UNITED24 - Make a charitable donation in support of Ukraine!

Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)

SLUG: 2-302349 Iraq / Friday Prayers (L)
DATE:>
NOTE NUMBER:

DATE=4/18/03

TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT

TITLE=IRAQ / FRIDAY PRAYERS (L-ONLY)

NUMBER=2-302349

BYLINE=LAURIE KASSMAN

DATELINE=BAGHDAD

CONTENT=

/// EDS: ALTERNATE TO ON-SCENE REPORT 2-302335 ///

INTRO: In the Baghdad neighborhood formerly called Saddam City, freedom on this Friday meant that tens-of-thousands of Shiite Muslims could fill the streets around their mosque for mid-day prayers; it was the first time in their memory. Under Saddam Hussein, such large gatherings were banned. V-O-A Correspondent Laurie Kassman was there, and filed this report.

TEXT: /// SOUND OF PRAYERS ///

Tens-of-thousands of worshipers kneel on their prayer mats outside the Hekmah mosque. Lined up shoulder-to-shoulder, they fill the wide, rutted boulevard in the hot mid-day sun.

It was just four years ago that Saddam Hussein crushed an outdoor prayer service organized at the Hekmah mosque in memory of a popular spiritual leader, who had been killed along with his two sons.

One worshipper at the prayer service this Friday says more than 300 people were killed in that crackdown. On Friday, an enterprising young man laid out a pink cloth on a wooden table set up by the curb, and spread out photos of a murdered Sheikh for sale.

Under Saddam's rule, prayers were confined to the mosques under the watchful eye of military intelligence officers, to prevent large gatherings that could turn into anti-Saddam protests. This Friday, after prayers, there were peaceful demonstrations in some parts of the city, calling for the establishment of an Islamic state in Iraq, and for U-S forces to go home.

/// FADE UP CHANTING AND DOWN UNDER ///

More than a thousand young Iraqi men toting AK-47 rifles guarded Friday's prayer service. Some wore gray uniforms that were looted from a government warehouse in the days after the battle for Baghdad ended.

They set up makeshift barriers, using abandoned furniture, cement blocks and pieces of wood, where they could control the crowd and search vehicles trying to approach the area.

/// ARABIC AND FADE ///

One guard, with a rifle slung over his shoulder, says they were worried that armed units loyal to Saddam Hussein, known as the Fedayeen Saddam, might try to disrupt the prayers.

Local residents at the service say they now call the neighborhood formerly known as Saddam City, Sadr City, after a revered Shiite cleric, Sheikh Bakr Sadr, who died in 1986.

/// REST OPT ///

A representative of the religious clerics of the Shiite holy city of Najaf, in southern Iraq, arrived a few days ago with a group of religious students to help restore law and order, and organize the neighborhood.

Amid efforts by coalition forces and various Iraqi groups to build new organizational structures in Baghdad, the mosque's administrative council says it operates independently, and has no need to coordinate with the other groups. (Signed)

NEB/LMK/AWP/RH/TW



NEWSLETTER
Join the GlobalSecurity.org mailing list