Mittwoch, 28. Januar 2015

Kurdistan




A country in the making!


It has been just two days since I returned from Iraq-Kurdistan. Normally it takes me longer to write my blog entry but this time I am constantly afraid of forgetting something important. I have had a truly amazing time in this country and every day was full of new experiences and impressions of the country and its people. So you will get a very fresh, probably slightly unstructured story to read but you can be sure that it is authentic and in the end I think that is what matters.

So as usual I picked a country which is temporarily not a tourist hotspot for various reasons and I was pretty nervous to be honest. All I have seen in our media was people losing their heads and military jets bombing terrorists. When I took the bus from Şırnak to Silopi, the Turkish city close to the Kurdish border, I had absolutely no idea what to expect. I definitely was the only foreigner and despite my attempt to grow facial hair to “fit in” I was spotted immediately by the locals, which did not help to ease my paranoia.

After the most chaotic border crossing I have ever experienced where my passport partly disappeared for half an hour in a mob of arguing Dolmus (Grouptaxi) drivers I managed to set a foot on Kurdish soil. It was already dark and I had no idea where to go. Luckily the family that I shared the Dolmus with to cross the border offered me to share a cab to the city center. The first time I encountered the hospitality of the Kurdish people.

Turkish-Kurdish Border Control

When I went out to get some food in the same night I already made my first experience what it means to live in this country  when I got a Falafel at a shop where the owner was a Kurdish Christian who has lived and worked in Europe for a long time and that employs Syrian refugees. It turns out that many of the Kurdish people have lived abroad when they had to flee from one of the several conflicts their country already had to endure. Now Kurdistan itself has become a country which hosts a great number of refugees. 

The 20 year old Masror who had to leave his hometown Haska in Syria with his family is just one of thousands. We all “know” that behind the numbers of refugees, we hear in the news, individual stories and tragedies take place but it became a fundamentally different meaning to me when I was talking to this young and smart guy in my age. His story was already an overwhelmingly complex structure of fear, hope and expectations for the future; therefore it is immpossible for me to process that there are thousands who share the same faith. Sitting there listening to the story of his life my problems back home seemed rather silly.

Masros, 20 years, Refugee from Syria


At the same time I am not ashamed of having those first world problems I simply had no saying in where my life will take place on this earth, so did he.
Still I felt a certain responsibility towards him, not necessarily to help but to listen to what he has to say.

On my second day I was strolling through the city of Zakho without a specific idea of what I am doing. I came across this construction side and realized that there are some things odd about it; in particular kids playing without any safety on the second floor and lots of laundry that was hanging around to dry.
I took me a moment to process that this was a refugee camp of Yezidis who were forced to leave their homes in Sinjar by terrorists of the Islamic State. The Kurdish government, with the help of UN and NGOs, has already established 23 camps for refugees allover Kurdistan, each fitting up to 5000 people but the capacities are simply not enough and so some the Yezidis have no choice but to live on bare brickwork with improvised sanitary installations and inconsistent electrical power. I have spent quite a bit of time with them and I am simply amazed. They have to improvise life with the very little belongings they could take with them and everyone of them knows family or friends who have died in the conflict or are in captivity and yet they greet you with a smile, invite you for dinner and offer to help you in any way they can. I forgot about the tragedy these people have to live through because they seemed so happy to me. I cannot thank them enough for their openness and great hospitality. 

Yezidi Refugee Camp in Zakho









Yezidi Man


I was reminded again of what was happening to the Yezidis when I got the chance to talk to Caton Golu Cudida, one of the old Yezidi women that were released from IS just a week ago. What she told me made me shiver. How all the men were killed except the old ones, young girls were sold, one of them her daughter, and food that was just enough not to die. Right now there are still thousands of them in the hands of IS. The time with the Yezidis has been very intense for me. The contrast of pure happiness with what they got and this deep rooted sadness of their loss brought up emotions in me that I had not felt in a long time. I can honestly say that I admire and salute them for the beautiful character they embody.

One of the 23 Refugee Camps in Kurdistan

Dinner Invitation from a Yezidi Family in the Refugee Camp

Refugee Camp Zakho


Warming up around a little stove


I made my way to Dohuk to talk to the government to get permission for the frontlines because I also wanted to include the Peshmerga and their opinions into my story. By the time I arrived in the city I was pretty short on cash and as I have skipped the research part on the country I was leaving to while I was home, I did not know that Visa card is not the most common tool of payment. Therefore there is exactly one ATM in Dohuk which takes this card. Of course I did not find it the first day and so I was stranded with 2000 ID (Roughly 1,50€) in a city I did not know without a place to sleep or food.
So I made my way through the city to find a nice bench to sleep on. I stopped on top of a hill to enjoy the view for a while, and pity myself of course, when some children came up to me.

