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VOICES OF FREEDOM [Quotes from the grateful Iraqi people - update]
White House Website -> Iraq -> Liberation Update ^ | July 22, 2003 - weekly (usually) | Various - press

Posted on 07/25/2003 9:36:48 AM PDT by Ragtime Cowgirl

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For Immediate Release
July 22, 2003

Liberation Update

News accounts are painting vivid pictures of the joy and relief of free Iraqis, who are living without fear of Saddam's brutality and beginning to enjoy freedoms unknown for decades. These voices have been silenced for too long, but now they are heard inside Iraq and around the world.

For more personal stories of life under Saddam, visit Tales of Saddam’s Brutality.

VOICES OF FREEDOM

“On July 4, some shops and private homes in various parts of Iraq, including the Kurdish areas and cities in the Shiite heartland, put up the star-spangled flag as a show of gratitude to the United States.”
National Post (Canada), 7/22/03

 
 
“Mobile phones rang Tuesday morning, ushering in the cellular era for Iraqis long deprived of the latest in information technology during their isolation under the fallen strongman Saddam Hussein.”
Agence France Presse, 7/22/03

“Thanks to them [the U.S. army] the security is good. Without them, people would be killing each other.”
Abdul Wahed Mohsen, in Iraq, Los Angeles Times, 7/22/03

“Even the blind can see what Saddam Hussein did, taking Iraq into so many wars and doing little even for this town, no sports club, no decent hotels.”
Wail al-Ali, Tikrit’s new mayor, The Guardian, 7/22/03

“Also, some 85 percent of primary and secondary schools and all but two of the nation's universities have reopened with a full turnout of pupils and teachers. The difference is that there no longer are any mukahebrat (secret police) agents roaming the campuses and sitting at the back of classrooms to make sure lecturers and students do not discuss forbidden topics. Nor are the students required to start every day with a solemn oath of allegiance to the dictator.”
National Post (Canada), 7/22/03

“A stroll in the open-air book markets of the Rashid Street reveals that thousands of books, blacklisted and banned under Saddam Hussein, are now available for sale. Among the banned authors were almost all of Iraq's best writers and poets whom many young Iraqis are discovering for the first time. Stalls, offering video and audiotapes for sale, are appearing in Baghdad and other major cities, again giving Iraqis access to a forbidden cultural universe.”
National Post (Canada), 7/22/03

“We don’t know who are those people who say that. They are outlaws. They just want to make problems.”
Abdul Wahed Mohsen, on anti-U.S. sloganeering in Iraq, Los Angeles Times, 7/22/03

“The Americans are giving the Iraqis the space to get our affairs in order.”
Sheikh Khalid Al-Nuami, a representative on the Najaf ruling council, Agence France Presse 7/21/03

“We are flying with happiness since Saddam is gone.”
Zahar Hassan, in Iraq, Agence France Presse, 7/21/03

“There’s more opportunity, more chances to earn money.”
Um Khalid, on life in post-Saddam Baghdad, The Christian Science Monitor, 7/21/03

“There is a lack of security, but psychologically, things are better, because freedom is nice.”
Ali Shaban, in Iraq, The Christian Science Monitor, 7/21/03

“Let the Americans stay, they protect us. I don’t see them hurting anyone.”
A mother living in Baghdad, The Christian Science Monitor, 7/21/03

“Before it was all about Saddam and his followers. Now there are different topics.”
Hassan Ali, on the Iraqi newspapers, The Christian Science Monitor, 7/21/03

“He [Uday] was a sick man, and he kept lions and tigers just to show his manhood, to show everyone that he cared more about animals than people. But he amputated their claws, and he took away their freedom, just like the people.”
Alaa Karim, a Baghdad zoo employee, The Washington Post, 7/21/03

“[Uday] was a bad man, and he used to beat the soccer players if they lost a game. I think he used to treat the lions better than the people.”
Mussab Ismas, a 13-year old boy, viewing Uday’s lions at the Baghdad zoo, The Washington Post, 7/21/03

“But the shock for a first time visitor to Iraq is that the destruction committed by Saddam’s tyranny is so much worse than advertised. … The most horrible damage on Iraqis was inflicted by Saddam himself. The Americans who are giving their lives to stop his Middle East Stalinism will end up saving many more lives.”
Wall Street Journal, 7/21/03

