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In
Iraq, a place where kidnappings, roadside bombs and sectarian violence are all
too prevalent, it is often the women - faced with the burden of holding fragmented
families together - who suffer the greatest hardships. In 'Through Their Eyes',
CNN's Baghdad-based international correspondent Arwa Damon intimately profiles
women who all share very different stories of survival, heartbreak and determination
in one of the world's most dangerous places. Some of these women had to
use cameras provided by CNN to record the reality of their day-to-day lives as
it was too dangerous for CNN to go, thus giving viewers a candid and raw insight
into life in a country plagued by violence and upheaval. "In some
cases we blurred faces [in the documentary] because simply getting caught telling
their story could mean a death sentence," Damon says. CNN
was the first television crew allowed in the al-Kadhimiya women's prison since
the war began nearly five years ago and came across Samar, whose story seemed
the most desperate of all the prisoners. She's been sitting and waiting on death
row for more than three years for a crime she says she did not commit. She says
she was tortured by the police into confessing a role in the killings of three
relatives, which she says her boyfriend carried out, yet he has never been captured.
"I'm not like the other girls. Some girls don't want to talk to me...they
feel sad for me because of my sentence," Samar says. "I don't sleep
at all on Wednesdays. I stay up from morning through the night because that's
the day they do the executions, so I'm always scared until the day is over."
Her family continues to appeal the verdict, but each one has failed, meaning
that Samar will be put to death. Working at an Iraqi hospital, Dr. Eaman
is a children's doctor, a profession has required her to live apart from her eight-year-old
son to protect him from those who would target doctors since they are known in
Iraq "to have money." Despite this precaution, her son was accidentally
pushed into a bonfire at school, causing third degree burns to parts of his body
and debilitating him. "I don't know the future of my one child. How
he is going to live? How he is going to depend on himself? But this is unfortunately
our life and this is what the war has given us," Dr. Eaman says. "Iraq
is my life, my country. I am working for a better Iraq, for a better future and
this is a chance that I am not going to escape." Nahla, mother of
a six-year-old autistic boy and manager at a local radio station, was forced to
identify her husband's charred remains after a car bomb exploded on a bridge he
was driving across to pick up their son from school. "My friends...told
me ten were killed, fifteen wounded...at the Jadriya bridge," Nahla says.
"It doesn't cross your mind; you always think that you are exempt from the
numbers. You are pained by them but you are outside of the numbers." Since
Nahla's husband was a doctor, she thought he was at a local hospital helping the
wounded but she searched through all them all and never found him. She was told
there were unidentified bodies melted together in the morgue at one of the hospitals,
so she decided to visit it hoping he would not be there, reassuring her he was
still alive. "You have to decide by a gap in the teeth and pin in
the knee whether this person, who you shared your life with, is now this burnt
thing in front of you," Nahla says calmly. "I knew they were his teeth…but
I didn't want it to be him. It was a hard moment." Several months
into the making, 'Through Their Eyes' is a dramatic and sometimes harrowing account
of the lives of eight women living in Iraq. However, Nahla and the other women
profiled in this documentary all share the same strength and determination to
carry on in their homeland, sending a hopeful signal to the future of Iraq and
the future generations of women whose voices need to be heard. Watch
'Through Their Eyes' on 15 March at 12.30 pm and 8.30 pm on CNN.
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By THE TELLY CHAKKAR TEAM |
Posted
on 13 Mar 2008 7:00 pm | | | |