They were interested in what I do and my camera and it did not take long until their father came out as well and invited me to their place for some food and tea! Me, a complete stranger, and a foreigner who does not even speak their language. I have never experience such unconditioned hospitality anywhere so far.


Got invited to sleep here

Of course a German visitor was something unusual and so the neighbors and some extended family came by as well. At the end I was even offered a place to sleep. In this moment I was the luckiest person alive. Then again I was reminded of the reality this country lives in when suddenly the police knocks at the door to take me away for interrogation. I honestly did not see that one coming! Of course it makes sense though that in a country that is at war a foreigner with a camera is something police wants to investigate further. While I was talking to the police the family who offered me a place to stay and one of the neighbors rushed into the interrogation room. They vouched for me and argued with the police to let me go. Again, those were people I have met only hours ago. When I was allowed to leave I could not believe what those people did for me. Needless to say that they still insisted that I will stay at their place for the night. Simply stunning. I thought I might just got lucky with this family but I encountered this natural hospitality on a daily basis. In general the people living in Kurdistan are very honest and to help each other out, foreign or not, is one of their core values on which their society is based. The Kurds are really one of a kind.

It took me some days until I was granted the permission to go to Sinjar where Peshmerga and Yezidi-militia are fighting against IS. The officials were very concerned about my personal safety and they wanted to make sure they take the proper precautions to minimize the risk for me. So when everything was arranged I was taken to the frontlines and had the opportunity to talk to the people who are defending not only their land but also values which they share with the western world. One of the reasons why the German army has been delivering weapons to the Peshmerga and helped them to train soldiers to use them efficiently.

Military Checkpoint on the way to Sinjar

Bombed Village, except the Moschee

Left-overs of a Humvee after an Airstrike

House of an IS commander after an Airstrike


This experience was also a first for me. To enter a war zone where a constant threat for your life is normality was a surreal place for a European. On my way I saw burned out cars, bombed houses and deserted villages. When I arrived at the local headquarter I witnessed men enjoying their spare time with some tea on plastic chairs in front of houses that were abandoned by their owners and now the temporary home for the soldiers.  They were happy to chat with me, take pictures together or to show me their equipment. The atmosphere was relaxed and I was again a very welcome guest.

Temporary Peshmerga Headquarter
Came back to Kurdistan from Germany to fight IS



Soldiers enjoying the Sun

I had the opportunity to talk to Captain Cheteen Doski from the anti-terror unit that was under the command of the recently assassinated Sheikh Ahmed. He and the other officers invited me for diner and first of all thanked the German government for their support and the delivered weapons, especially the Milano rocket, which had contributed to their recent success against IS. At this point I felt the need to thank them for fighting this war for us as well. When we continued our talk he mentioned that most of his men have not been paid in 7 months because the money from the Iraqi administration has not come through yet from Baghdad. When I later on talked to the soldiers they told me the same. They actually sell their personal belongings to be able to finance the fighting. I also met many Kurds that have come back to Kurdistan because they wanted to fight in the war to protect their nation. 

Captain Cheteen Doski (Right)

Picture of Sheikh Ahmed as a Memory




Anti-Terror Unit of Peshmerga


I was impressed by the courage and the willingness to give up a structured life somewhere else to fight in the war. I think this aligns well with the fact that Peshmerga is the only army at the moment which is fighting IS on the ground after the Iraqi army was descending into chaos and still has big problems to organize a counter offensive to regain their lost territory. The success of the Peshmerga is not only based on the weapons and airstrikes from the west but also because they stand united behind a vision of their own state. The General Sheikh Ali, who leads the troops in the Sinjar area, has managed to unite the different interests of the Peshmerga and has led them to their success to regain control and disperse the Islamic State in the region. Sheikh Ali and his man embody the dream for which many Kurds hope, an independent state of Kurdistan.

General Sheikh Ali

 Throughout history international intervention and local conflicts have always avoided the establishment of a Kurdish state. Now with this conflict Kurdistan can cease the opportunity to finally achieve independence. There are many who would like to prevent this from becoming reality, especially Turkey, but in my opinion I do not think they have the right to do so nor the power to intervene. Kurdistan has been an autonomous province for a long time and knows how to govern itself and also I see it as a role model. Whereas the world around it collapses in religious conflicts and civil war, Kurdistan has a very liberale attitude towards religion. I have met Christians, Yezidis and many more religions living together without any major problems. As a foreigner I felt safe even in the most remote areas. They have an elected president which is widely respected and to be honest I think they will claim their right sooner or later with or without the approval of the international community. They have surely won me as a supporter and I hope they can continue their progress in the future.

 Thank you for a very insightful journey Kurdistan. I am sure we will meet again!