“I can see that the American soldiers are free. In our old army, we were always under pressure and strict military orders. There was tough punishment.”
Raad Mamoud, a former Iraqi soldier, USA Today, 7/21/03

“Before, I would not even say hello to them [Iraqi army officers]. We are all equal now. This is justice.”
Husham Berkal, an enlisted soldier in the former Iraqi army, USA Today, 7/21/03

“When I heard on the radio that the Baathists had seized power I was not surprised. I was hoping it would make the situation better but, well, you can see. I have hope that things will get better now, that the new government can get rid of all the problems.”
Abdul Karim al-Qaissi, a pharmacist in Baghdad, on the anniversary of the Baath Party’s seizing power, Agence France Presse, 7/17/03

“But I blame the Baath [for problems with security and infrastructure]. It’s not the Americans’ fault. I like the Americans.”
Nuri Mansour, in Baghdad, Agence France Presse, 7/17/03

“Iraqis were living a good life. We had security, jobs, people were getting paid. People used to get on and would help each other…”
Nuri Mansour, reflecting life before the Baath Party overthrew the Iraqi government in 1968, Agence France Presse, 7/17/03

“During the Baath Party’s time we didn’t see 1,000th of Iraq’s wealth come to us.”
Yasua, an Iraqi man in Baghdad, Agence France Presse, 7/17/03

“I hope Iraq comes back strong. I am in favor of the new government.”
Uday Kadhu, a Baghdad car salesman on the Iraqi archery team, Agence France Presse, 7/16/03

“The residents of glorious Fallujah suffered from the confiscation of freedom and the absence of justice under the dictatorial regime.”
A statement released by the “League of Fallujah Residents,” Agence France Presse, 7/16/03

“The Governing Council is a step towards building a free, democratic Iraq.”
Iraqi newspaper Al-Zawra, 7/15/03

“In our opinion, the most significant thing about the formation of the transitional Governing Council is that it includes important personalities that are known to the masses and that represent the different political, national, democratic and progressive forces, as well as independent political organizations and religious denominations.”
Iraqi newspaper Al-Manar, 7/15/03

“I felt that we had gone back to the year 1930. I feel that Iraq has started back from zero. We have wasted 75 years waiting to taste freedom.”
Hadid al-Gailani, after the Governing Council announced the abolition of Baathist holidays, The Boston Globe, 7/14/03

“I helped deliver thousands of Iraqi babies, and now I am taking part in the birth of a new country and a new rule based on women’s rights, humanity, unity and freedom.”
Raja Habib al-Khaza’i, the director of an Iraqi maternity hospital and a member of the Governing Council, Associated Press, 7/13/03

“The formation of this council which represents all sectors of Iraqi society is the birth of democracy in the country. It is better than Saddam’s government of destruction and dictatorship.”
Razzak Abdul-Zahra, a 35-year-old engineer in Baghad, Associated Press, 7/13/03

“The establishment of this council represents the Iraqi national will after the collapse of the dictatorial regime.”
Muhammad Bahr al-Ulum, a Shiite cleric on the Governing Council, Associated Press, 7/13/03

“This is a great day. It’s unbelievable.”
Yonadam Kanna, an Assyrian Christian on the Iraqi Governing Council, Associated Press, 7/13/03

“It’s a hard situation. But now that Saddam has fallen, it’s OK. We can wait for the future now.”
Muhammed Abdul al Sudani, the night watchman at a school in Baghdad, Baltimore Sun, 7/13/03

“Iraqis are looking forward to this day. They have been dreaming for so many years to have a government run by not only one man.”
Sherwan Dizayee, a member of the Kurdistan Democratic Party, Los Angeles Times, 7/13/03

“The building of a new Iraq shall remain among the first priorities of the good Iraqi people. It will require the participation of all Iraqis from all political and social strands who are willing to help accomplish this historic task.”
Mohammed Barhul Uloom, an 80-year-old Shiite who has returned to Iraq to serve on the new Governing Council, AFX News, 7/13/03

“Saddam is gone, he’s history, he’s never coming back.”
Mohammed Barhul Uloom, at the first meeting of the new Iraqi Governing Council, Agence France Presse, 7/13/03

“In our view, political life must not be based on ethnic, religious or sectarian considerations.” Adnan Pachachi, former Iraqi foreign minister and current member of the Governing Council, Agence France Presse,
7/13/03

