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Updated:Tue. Mar. 21, 2006

 

Iraqis and the Occupation

Dark Humor

Laughing Instead of Crying in Iraq

By Nagem Salam

Journalist – Baghdad

10/06/2004 

A car bomb at the 14th of July Bridge entrance to the "Green Zone" in May

“Should be time for the daily car bomb,” says a colleague as we prepare to hit the streets, which are jammed with traffic. “We haven’t had one yet, have we?”

As temperatures rise and Iraqi tempers grow shorter today in occupied Baghdad, people are finding creative ways to vent their frustrations. One of the most popular has been using dark humor to diffuse the frustration that grips most Iraqis today in their capital city. Journalists, Western and Arab alike, who work amidst the chaos, have adopted a strong sense of the black humor themselves.  

The recent upsurge in random attacks has made traveling around the capital city of Iraq both stressful and scary. One never knows when they will be in the wrong place at the wrong time, and the bottom line is that it could happen to anyone here. Many people choose to stay in their homes as much as possible; but inevitably, at some point everyone must venture out onto the dangerous streets where US patrols lurk, as do the resistance fighters who await them. 

Oftentimes cars drive the wrong way down the streets of Baghdad—each time another car is quickly approaching us head on, my interpreter will yell out, “Al-Huria! [the freedom]” Traffic used to be tightly controlled under the regime of Saddam Hussein. Now, it is utter bedlam, as drivers tend to go wherever they please in efforts to avoid the horrendous traffic.  

Oftentimes we watch cars racing the wrong way down busy streets, and yell; “Watch out! Here comes another liberated driver!” 


“Should be time for the daily car bomb; we haven’t had one yet, have we?”


Without much evidence of the new “freedom” promised by the US-led occupiers, Iraqis make light of their dashed hopes by finding this “freedom” wherever they can, even if it means making light of breaking laws which used to exist here.

The horrendous photos and stories coming out of the Abu Ghraib prison aren’t something to laugh about, yet Iraqis are keen to find ways to take the sting out of this tragedy as well. Even the detainees themselves are using humor to diffuse the atrocity.  

One detainee who was recently released from Abu Ghraib said, “The Americans brought electricity to my a** before they brought it to my house!”  

Another man, while discussing the atrocities which occurred while he was in the dreaded prison, laughed when he told of how US soldiers forced him to beat another detainee after having been beaten himself. He laughed deeply while flopping his arms lazily about the air simulating hitting someone and said, “I was so exhausted that all I could do was lift my arms and let them fall on him!”  


Each time another car is quickly approaching us head on, my interpreter will yell out, “Al-Huria! [the freedom]”


He then went on to tell of how when he was released from the prison, the military drove him to Tikrit and dropped him there, rather than leaving him in Baghdad where he lives. “They even gave me a free tour of my own country.”  

An Iraqi family, who had their home shot with rockets by US helicopters, mocked their tragedy as well. Standing underneath a hole in the ceiling caused by one of the rockets, the owner of the home said; “If I’d have wanted a sky-light, I would have built it myself. But I guess the Americans are trying to remodel our homes now in the New Iraq!”  

Iraqis aren’t the only people needing to make light of their difficulties. US soldiers have resorted to making light of their suffering as well. One soldier, sitting atop a tank near the Sheraton Hotel in central Baghdad amidst blazing temperatures, was overheard saying, “It’s like the beach—we have palm trees and heat; all we need is the ocean and women in bikinis, rather than people shooting RPGs at us.”  

Another soldier, referencing his perceived disorganization of the mujahedeen in Fallujah during heavy fighting there in April, said they fought with the tactic, “spraying and praying,” regarding men who would pop out from behind a wall and shoot wildly towards soldiers before disappearing again.  

Yet most of the dark humor seems to be produced by Iraqis themselves, for it is they who are suffering the most under the occupation.  

An interpreter friend of mine, citing how difficult it is for Iraqis to enter the “Green Zone” of the Coalition Provisional Authority, said that the best way is to have a Westerner along with him. He calls it his “Rent a whitey,” program, and says that it works like a charm every time.  

Regardless of the difficulties that confront the people of Iraq every day, they have obviously not lost their humanity nor their sense of humor about their situation, as they are left without many options in dealing with it.  

“I can either laugh, cry, or pick up a weapon,” said one Iraqi who works as an interpreter, “So I try to laugh while hoping something will change here.”


Nagem Salam is an American journalist of Lebanese descent who has worked in Iraq for a total of four months since the Anglo-American invasion of spring 2003. His articles focus on Iraqis, and how the occupation of their country affects their daily life.


The articles posted on this page reflect solely the opinions of the authors.

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