For all the Pictures follow this link:
https://www.facebook.com/fabian.annich/media_set?set=a.10204373123782162.1073741835.1052246192&type=3

Dienstag, 7. Oktober 2014

Vietnam


A Change of Perspective

The countries I have travelled to recently have always had one big topic I focused on. Vietnam is not in the middle of a segregation conflict or at war but still I feel like there are many stories to tell. For me it is new to write about something less political and more cultural but I will definitely give it my best shot.

At the beginning I was overwhelmed by the chaos around me and even though it was already my second visit in Vietnam, I was again surprised how people manage to get by every day. The constant honking in the streets, the stop-and-go in the cab because a motorbike with a complete Vietnamese family on it tries to squeeze in between my cap and the autobus next to us, and of course the street sellers who sell everything from miniature turtles to lottery tickets not strictly on the side of the road but also right in the middle, drove me crazy. I pretty much asked myself the question how any society could possibly work efficiently if they do not even follow rules as simple as waiting in front of a red traffic light. Well I was proven to be wrong but I stayed resilient for a couple more days. If any cartoonist would have bothered to draw me at this point it probably would have turned out as a policeman in the middle of the intersection trying to regulate traffic while everyone just kept 
on doing what they did before.


I still remember when my perspective changed. I was riding into town on the back of my friend’s bike to go for some dinner when he mentioned how the honking has the sound of whales or dolphins communicating between each other or how the motorbikes move around obstacles like a shoal of fish. There was a certain harmony in this metaphor which made me reconsider my own position. Of course if I keep looking at the Vietnamese society from the point of view of a European I could never relax or enjoy anything there. The realization to let go of certain habits to truly arrive at your destination has helped me to become part of the Vietnamese life. I hate being a tourist in a country, the things you get shown are not real, overpriced and represent nothing about the culture you came to experience. Therefore I got rid of my ambition to teach the Vietnamese drivers about right of way and instead became part of the shoal myself.

I finally started to discover. There are so many bizarre aspects. The country is governed by a communist party since the war ended in 1975 and still the people simply worship Apple products. The French tried to colonize the country unsuccessfully until 1954 and pretty much represented social-Darwinism and still it is considered an ideal of beauty to have white skin. Throughout history it seems like the Vietnamese people always had to fight against foreign intervention to keep their own culture alive and now that they are self-dependent they elaborate on it but still have chosen to liberate their markets in the 90s for foreign investments. All those correlations mixed with their very own traditions and beliefs makes it even more difficult to describe their society sufficiently.



I think the Vietnamese people are very pragmatic not only in the way how they transport simply everything on their bikes but the way they accept foreign support or intervention if they benefit from it and it does not matter if it is the same country which tried to occupy them a couple decades before. This pragmatism helps to boost your economy and you can tell by the number of expats and growing investments, especially in the urban areas, that the strategy works out fine.



For the future I wonder how they will further develop. An average age of 28 years, a low illiterate rate and an entrepreneur friendly environment are promising prerequisites. I am curious if they will make use of it and if the relationship to foreigners in their country will begin to change as they start to be successful themselves.

If anything I can only say that I admire the way the people live and work there. As a European many situations are cruel as you see people sleep behind their streetfood shops or old ladies pushing huge trash bins through the streets at night but then again you cannot observe objectively from a European perspective. It is easy to label those conditions as inacceptable but considering the given circumstances in the country it is a rational consequence.



I really enjoyed my visit and I am sure to be back at some point, maybe not for the food, but as an escape from my German habits and to comprehend how life in another culture can work in completely different ways.


Very sorry there are not so many picture this time. I used an analogue camera so I still have to develope the pictures and digitalize them. I just use those few pictures from my first trip to make this article look a little bit more exciting! ;-)





Freitag, 29. August 2014

Palestine



Forget History!



It is hard to decide on which aspect of my journey to Palestine I want to focus on. My original topic was based on the ongoing conflict and the political situation but that was before I experienced this country for myself. Now I simply cannot exclude anymore since everything I got to know is somehow a reaction to what has been happening in Palestine over the last decades.

Once I passed the Israeli checkpoint and entered Ramallah I immediately forgot about wars, political interests, water shortage and even settlements. As I learned later, Palestinians call Rammalah "The Bubble" for the exact same reason.
People are busy living their lives. When you promenade the streets you smell a mixture of freshly cut herbs, fruits, waterpipe smoke and of course Falafel. You can observe shopowners bargaining over prices, kids playing in the streets. Just like in every other larger city in the middle-eastern area. Everything seemed to work somehow and I did not feel any tensions, in fact I was benumbed to a state of total relaxation; sitting on rooftops and watching the sun go down while having a smoke. Life was really good and not just to me; it felt like even the people living there were enjyoing the city as much as I was.










