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Saturday, October 28, 2006
IS KURDISTAN HEAVEN OR HELL?


After three months of Kurdistan/me time, it is time to get back to the normal life of checking the internet, reading and replying e-mails, checking on friends, checking out news, etc… only the normal life is still in Kurdistan with eyes wide open for all the good and bad things that go on everyday with the outside prospective but at a different angle, THE KURDISTAN ANGLE.

So, is Kurdistan the heaven that mom and dad always portrayed? Or is it the childhood picture we all had of Kurdistan, or the beautiful landscapes that writers and visitors of Kurdistan write about after their two or three weeks long journey to Kurdistan? or is it the hell that the relatives who live in Kurdistan always talk and complain about?

Having had the privilege to stay in Kurdistan for such a long time, I had the advantage to see one of the best and worst seasons of Kurdistan. The hot and beautiful summer that has the coolest breeze in the mountainous areas, where springs and waterfalls make you forget about anything you wish to forget; and some of the hottest afternoons, where you can feel like a fried chicken if you stay under the sun for less than 20 minutes. That might be an exaggeration, but it really feels that hot in those hot summer afternoons where the temperature could possible reach 110-120 degrees Fahrenheit in some areas in Kurdistan.

Kurdistan started the first moment we landed in Amed, but the real Kurdistan that I remember from the golly childhood days started in Akrê where the unique trees covered the city and the high mountains hugged the city in all corners and everything in between. Thanks to the occupiers of Kurdistan and the world politics, there wasn’t much development urdistan started the first moment we in the area and so the city looks almost the picture I had in my mind.



Living abroad means missing Kurdistan especially when reading about the imaginary picture that visitors of Kurdistan draw in their descriptive articles. Coming back to Kurdistan meant going sight seeing, and especially those places where a lot have spoken of and have came to Kurdistan specifically to see such places. Many times, foreigners and tourists from the occupying countries would appraise when they were interviewed or asked as to why they would chose tourist places in Kurdistan for their summer attractions. Months in Kurdistan gave me the chance to see many of those tourist attractions and especially in Southern Kurdistan.

Finally, the reality that the ordinary Kurd lives in everyday, is limited hours of electricity in the 21st century, where life runs by machines and computers in most places around the world. Fortunately, life doesn’t run by machines and computers in Kurdistan; otherwise, life would have to stops for many hours each day.

The reality of limited usage of water effects the simple daily activities like showers, such things that we never even have to think of in our comfortable lives abroad. The luxury of having so much leisure time at hand from the youngest to the oldest people is one of the least favored luxuries in Kurdistan. A place where there is very less to do especially for the younger generations has affected many young people, most of which would fall in the category of depressed if they were seen by psychiatrists. A young person best described his leisure time as “throwing rocks at frogs,” when he was asked what do you do with all this time you have at hand. Then the same person took the joke further by saying “With all the young people in Kurdistan, we are all worried about what we will do after we kill all the frogs.” These are few of the many hardships that every person in Kurdistan has to care about each day they wake up and only those that live such conditions will ever get to understand their complaints.



Perhaps what I have mentioned and experienced in my stay in Kurdistan, not all of us will experience. Yet I am positive that what I have experience is what most people in Kurdistan experience each day in their lives. For those who have left Kurdistan in times of Enfal, Halabja, or the great uprising, all these hardships could be seen small hardships all Kurdistanees felt during the years of oppression under Saddam’s regime or the regimes of the occupying counties. Yet, for those of us who have lived comfortable lives abroad could be seen as meaningless hardships if each one of us gives a harder effort to help the people and government of Kurdistan to further and faster improve the living standards of people of Kurdistan.

I don’t wish that all those of us living abroad will come back to see what I saw, but I do wish that they all come back and observe Kurds and Kurdistan and their living standards. Hopefully, each one will have the chance to pay a visit to Kurdistan, but each one will see less of these hardships. It is important however that each one of us comes back to see Kurdistan at first hand and judge whether KURDISTAN IS HEAVEN OR HELL!!!
posted by Aryan Akrayi at 7:36 AM | Permalink |

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Comments for
Dest xweş hevalê hêja! You gave a descriptive image of what your intention was all those times I saw Kurdistan IS Heaven and Hell next to your profile =)

*hevala hêja =P

Dest xwesh, xushka heja. I think you gave a great insight to all of us living abroad. I hope that each and everyone one of us is motivated to be able to contribute and give back soon..

silav

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