„… Some years ago, I wrote a poem about those who die for freedom and justice. I never thought that I was writing it prematurely for my friend…“
Murals
"A painting that embodies the revolution
Painted in two colors
The white and the black
stood on it, a colored Butterfly"
Martyrs do not go to paradise
They leaf through the heavinly book
each in their own way
as a bird
a star
or a cloud
They appear to us every day
and cry
for us
we, who are still
in this hell they tried to extinguish
with their blood
“I will visit your grave when I go to Iraq, but I know that you are not only there. Your face is on so many walls, banners, T-shirts, and your spirit is everywhere. Your brothers and sisters, Thanwa‘s children, are still fighting for the new Iraq you dreamed of and loved.“
S.A.
Dec. 16, 2019
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/12/16/opinion/iraq-protests.html?smid=tw=share
Series
"In the photo album of martyrs
There is a missing picture"
Videos
a Revolutionary walks slowly
Under the rain"
Women plaid an important role in the protest movement. Throughout the country women and men organised women marches such as in Nasseriya, Erbil, Basra and Baghdad. On February 13, 2021 people from Baghdad called for the so called “Pink March”. Women of all ages, but mainly young women were demonstrating around Al Tahrir Square.
Posters
"Martyr's soul
standing on his coffin
White Pigeon"
About
“Painter painting with bright colors
a painting of a dancing Revolutionaries
a funeral passes in front of the painting
The revolutionaries stop their party
And they stand ready”
Baghdad Tahrir Art shows street art, photos, videos and posters that evolved in the area of Al Tahrir Square in Baghdad during the protest movement that started in October 2019 up until March 2020, when the worldwide lockdown started.
Baghdad Tahrir Art represents an archive of images and videos from the youth protest movement that began in October 2019 in Baghdad’s Al Tahrir Square and links them to the specific places where they were created. On display are selected murals, photographs, poster designs, and video statements that highlight how young artists, creatives and amateurs used the medium of imagery to portray their desires and demands as well as to show solidarity.
The homepage commemorates the event while changing the way we look at the past and the present. It is an archive of commemorative culture, and in order to protect the individual protagonists, all material is published anonymously.
The homepage is in the form of a map, since the protest movement was not limited to the public space of Al Tahrir Square, but extended to other public spaces such as Al Saadoun Street, Al Jumhuriya Bridge, the Tigris bank between Al Jumhuriya and Al Sinek Bridge, Al Rasheed Street to Al Ahrar Bridge, Al Wathba Square, Al Khilani Square, Al Tayaran Square and Al Ummah Park and at times the Mohammed Al Qassim Highway.
The murals created in the tunnel (road subway running under Al Tahrir Square) were the beginning of a series of murals in different locations of the public space encompassing the sit-in. The murals are not mere examples of street art; they were created as contributions by their respective artists, who were driven by a desire to support the movement — cultural offerings, if you will, for the people who had settled in and around the square, as well as the visitors who came every day to express solidarity.
Besides the murals, artists, photographers, filmmakers and graphic designers took on the role of “postmen” for the movement, contributing their share by posting information on social media in order to show the reality of what was happening. Different poster designs were published that conveyed different messages, and although some were printed they were mostly distributed on social media platforms.
Adding content on this homepage will be possible even after the launch of the virtual exhibition. It is the start of an archive that will hopefully grow over time.
Brief historical abstract
The 2019 Iraqi protests, also known as the Tishreen Movement (Tishreen corresponds to October in the Syriac calendar used in Iraq and the Levant) were a series of activities all over Iraq consisting of demonstrations, sit-ins and marches. The movement started with a week-long demonstration in Al Tahrir on October 1, 2019. It was the continuation of preceding demonstrations by certain sectors of society, but also an outcome of people’s anger after the dismissal and relocation of Abdel Wahab Al Saedi, widely regarded as a national hero and known as the ‘Liberator of Mosul’.
From the very beginning, demonstrators were faced with violence. “Baghdad was put under a curfew and Iraq faced an internet blackout, 75% of the country’s internet was shut down. On October 5, 2019, unknown forces raided many private TV channels in Baghdad for airing the protests. At the beginning of the protest, during the first week of October, demonstrators were mainly young men.” Faced with state violence, different acts of solidarity started to take shape among the demonstrators. Tuk Tuk drivers were transporting protesters who had been injured or killed. Other people started to distribute water, food and Cola. The latter in particular was used against the effects of tear gas. The demonstrations ended after seven days in Al Sadr City.