As it turned out this "Bubble" was also a point of retreat where Palestinians could live their lives without being observed by Israeli soldiers or harrazed by settlers. When venturing outside of the city I learned quickly that Ramallah was not representative for the West Bank.
Ugly grey watchtowers with cameras and barb wires were the most common sight, quiet often accompanied by an even uglier grey wall which encloses new apartment buildings in the middle of the desert and made them appear like an oasis. A safe haven for those who are allowed to enter.







As if it was not enough to refuse the Palestinian people their own state, the Israeli government shows them every day what a great life they have on their side of the wall, on land that once belonged to Palestinian families. While the Israeli government keeps on building new settlements, new roads for the settlers, water supply lines and every other commodity you could think of; the Palestinians have to rely on the good mood of Israeli military if they may use the roads as well to get to work, or to visit family.
Every day they are subject to random checks, random road closings and arbitrariness at its finest. Just after a day those circumstances made me so upset; I simply could not understand how this can become daily life for anyone. All of those emotions got even toped when I visited Hebron. In this particular city Israeli settlers and Palestinians live almost door-to-door. They are only seperated by fences and walls. Over the years the Israeli settler policy started to close parts of the old city to the Palestinians and so it happens that one remaining school for Palestinians is located right in the middle of that area and every day the school children have to make their way there; trough angry settlers and military checkpoints. To top that, they sometimes cannot even pass the regular checkpoint because it is closed for whatever reason the soldiers prefere. Then they have to climb over a wall using an old ladder to get into the settlement and to get to school, every day.

Way to School in Hebron


Way to School in Hebron


Way to School in Hebron



If you walk into the old town of Hebron you will see cages over the narrow streets, filled with garbage and all sorts of trash which Israeli settlers throw out their windows on the streets where the remaining Palestinian shops are located.


Old Market Hebron

Cages to protect shops from settlers

Seeing all of this myself I can honestly comprehend how people reach a point of frustration where they start picking up stones to throw them at soldiers or their armored vehicles. Needless to say that the effect is rather minimal, if even existent. Retaliation however is severe. Sound bombs, tear gas and rubber bullets of the Israeli army definitely leave their marks. I experienced a similar situation in Bil'in where maybe 20 people started demonstrating against the continuing extension of the settlements when suddenly dozens of tear gas cartridges where in the air. No one had thrown any rocks, simply chanting for their cause.All of that just seems so unproportional to me and despite the dominance of its military, the Israeli people are as far from peace as Palestinians.

This conflict has seen many victims, and there is wrongdoing on both sides but to always look back in history and to point fingers at the other party will not bring along a solution. Neither will the extinction of one enemy lead to sustainable peace. Forgetting about the history and simply observing the situation as it is right now, every rational person would realize that peace will not find its way back to those countries if Israel does not change its military campaign in the West Bank and Gaza radically. They have taken everything from the Palestinians, their right to self-determination, autonomy and freedom. I cannot believe anyone who proclaims that Israel is interested in peace if I see how they make life as hard as they possibly can for Palestinians. How can you blame children of throwing rocks if they have lived their whole life in refugee camps because both their parents are dead or imprisoned. How can you possibly remain calm when you see settlers applaud from their balconies while the army on the other side of the wall tear gases a handful of protestors who want their land back?

Lone Protestor in front of Settlement
Tear Gas from Israeli Military







Yes, there have been cruel suicide bombings in Israel and innocent people died but what do you expect to happen if you surround a country with walls, close every border and then wait what happens. Israel can go on blaming external radical forces for the never lasting peace or maybe reconsider its own position. I remember how Israelis reacted the last time they felt suppressed by England as an occupation force.

When I saw the celebrations after the ceasfire deal was closed it really made me wonder why the people were celebrating this as a victory. Some minor improvements to their situation but then again it was enough to make Palestinians all over the West Bank so happy that they celebrated long into the night. No one was screaming for revenge at that moment. Israel could give so much to the Palestinians if they wanted and they would immediately reduce the threat for themselves as well. Radicals need military suppression and injustice to fill their ranks.

After my visit I have become a strong supporter of the Palestinian cause and that does not mean I wish to destroy the state of Israel but simply to help the people in Palestine to gain back their freedom and give them the opportunity for a life in peace on their own terms. I hope article and the pictures will help to grow awareness of the situation.

Also I can only recommend everyone to go to the West Bank themselves and meet the people living there. I have travelled quiet a lot recently and I have encountered many different people but the Palestinians outdo them all. Everywhere I went people invited me for tea or coffee, welcomed me in their country or city and even invited me to their familys to have dinner with them.

For all the pictures simply follow the link below:
https://www.facebook.com/fabian.annich/media_set?set=a.10203329396249626.1073741834.1052246192&type=1

As always any feedback/comment/question is welcome.


Kids celebrate ceasefire

Family Gathering


Hebron Checkpoint

Hebron Checkpoint

Hebron Checkpoint