Letters
of the Diaspora from Quebec, Canada:
The Anfal Chronicler, Khalid Sulaiman
Kurdish
Herald Vol. 1 Issue 2, June 2009 -
by Vahal
A. Abdulrahman
The word “Anfal”, meaning “The
Spoils of War” was supposed to remain a 7th century Arabic
term, immortalized by the eight Surah of the Quran. In the late
1980s, however, Saddam Hussein resurrected the term to label
his genocidal campaign against rural Kurdistan. I recently spoke
to an Anfal survivor and expert from Quebec, Canada by way of
Garmian, Iraqi Kurdistan; Mr. Khalid Sulaiman, in a rather depressing
way, defined the Anfal for me as, “that moment during which
I lost the taste of life.” For 182,000 Iraqi Kurds, including
scores of immediate relatives of Khalid, the Anfal simply meant
the end of life through a meticulous and systemic operation commencing
with being trucked in military transportation vehicles and ending
in the mass graves of the deserts of Iraq.”
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Mr. Khalid Sulaiman, Iraq
Memory Foundation
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Born The district of Garmian is often referred to by Khalid
as “Anfalistan”; it was here where the young Khalid
Sulaiman watched his fellow countrymen, including members of
his immediate family line up to get into the back of trucks and
be taken away never to be seen again. The dead shared an identity;
they were Kurds, insofar as the Saddam regime was concerned,
that alone qualified them to be the “The Spoils of War.” On
the tombstone of Khalid’s childhood, the word “Anfal”,
and only that word, reads as a reminder of a time when the people
of Iraqi Kurdistan underwent the wrath of Arab nationalism mixed
with a deafeningly silent international community that included – but
by no means was limited to – the Arab and Muslim worlds.
Today, Khalid Sulaiman resides in Canada where he works as an
editor for al Dhakira newsletter, a publication of the Iraq Memory
Foundation. The soft-spoken Khalid, traumatized by the hatred
of the Arab Ba’ath Socialist Party led by Saddam Hussein,
described the Anfal as the type of cruelty that humiliates humanity.
That statement instantly reminded me of Eli Wisel who once wrote, “I
swore never to be silent whenever and wherever human beings endure
suffering and humiliation. We must always take sides. Neutrality
helps the oppressor, never the victim. Silence encourages the
tormentor, never the tormented.”
So, thousands of miles away from Garmian and thousands of miles
away from Anfalistan, Khalid from his home in Quebec, has decided
not to be silent and through the documents of the Iraq Memory
Foundation, he tries to tell – in Arabic – the story
of the Anfal to an audience that is either brainwashed by Arabist
propaganda or deliberately made ignorant of the facts of history.
Behind the Saddam who deified the Arabs and their civilization
and who swore to liberate Jerusalem, there was a genocidal man
who took the lives of at least 182,000 men, women and children
whose only crime was that they were born Kurds.
I asked Khalid what he wanted the world to know about the Anfal,
and he instantly replied, “I want the Arab and Muslim worlds
to recognize this genocide.” Khalid, who chronicles the
Anfal details in Arabic and has published a number of articles
and books on the subject, believes that Saddam conducted this
operation in name of Muslims by using an exclusively Quranic
term as the name of the campaign. Why there was no outrage as
hundreds of thousands of Kurds were sent to their deaths in the
name of the Quran is less important to Khalid than why there
is no recognition of that cruelty today in spite of all the undeniable
evidence.
Khalid Sulaiman, the eloquent multilingual Iraqi Kurd who happened
to be born a Kurd and lived through 1980s in Kurdistan, appreciates
that the new Iraq recognizes the Anfal as an act of genocide
but is worried about how some Iraqis to this day link the Anfal
to the Iraq-Iran war and see it as a mere incident of the war.
I asked Khalid about the number of dead during the Anfal, fully
accepting the official Kurdish claim of 182,000, and he told
me that that number may be right but it is possible that it may
be a little more than that. Khalid said that in his small village
consisting of only 30 households, at least 80 men, women and
children were killed. That is an addition to at least 4500 villages
in Iraqi Kurdistan – most of which were much bigger than
his village – that were demolished and their residents
Anfalized.
On Darfur, I asked Khalid whether he thinks there is an adequate
Kurdish condemnation for the genocide in Sudan. He immediately
said, “Condemnation alone is not enough,” and added
that Iraqi Kurds who constantly complain about the Arab/Muslim
silence over the Anfal should think of the day when the people
of Darfur express similar concerns. Indeed the tragedy of Darfur
is an Iraqi Kurdish issue as much as it is a Sudanese issue,
and as much as it is an issue affecting all of humankind.
Khalid Suliamn who admits that he is drowned in the testimonies
and documents of the Anfal campaign lives in Canada, yet his
heart is still in that small village in the Garmian district
where the brutality of the Saddam regime lives with him every
moment of every day. When I asked Khalid what he thinks the most
about, he told me in a powerful tone, “the last moment”;
the last moments of the dead from the Anfal, what they must have
been thinking as they were collectively executed.
Between Khalid Sulaiman and Iraqi Kurdistan lie oceans and continents,
yet the word “Anfal” that was meant to be remain
a mere Quranic reference lives with him every minute of every
hour of every day.
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