Posted on 01/14/2006 4:31:37 AM PST by martin_fierro
Sex and the electricity in Baghdad
Fri Jan 13, 10:08 AM ET
BAGHDAD (AFP) - Ahmed Hadi and his new wife Tiba Mohammed, like many young married couples in Baghdad, are not getting enough sex. The problem, they say, is not a lack of desire but of power -- electrical power.
Making love for many of Iraq's Muslim population not only requires a willing partner but also a sure supply of water -- preferably hot in the winter -- to enable the participants to take a shower afterwards before going to pray.
No hot water means no hot shower and therefore prayers, which take place five times a day for devout Muslims, can become a problem.
Either a couple avoids sex or they are forced to take a cold dip, not a pleasant prospect during the winter months.
"I have less sex than I want because there is no hot water to wash with afterwards," moaned Hadi, 25, a Baghdad local who works in the water sector and has only been married for two weeks.
"Sometimes, when we are in the middle of making love the electricity turns off so we have to stop. I get out of bed to put a generator on and then we have to wait for the water to heat up," he told AFP.
On the evening of the Eid Al-Adha (Muslim feast of the sacrifice) holiday which started on Tuesday, Hadi had hoped for a night of romance.
"Unfortunately, the electricity cut out from 5 pm until 11 pm. There was nothing for us to do other than sit and look at each other. I did not get married just to have conversation," he said.
In contrast to the situation in Iraq, power cuts in Western countries often lead to a spike in births nine months later as couples abandon watching television to share a warm bed.
Baghdad and much of central Iraq is suffering its worst ever electricity shortage, said a Western diplomat with expertise in the electricity sector. The power is on for just two to six hours per day in the capital.
In contrast, southern and northern Iraq -- where most of the power stations are based -- have more energy then before the US-led invasion when Saddam Hussein used to divert most of the power to Baghdad, depriving everyone else.
Following his downfall in April 2003, US-led and Iraqi projects have been launched to generate permanent power for all of Iraq, but so far they have failed to make much impact.
This is because the US-led coalition underestimated the dilapidated state of Iraq's electricity infrastructure following a decade of international sanctions, the diplomat told AFP, speaking on condition of anonymity.
In addition, repair work has been hampered daily by insurgent attacks against transmission lines and power stations.
For normal Iraqis, especially those living in Baghdad, this has resulted in further hardship.
Yasser Mohammed Saffar, a 26-year-old shop owner, and Tamara Shimary, 20, his wife of one year, live together with Safar's parents and two sisters in an apartment in southeastern Baghdad.
He too said the lack of electricity has affected his sex life because there is no hot water in the winter months and no air-conditioning in the summer -- another major impediment to a person's libido.
When Safar got married in the summer of 2004 he was so worried about the electricity cutting out in the flat on his first night with Shimary that he decided to bribe an official from the local grid to keep the power flowing.
"However, I then realised that it would be cheaper -- and more private -- to book a night in a hotel for my new wife and I," he recalled. "We had plenty of electricity, air-conditioning and water, it was great."
Major hotels try to secure a constant supply of energy for their guests.
One such hotel is the Al-Mansour in central Baghdad, which is conveniently located close to the well-powered Green Zone, where the Iraqi seat of government and a number of embassies are based.
Mohammed Jabbar, assistant manager for house-keeping at the hotel, agreed that guaranteed electricity and hot water were an attraction for newly-weds.
Safar said the lack of electricity in Iraq was definitely preventing people from having as much sex as they would like, but he also blamed other stress factors such as the deadly violence.
"Each kind of disorder you face -- such as the security problem and the lack of electricity -- reduces your sex drive, eventually down to zero," he said.
"Fortunately I am still going, thank goodness."
Population control?
As with everything in Iraq, it is not as bad as the media portrays it.
It's hard to repair the grid for good right now when terrorists keep bombing power plants or other sources.
And that's what they do.
"The soft glow of electric sex."
My B.S. detector is going nuts.
Most of the country never had these basic services outside of the Sunni Triangle. Also, it is hard to create infrastructure when you have a significant portion of the population determined to destroy what you build. Think about how easy it would be to knock out power and water to your own city if that was your agenda. Five terrorists with a can of gasoline each could burn down half the country if they wanted to.
Your BS detector is absolutely spot-on in this case. ;-) This article appears to be rife with distortion and exxageration.
How about when the power is on, the water gets heated. It doesn't just cool off when the power goes off. It remains warm for a day or so. Adjust the water until it is comfortable. I find that straight water out of the tank without adding the cold works just fine, but of course I gradjeated form High Screwl.
Well, cleanliness IS next to godliness.
Though if mundane stuff like this is all the Iraqis have to complain about, we're doing pretty well there.
Making love for many of Iraq's Muslim population not only requires a willing partner....
Wait, they're muslim, who says they have to be willing?
What a cult.
I never hear them complain. The media will talk to as many Iraqis as they have to until they find one who will gripe and that's the guy who gets quoted.
These people live with hardships we can't imagine and yet, they tend to be very cheerful, warm people with their senses of humor intact. They walk around singing, they cut up with their friends and smiles seem to be their natural demeanor.
I admire their courage and spirit.
I don't get it...Whats wrong with rensing her mouth with cold water?
Repairing the electrical grid takes time new poles to set and new lines to run. Not all of N O has power back and it is very small area. Also no one is shooting at the guys fixing it in N O.
Two things: AFP is French, so not surprising they're hung up on Iraqi sex life. And the problem in Iraq IS a lack of desire, not power - no one can rationally blame cold water.
Do you have to wash after sex? Yup. Jews have the same rules, and so would Christians if they followed Old Testament teachings. Here's the verse, from Leviticus 15:
18 The woman also with whom man shall lie with seed of copulation, they shall both BATHE themselves in water, and be unclean until the even.
One cannot pray or enter the temple while unclean. So, this is not all that surprising, is it?
All I can say is, thank God for Jesus. We are free from the curse of the law!
"All I can say is, thank God for Jesus. We are free from the curse of the law!"
OK. I was just pointing out that this teaching is not confined to Islam. Still, if I were a Christian, I do not believe I would go to church funky from sexual activity. But, that's just me.
Good. Maybe their frustration will turn into anger and action at the terrorists that disrupt power. Victory through sexual frustration...
These people can't even pray after sex! Now that's just stupid. Like God didn't invent the whole thing in the first place?
No, it's not a boombox, it's a bangbox.
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