In response to the violence the initial protests were met with, civil activists announced another demonstration on October 25, 2019. It was the beginning of mass protests and strikes which took place in many cities in Iraq for several months. “The movement was the largest civil unrest that Iraq has experienced since the 2003 invasion” and can be considered a continuation of a series of peaceful demonstrations and protests that started in February 2011, initiated by journalist Hadi Al Mahdi, who was later assassinated on September 8, 2011. While demonstrations were being held every Friday over the past 10 years, on October 25, 2019 protestors decided to stay in Al Tahrir and to protest in the form of a sit-in.
In a sit-in, demonstrators occupy a place open to the public. The sit-in in Baghdad was in Al Tahrir Square and its neighbourhood where protesters set up a tent city with a self-organised functioning infrastructure and governance.
Other cities with sit-ins:
Babylon: Al Tahrir Wa’l-lssa Square
Basra: Abdulkareem Qassim Square
Diwaniya: Al Sa’a Square
Nasseriya: Al Habubi Square and Al Zaytoon Bridge
Kerbela: Al Ahrar Square
Maysan: Maysan Square
Muthana: Algadeer Arena and Al Ihtifalat Square
Najaf: Al Ishreen Revolution Square
Wasit: Tamose Square
Additionally, different marches in the aforementioned cities took place, as well as in Dyala, Erbil, Kirkuk and Suleimaniya.
The movement’s demands, composition and features
“Baghdad – 10 November 2019
Over the past weeks, demonstrations erupted in Baghdad and other governorates in Iraq. Protester demands cover a wide spectrum of issues, including economic growth and employment, reliable public services, prudent and impartial governance, an end to corruption, credible elections as well as broader reform of the political system – including amendments to the constitution.”
The composition of the movement reflected Iraq’s complex society. The participants came from a variety of political, religious, societal and ideological backgrounds. Different groups shared the same mission, groups who normally wouldn’t communicate with each other. What united them was a vision: “We want a homeland!”, but what united them also was the place: Al Tahrir, Baghdad. “All provinces agreed about the importance of Baghdad as the key symbol of the movement. One protestor noted: ‘In Baghdad you find people from all the different social, religious and sectarian classes including women.’.”
Even though the movement included young and old, the Iraqi youth was the driving force, with a massive women’s participation. “A Woman’s Voice is a Revolution” is written on a wall painting in the tunnel under Al-Tahrir Square, underlining the role of women in the movement. “While remarkable, this participation is not surprising, it only makes visible deep societal realities and transformations that have found their space of expression in the Iraqi streets and squares of protest.”
While often criticized as leaderless, especially from international ‘parties,’ the movement was far from unorganised or unstructured. The movement represented a united nation, demonstrating against a ruling system that had fallen short. “… They are risking their lives and wellbeing to shape, coordinate and direct a movement that serves the greater good, not themselves.”
The movement was organised in different teams: the frontliners, who held their positions on the barricades; the hunters, who tried to render the flying teargas bombs unusable; the different first aid teams with tents everywhere to help injured persons; the Tuk Tuk drivers, who transported injured people, visitors and goods and played loud music to motivate and entertain the people; the strategic team, which planned the next steps; the logistic team, which distributed goods from tent to tent; the cooking team, which served everybody with food and drinks; the cleaning team, which organised the cleaning all over the place; the painting team, which covered the walls with murals; the media team which documented what was happening via photo and video then posted it on social media; the graphic design team which developed different poster designs and also distributed them on social media.
All these teams got support from people outside of Al Tahrir through donations of either money or material goods. If Al Tahrir needed something, protestors called on social media: “It is becoming cold. We need blankets.” And people sent blankets and clothes to Al Tahrir. Everyone tried to find their own way to support the movement. For the first time in the history of Iraq, the nation was united. Even though it lasted only a specific period of time, it shows the transformation within the Iraqi people, and their genuine wish for a change, especially among the young generation.
Credits
Our thanks and appreciation to all participating artists, contributors, team members, colleagues, and friends, who made this project possible.
The virtual exhibition BAGHDAD TAHRIR ART is a project in the framework of “Artists: Creators of Social Change” conceived and implemented by elbarlament and kindly supported by the Federal Ministry of Foreign Affairs Germany.
Baghdad Tahrir Art
E-Mail: baghdadtahrirart2019@protonmail.com
Website
Content editor: Marya Saad
Translation: Yasmine Zohdi
Design: Basics09
Code and motion design: Rasso Hilber
Project Manager: Kenza Rady
Project Assistant: Maha Atteah
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