“Farther down the block [in Baghdad], a new Internet cafe just opened three weeks ago—$3 an hour buys you a satellite link on a computer that runs Windows, and a shortcut to Yahoo! E-mail is already on the desktop.”
Winston-Salem Journal, 7/12/03

“He [Saddam] occupied Iraq for 25 years. It’s not important that the Americans are here. What is important is that they got rid of Saddam Hussein. Now I feel free.”
Fadil Emara, a shopkeeper in Baghdad, Agence France Presse, 7/12/03

“My optimism grows ten-fold every day. We’ve got a wonderful and brilliant future in front of us.”
Fadil Emara, a shopkeeper in Baghdad, Agence France Presse, 7/12/03

“In Saddam’s time, the mere act of pointing at something—a building, a person—risked attracting the attention of a secret policeman. Now people freely jab their index fingers on the streets. To a visitor returning, it’s something of a shock.”
Associated Press, 7/12/03

“It’s a dream for me to participate.”
Afrah Abas, an Iraqi archer competing in the 42nd World Archery Championships, Associated Press, 7/12/03

“We have been celebrating the Iraqi revolution and the fall of the kingdom every year. Today we combined the celebration with the fall of the second monarchy—the dictatorship of Saddam Hussein.”
Aladdin Sabih, an Iraqi living in the Czech Republic, Czech News Agency, 7/12/03

“Cutting through all the barriers of religion, culture, war and economics are stores filled with hundreds of pairs of high-heel pumps, clunky platforms and spiked heels in scores of styles. Other stores with similar numbers—but fewer styles—of men's and children's shoes are open for business.”
Winston-Salem Journal, 7/12/03



TOPICS: Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events; United Kingdom; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: goodnews; iraq; iraqicivilians; iraqifreedom; liberators; quotes; rebuildingiraq; voicesoffreedom; warlist
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To: Skywalk
Well said, Skywalk.

We can help the troops by sharing these stories with others. OUR PRESS is not informing the people. For each sacrifice, our troops take out far more Saddam loyalists, and make progress rebuilding and stabilizing Iraq daily - with help from the grateful Iraqi people .

21 posted on 07/26/2003 8:12:42 AM PDT by Ragtime Cowgirl ("I don't find myself in any quandry. I'm a soldier." Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez *CENTCOM* July 23)
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To: MeeknMing
Thanks, Meekie - and for Diogenesis war pic link! Added it to my homepage along w/ the OIF liberation day war thread and our FR 'welcome home parade'.
22 posted on 07/26/2003 8:48:03 AM PDT by Ragtime Cowgirl ("I don't find myself in any quandry. I'm a soldier." Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez *CENTCOM* July 23)
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To: beachn4fun
Thanks for the ping. Sorry I got to it so late.

I wish our media would report responsibly!
23 posted on 07/28/2003 8:47:54 AM PDT by SouthernHawk
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To: Ragtime Cowgirl
"America has shown us compassion we never had from Saddam or fellow Arabs." Attallah Zeidan, co-owner of a small bookstore in Baghdad, Associated Press, 6/17/03

Wow.

24 posted on 07/28/2003 8:58:13 AM PDT by Liberal Classic (Quemadmoeum gladis nemeinum occidit, occidentis telum est.)
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To: All

 

Liberation Update

VOICES OF FREEDOM

“I can honestly say now that I’m proud to be an Iraqi. Because of what has happened, because there is freedom here like I have not known before. Now I can talk—to you, to people I could never talk to before. I am a simple man. I am just a worker. But even these simple things—talking—give me hope.”
Khalid Nemah, an Iraqi taxi driver, Chicago Tribune, 8/05/03

“Baghdadis now freely surf the Internet and send e-mail without a government official pacing behind them.”
The New York Times, 8/05/03

“Iraqis are very thirsty to learn what is happening outside of Iraq.”
Abbas Darwish, owner of a Baghdad shop that sells newspapers, The New York Times, 8/05/03

“Recruitment for Iraq's post-Saddam army started on July 19, and this week, a two-month basic training course gets underway to produce its first 1,000-strong light-armoured mechanised infantry battalion.”
Agence France Presse, 8/05/03

“I can put my head on the pillow and sleep deeply. I can rest now.”
Ayad Hosni,, a barber in Baghdad, Knight Ridder, 8/05/03

