Intelligent Travel

Perspectives on Iraq

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Jenn Blatty is our newest Traveler photo intern, and she is also a former U.S. Army Engineer Officer who has served in Iraq and Afghanistan. Since those are two places that we hear about in the news constantly, but where few of us travel, we asked her to share some of her experiences while she was deployed there.

Iraq WindowIraq is a controversial topic; increasingly so now with a new President making new decisions about our military. But it's also a place that has left a large percentage of travelers asking a different set of questions, other than whether  our military stay or go. Instead, they are asking: What is it like there? What are the people like? Or will it be open to travel in my lifetime? I am certainly not a professional in the matter, but there is one experience I would like to share as it made me realize how close in nature we really are to the Iraqis, and that many of them ask the same questions about us.  

A deployment into Iraq begins in Kuwait, where soldiers spend about two weeks preparing for movement north. Our movement north was to Tallil Air Base, an old Iraqi airfield that was about 20 kilometers from the city of An Nasiriyah, and walking distance from the historical remains of the ancient city of Ur.

Because we were a Combat Heavy Engineer unit (in civilian words, a construction unit), we were in a constant need of materials. I was the contractor for my unit, and once a week I would travel into downtown Nasiriyah with a team to purchase a "shopping list" of immediate needs from the local Iraqi vendors.
During one of these supply runs, we were parked in a dirt lot outside of a building downtown, waiting for Yassir, our translator, to join us. While we waited in the vehicle a local woman approached me on the passenger side, wearing a traditional cloak (an "abaya") covering her from head to foot. I was used to being approached as a female soldier; I can only imagine that I was an abnormality to their culture. Crowds would flock to our vehicle on a regular basis, trying to get a glimpse, but this was the first time I had ever seen woman approach us. It was a rarity to even see an Iraqi woman in public, and if we did, she would be hiding in the background, avoiding eye contact and attempting to be out of sight.

Now here she was, one foot away from me, staring straight into my eyes without fear or hesitation. For the first time during the deployment I felt stripped of my uniform; it was as if for a moment we were somewhere else, forgetting the unfortunate circumstances surrounding us. She wanted to understand my world and my culture just as much as I wanted to understand hers. We could have been in the middle of a combat zone, as we were, or in a coffee shop in Washington D.C.

She carried a book under her arm, and as she smiled and nodded her head in a gesture, she opened it to a page and pushed it towards me. I didn't understand what she wanted, but as I closed the book to read the cover, it became more than clear. It was a translation dictionary.

There hasn't been a time in my life that I've cursed the barrier of language (and myself for not knowing them all) more than I did that day. Our brief encounter was interrupted only seconds later by Yassir's return and the vehicle instantly cranking. I quickly placed the book in her hands and met her eyes to farewell, and in that moment I knew there was an understanding between us; an acceptance of our circumstances, and that our interaction would end where it began.

It's been almost six years now, and I still think about what could have been said and shared between two people, two women for that matter, whose realities are so intensely different. But at the same time, right there, in that dirt parking lot in the middle of a combat zone in Iraq, we were exactly the same.

Photo: Jenn Blatty




6 Comments

Linda Lindsley said:

This article brought tears to my eyes. I am overwhelmed and speechless.
I'll never forget what I have just read.
This is a wonderful and meaningful article.


Thanks for a great story!

I used this post in my blog as an example of how travel can create bridges and understanding between different cultures and people!

-Hakon

Karla said:


That was very moving........it's quite sad. Thanks for sharing.

Karla

Marilyn said:

Thanks for all your great comments. The backstory of this photo: I saw it on National Geographic's Daily Dozen a few months ago, where photo editor Susan Welchman picks her favorite reader-submitted photos for people to vote on. I was mesmerized by the faces in the photo, and by the one fact I knew from the caption: that it was taken by a female US soldier. I never knew any more about it. Then Jenn joined our staff not long ago and I checked out her website and there was that same photo! I couldn't believe she was on our staff. I ran around to find her and asked her if we could please use that photo on Intelligent Travel, and would she write a blog post about it, I'm happy she did.

You can check out the current Daily Dozen here: http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/your-shot/daily-dozen

makobill said:

THis is a great piece - well written, moving, great photograph. The various expressions of the diverse faces is priceless. Well done!

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corporate event photography singapore on Perspectives on Iraq: it's so natural~ nice spot
makobill on Perspectives on Iraq: THis is a great piece - well written, moving, great photograph. The various expressions of the dive
Marilyn on Perspectives on Iraq: Thanks for all your great comments. The backstory of this photo: I saw it on National Geographic's
Karla on Perspectives on Iraq: That was very moving........it's quite sad. Thanks for sharing. Karla
winter-travel.org on Perspectives on Iraq: Thanks for a great story! I used this post in my blog as an example of how travel can create bridg

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