Posted on 11/15/2008 9:32:15 AM PST by SandRat

During the month of October, various children from Jazeera, located in the Rashid District, created more than 100 posters for a patriotic poster contest to express the Iraqi youth’s feelings on the current situation in Iraq and their forecasts of the future.
The submissions revealed an astonishing level of cultural awareness from the children, said Amir Salman, a councilmember of the Doura Neighborhood Council. What the children lacked in age, they compensated for with insight.
“The children were very proud,” stated Salman, who helped organize the event. “They have been telling all of their friends how much fun they had participating.”
Some of the children employed a wide array of styles and techniques in the production of the posters. The 8-year-olds made astute social observations in oil, and the 10-year-olds produced captivating cultural commentary in watercolor.
Some participants portrayed the current situation in Iraq with intricately detailed depictions of daily life; others displayed political cartoons and Iraqi symbolism to convey their interpretation of life.
Hashem Mahmood, an elected district council leader in Baghdad’s Rashid District, attended the initial unveiling of the exhibition.
“It is a kind of education for the people and it gives them motivation to do positive things,” Hashem said.
The patrons held the event at the Doura Library and Cultural Center, a building that recently underwent extensive repairs and improvements through a joint Iraqi-American project.
Members of the Jazeera Neighborhood Council selected and rewarded the contest winners, said Salman.
The event leveraged the talents of adolescents, but it was aimed at Iraqis of all ages. The opening of the exhibition drew many of the community’s most influential people, from powerful tribal sheiks to respected professional artists.
A menagerie of government officials, journalists, American Soldiers and Iraqi students also filled the library’s chambers.
“It was a new experience, so people were excited about it – not just the kids but also the adults,” Hashem explained.
“This is a very positive sign,” said Maj. Mark Olin, operations officer of the 2nd Battalion, 4th Infantry Regiment, attached to the 1st Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division, Multi-National Division – Baghdad. “This is the people of Iraq exercising their freedom of speech and expressing their opinions."
(By Capt. Brett Walker, 4th Infantry Division)
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