“But neighborhoods in and around Baghdad, staggering from uneven electrical power and water supply, also buzz with normal summer delights. Ice-cream stands are jammed, soccer fields swirl with the dust of matches and bookstores down from the Shabandar [café] are open all hours and selling posters of imams and politicians once-reviled by the ousted regime. Booksellers grin when asked about their new reality.”
Chicago Tribune, 8/05/03

“You never knew who was sitting next to you. In the past no one would dare to just speak out. Now everybody is talking. About federalism, about a monarchy. ... I think our aims are just one, to eliminate persecution for anyone ever again.”
Jafar Adel Amr, a tool salesman in Iraq, Chicago Tribune, 8/05/03

“I can’t be optimistic or pessimistic. I don’t want to say we can do it or we’ll do it well. But the way we’ve suffered in the past 30 years, we will try to create a new way.”
Jafar Adel Amr, at the Shabandar café in Baghdad, Chicago Tribune, 8/05/03

“Iraq without its marshes is like the United States without the Grand Canyon. One of the communities that suffered the most under Saddam is the marsh Iraqis. If we're ever going to see justice done in Iraq, part of that justice is restoring these peoples' way of life. This is a matter that goes beyond the environment.”
Azzam Alwash, an Iraqi exile who has returned to Iraq to restore the wetlands, Los Angeles Times, 8/05/03

“The only way for me to leave was to escape the country. If I had just quite and gone home, I was afraid that the people who worked for him [Uday] would have stalked me and killed me.”
Uday’s former bodyguard, Los Angeles Times, 8/02/03

“Freedom is much sweeter. I can get up in the morning and decide whether I want to shave or not; if someone in my family is sick, I can stay home with them. I don’t need to ask permission.”
Salim Kasim, one of Uday’s chief mechanics, Los Angeles Times, 8/02/03

“It brings us to the future, this train.”
Mohsin al Naif, watching the first train pull into Rabiyah in over a year, Associated Press, 7/31/03

“Their textbooks were filled with Hussein's regime as well: Math texts substituted S and H for the variables X and Y, reading comprehension paragraphs discussed ‘Zionist aggression’ and using oil as a political weapon, and other exercises promoted joining the Popular Army as an everyday activity such as buying a music cassette or acting in a play. … That is changing, as Iraqi teachers and parents team up with U.S. and international organizations to root the former Iraqi dictator out of textbooks and replace militaristic rote learning in Iraqi classrooms.”
Chicago Tribune, 7/31/03

“We didn’t believe these things, but we had to say them. Saddam was there in all the books, even the math books.”
Ghada Jassen, a fifth grade teacher in Iraq, Chicago Tribune, 7/31/03

“We don’t want patriotic education anymore. Nothing about war. We want flowers and springtime in the texts, not rifles and tanks.”
Dunia Nabel, a teacher in Baghdad, Chicago Tribune, 7/31/03

“Long live great Iraq!”
Iraqi students, who are no longer required to salute Saddam at the beginning of class, shouting their new salute, Chicago Tribune, 7/31/03

“We want to have a real education, to be a progressive country. Education is very important to the reconstruction of our society. If you want to civilize society, you must care about education.”
Al Sa’ad Majid al Musowi, a businessman on Baghdad’s city council, Chicago Tribune, 7/31/03

“This is where all the money went—all our money went. I am astonished and angry.”
Salih Fadhil, viewing Saddam’s palace in Tikrit, The Daily Telegraph (London), 7/31/03

“It just reminded me of how powerful Saddam was.”
Mudhfar Awad, after seeing Saddam’s palace in Tikrit, The Daily Telegraph (London), 7/31/03

“Water is returning to the Mesopotamian marshlands, turned into salt-encrusted desert by Saddam Hussein.”
The Christian Science Monitor, 7/31/03

“The return of water had an immediate effect on the people [the Marsh Arabs in Iraq] whom the war had freed. They are fishing again from boats that had not floated for years. Water seems to hold the promise of reviving an old way of life.”
The Christian Science Monitor, 7/31/03

“We have full freedom to print anything we want. The coalition doesn’t interfere in our work but, of course, we have our own red lines.” Ishtar el Yassiri, editor of the new satirical Iraqi newspaper Habez Bouz,
Financial Times (London), 7/31/03

“Volleys of Kalashnikov gunfire erupted above the dusty village of Haush al- Jinoub in southern Iraq. Children and weeping women thronged around the bus as it drew to a halt. Out stepped Thabed Mansour, frail and weary after 12 years of exile, for an overwhelmingly emotional reunion with his wife and family. Mr Mansour was one of 244 men who returned to their native country yesterday in the first formal repatriation of Iraqi refugees since the war ended.”
The Times (London), 7/31/03

