, the marshes could
prove to be an important water source for the south. They also influence
the climate. The region became hotter after the marshland was
destroyed, says Richardson. When temperatures went over 50 degrees
Celsius (112 degrees Fahrenheit), the crops dried up in the fields. The
fishermen and shrimp growers also saw a sharp decline in their catch,
because the marshes were no longer there to filter dirt and pollutants
out of the rivers.
Now, about a third of the original river marshes are covered with
water once again. Teams of international experts, Nature Iraq employees
and representatives of three Iraqi ministries are demolishing dams,
channeling water from the canals back into parched areas, sowing native
plants and studying the composition of species and the development of
plant and animal populations.
Before they flood a new area, the scientists measure salt and sulfur
concentrations in the soil. Levels are so high in some places that
neither reeds nor indigenous fish species can survive. A constant flow
of fresh water is needed to flush out the salt and allow the soil to
recover.
Alwash and his collaborators are developing a plan for the country's
first national park: a protected zone of about 1,000 square kilometers
(386 square miles) where the water supply will be regulated with a large
number of floodgates. "We are in the process of drafting guidelines for
nature reserves," says Giorgio Galli of Studio Galli Ingegneria Spa, an
engineering firm in Padua, Italy. "This sort of thing has not existed
in Iraq until now." The scientists hope that if the project
materializes, it could be declared a UNESCO World Heritage site.
Bombs 'Just Part of Daily Life'
But all of this is happening in the midst of a conflict zone. Dozens
of employees of the project have died in terrorist attacks in the last
seven years. Others, fearing for their lives, have left. Experts with
the United Nations Environment Program (UNEP) can only provide advice
from afar. For safety reasons, they have been barred from entering Iraq
since 22 people died in an attack on the U.N. headquarters building in
Baghdad in August 2003.
The situation seems to have calmed down somewhat recently. Basra is
not as safe as Sulaymaniyah, but neither is it as dangerous as Baghdad.
But security is a relative concept. Is the risk worth it? Can
conservation even function in a country like this?
Alwash is used to bombs going off. "As long as you are at least 100
meters (about 330 feet) away, it's just part of daily life." He tries to
explain how he feels: "For the first time in my life, I have the
feeling that my work really helps people, and that I'm not just working
to make money for my family and myself. That's fulfilling."
Nowadays, when Awash is traveling in the marsh of hope, he sometimes
encounters images of his childhood. In Al-Hammar, a labyrinth of
waterways leads through dense, meter-high reeds and comes together to
form larger lakes. Dewdrops glisten on the reeds, rustling as they
recede alongside the passing boat. A crescent moon fades away as the sun
grows stronger. Tiny fish dash through the water, fleeing a water
snake. And the birds are back: night herons, pied kingfishers, purple
herons, little grebes, black-tailed godwits and marbled ducks.
Reed huts surrounded by sleepy water buffalo stand on small islands.
Men and women with sunburned faces and long robes glide through the
water in boats, cutting reeds, occasionally raising their hands in
greeting.
The Return of the Madan
The water has brought back the Madan, whose numbers are already believed
to have climbed to about 80,000. Their stories are like the story of
Naim Aatai, a small, hunched-over man with a white beard, a furrowed
face and deep-set eyes. "Saddam's soldiers came to our village and
accused us of hiding terrorists," says Aatai. "They shot at us and
killed my brother. Then they burned down our huts."
After the attack, Aatai fled to the north and found work on a farm
near Baghdad. "It wasn't a good life," he says. "It's better here. This
is our home."
Dhwia Jift is just returning from her first reed-cutting trip of the
day, her boat filled with reeds. A few men load the bundles onto a
truck. Jift is paid the equivalent of $4 (about €3) for a full load. The
slight woman, dressed in black, says that she gets up every morning
before sunrise, bakes flatbread and feeds the children. Then she spends
the rest of the day harvesting reeds.
The skin on her hands and feet is cracked and covered with calluses.
She says that she is tired and sick, but that she doesn't want to
complain. Her time as a day laborer in the north was much worse, she
says, because she was treated like a slave there. "I'm free here," she
says with a smile, exposing the gaps in her teeth. "At least I don't
have to beg, as long as I have water and reeds."
Wasting Water
But it is far from certain that the water will remain in the marshes.
Turkey, where the Tigris and the Euphrates originate, is building dams
and gradually reducing the flow of water southward. There are no
agreements between the two countries over joint use of the rivers. And
Turkey is only one of three countries, along with China and Burundi,
that have not signed the 1997 U.N. Convention on the Law of the
Non-Navigational Uses of International Watercourses.
Much would be gained if Iraq's farmers would learn to be economical
with their use of water. They are not familiar with the principle of
drip irrigation. Instead, they still flood their fields, a method that
was practiced in times when there was a surplus of water.
There are also other ways to save water. Iraq treats hardly any of
its sewage, and recycling water is practically unheard of. As a result,
the water that is being fed out of the canals and back into the marshes
contains high concentrations of fertilizer, environmental toxins and
pathogens. The Environment Ministry and Nature Iraq are jointly
monitoring the situation to gauge the effects on the ecosystem and the
health of human beings and animals.
The Hazards of Oil
Broder Merkel, of the Freiberg University of Mining and Technology,
sits between muscular bodyguards in the lobby of the newly opened Mnawi
Basha Hotel in Basra. The German hydrogeologist has identified another
hazard: oil. "The oil companies can't wait to start drilling for oil in
the marshes," he says. "And when that gets going, without regulations,
research and monitoring, you can forget about the marshes once and for
all."
Iraq has the world's third-largest oil reserves, and there are plans
to triple production in the next five years. A number of oil fields are
located in the marshlands. Merkel, who has a white ponytail and many
laugh lines, has come to Basra on behalf of the German Academic Exchange
Service to develop two new courses of study together with
representatives of Iraqi universities: "Sustainable Oil Production" and
"Hydrogeology and Water Management in Arid Regions."
This time, Merkel wants to take home a few water samples from the
Basra canals. His trip takes him past slums the color of brown mud,
mountains of garbage and checkpoints. The streets of Basra are filled
with the stench of garbage and gasoline. Rickety cars squeeze past
donkey carts and beggars. Combat vehicles are parked next to corrugated
metal huts where vendors sell fruit and vegetables. Shiite mourning
flags flutter in the wind. Wherever the scientists stop, police officers
join them and wait politely until the guest from Germany has filled his
test tubes.
Hotels and Hikers
Alwash knows the geologist from Freiberg, and the two men greet each
other in the Arabic fashion, by kissing each other on both cheeks. But
the US Iraqi doesn't share his German colleague's pessimism. In fact, he
sees the oil boom as an opportunity. "Maybe we can create incentives
for the oil companies to contribute to the establishment of a nature
reserve in return," says Alwash.
Alwash isn't afraid of dreaming. And when he glides through his
beloved marshlands in a boat during the evening, his dream seems within
reach. "I see floating reed hotels and camping sites," he says. "I see
glass-bottomed kayaks, hikers, para-gliders and hot-air balloons." His
minders listen to him, their weapons lowered.
"The first people to come will be the ornithologists," Alwash
continues. "Then the people who are interested in archaeology, in the
ancient cities of Ur and Uruk. And then the eco-tourists." Eco-tourists?
Alwash grins, and then he says: "One of my strengths is that I don't
let myself be constrained by reality."
Intellpuke: You can read this article by Spiegel journalist
Samiha Shafy in context here:
www.spiegel.de/international/world/0,1518,709180,00.html
This article was translated from the German for Spiegel by Christopher Sultan.
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