“It is like the soul coming back to the body.”
Ibrahim Abdullah, a refugee returning to Iraq, The Times (London), 7/31/03

“Since Iraq’s liberation, the dominant theme of Western news reporting has been the guerrilla attacks against U.S. troops. The focus obscures a larger truth: Life is returning to normal in Iraq—better than normal, actually, because this ‘normal’ is Saddam-free. All of the country's universities and health clinics have reopened, as have 90 percent of schools. Iraq is now producing 3.4 gigawatts of electric power—85 percent of the pre-war level.”
National Post (Canada) commentary, 7/29/03

“The tension is reducing every day. We are seeing a change. People are starting to realize that the soldiers are not here to occupy Fallujah forever—they’re here to help us rebuild.”
Taha Bedawi, mayor of Fallujah, The Washington Post, 7/29/03

“It’s a chance to defend our country for our people. It’s good to work with the American soldiers. They give us new training and a mutual respect.”
Omar Abdullah, a recruit for Mosul’s newly formed joint security group, Associated Press, 7/29/03

“I want to serve a new Iraq.”
Shevin Majid, a former Kurdish fighter who is now a recruit in the Mosul joint security force, Associated Press, 7/29/03

“We’re happy, we’re rid of Saddam Hussein; the torture and executions of 35 years are over. We should wait to see what the Americans will do.”
Ahmed Abdel-Sahib, in Najaf, The Washington Post, 7/28/03

“Most Iraqis aren’t worried we’ll stay too long; they’re petrified we’ll leave too soon.”
Paul Gigot, The Wall Street Journal, 7/28/03

“There is a certain harmony. But you can not rebuild a city or country—a country destroyed by war—in one month.”
Mohammed Tahar al-Abid Rabu, a member of the Mosul city council, Agence France Presse, 7/28/03

“More and more businessmen are coming to Iraq. It is a rich country and the Iraqi market is enormous. All the world wants to come and do business here.”
Captain Adel Khalaf, director of the port at Umm Qasr, Agence France Presse, 7/27/03

“For the first time I feel really free.”
Latif Yahia, Uday’s former double, after hearing of Uday’s death, Agence France Presse, 7/26/03

“The Iraqi people have got rid of two of the biggest criminals in history. Their victims and the sons of their victims, who lived for 35 years under oppression, are feeling proud and happy.”
Muwaffak al-Rubaiei, a member of the Iraqi Governing Council, Agence France Presse and Reuters, 7/25/03

“We are more free nowadays. My father gave me the full freedom to marry whom I choose.”
Raina Nuri, a woman in Baghdad, Christian Science Monitor, 7/25/03

“We heard about Uday and Qusay being killed and, frankly, we are happy.”
Fadil Abbas, in the Sadr City suburb of Baghdad, Associated Press, 7/24/03

“We felt better after the regime fell, now we are really happy—we have been freed from our nightmare.”
Alaa’ Kathem, an Iraqi soccer player who had been punished for losing games, Financial Times (London), 7/24/03

“If it’s really him, we will be so very happy. We will be able to start a new regime of Olympic sport in Iraq. OK, he’s gone. We start a new life.”
Jaffer al-Muthafer, an Iraqi soccer player, Los Angeles Times, 7/24/03

“Iraq is now free from torture. Free from Uday.”
Amu Baba, a legendary soccer star in Iraq, Los Angeles Times, 7/24/03

“We feel safer now because we used to hear lots of stories about girls. We were so afraid to go out in case Uday saw us.”
Farrah, a 15-year-old Iraqi girl, Newsday (New York), 7/24/03

“My father died because of Saddam. I don’t want to speak about the reasons. But I was so happy. I was at home when I saw it on the TV. I woke up my aunts and told them the good news. I used to hate those guys so much and so I felt so at ease in my heart.”
Osama Zaid, a distant cousin of Uday, after learning of Uday’s death, Newsday (New York), 7/24/03

http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2003/07/iraq/20030731-7.html

8 Unapologetically Pro-Coalition News Links and Articles

25 posted on 08/11/2003 5:02:24 PM PDT by Ragtime Cowgirl (4 years? Dems can't even handle 4 short months of good works and security successes in Iraq.)
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