7 posts tagged “iraqi children”
Pfc. Brian Jones just returned from the city and brings us the State of Fallujah Address where city officials tell you about what has taken place over the past year to strengthen their home:
FALLUJAH, Iraq —City officials and leaders gathered at the newly developed Fallujah television station to deliver a live broadcast of the state of Fallujah address to the people recently.
Sheik Hamid Ahmed, the chairman of the Fallujah city council, and Col. Faisal Ismail Husayn, the chief of police, spoke on behalf of the city recounting their history and announcing the current state of affairs.
Both Ahmed and Husayn thanked the service members and commanding officers with Regimental Combat Team 6 and Multi National Force-West for their support in security, reconstruction efforts and taking interest in the future of the city.
“The real picture of Fallujah is what you see today,” said Ahmed, translated by an interpreter. “It is living in security and reconstruction because the leadership of the city was put in the hands of the good people.”
Currently, the local tribal sheik council and city muktars are diligently working in accordance with the mayor and city council elected by the citizens of Fallujah in guiding the city’s future as Coalition Forces remain in a supporting role as advisors and security.
“When we united the city council, the mayor and the muktars of the city, the situation of the city turned for the better,” said Husayn. “Everybody knows that the security situation in Fallujah before 2006 was killing in the streets, destruction and no one could say any righteous word anywhere. Today the situation is special, very secure and peaceful. That is not our own evaluation, but it is the citizens of Fallujah who have evaluated the situation and have told us the status of the city.”
Husayn said that as security improved within the city all other efforts in rebuilding the city became a success and due to the city’s new leadership the city is moving in the direction of progress and stability.
All this was not possible without the help of the Coalition Forces and their help with the reconstruction efforts that work side by side with the security efforts in the city, said Husayn.
As security drastically improved the people of Fallujah received nearly 1,000 government jobs granted by the central government of Iraq, opened new and old businesses and have managed public services. Special efforts have also been made in supporting the students and youth of Fallujah, from school supplies to recreational sports.
The Fallujah Business Development Center has opened to manage reconstruction efforts for the district and is also used as the central foundation to inviting Arab and other investment companies into the city.
“Fallujah is ready for major investment,” said Ahmed. “From this place, we call on all the investors from the Arab nations and international nations to come and invest in the district of Fallujah.”
Ahmed attributed the reason for investing in the city is because of the city’s location on the Euphrates River that is an intersection for all the international roads and also, the city contains all the main ingredients necessary for development, such as human and construction resources and the availability of the experience and expertise.
Husayn addressed government representatives and brothers from the Arab nations around Iraq in his speech asking that they come and visit the city that sacrificed more than many other cities in Iraq and deserves that the people stand by its side and provide the services that it needs for support.
“I want them to come and see the reality of Fallujah today,” said Husayn. “They will see that Fallujah is very secure and that the citizens of Fallujah are very generous and very brave and are here to welcome anybody that comes to Fallujah.”
“All want the peace and are looking forward to building good relations and friendships with all the peoples’ nations,” said Ahmed. “We will turn the page of the past and will open a new page with the grace of God. We swore to ourselves that we will keep our city as a star shining among the stars of the other cities of Iraq.”
A team from NBC News recently embedded with us to obtain footage of Fallujah and the turnaround that has taken place with the people and the way of life. This segment aired last night and the possibility exists of another piece next week. The Marines of the "Darkhorse Battalion" hosted the crew and provided them a tour of the City of Mosques...
FALLUJAH, Iraq—Fallujah citizens gathered in large numbers to kick off the “Fallujah Cup” soccer tournament here
recently.
Soccer, a favorite sport among Iraqis, was chosen as the first organized sporting event the city would embrace as a result of improved security in the area.
“This is kind of a microcosm of everything that is going well right here in Fallujah, and this is a culminating event,” said 2nd Lt. Gregory Collins, the platoon commander of 2nd Platoon, Company K, 3rd Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment, Regimental Combat Team 6.
Collins initiated the request to bring the community together through the sport. He helped facilitate the organization of the tournament and helped obtain uniforms that were donated to the participating teams.
The amateur league welcomed soccer players of all ages to try out for the teams. Soccer players throughout the city signed up and were organized into 21 teams to compete. Each team represented one of the 10 districts of Fallujah.
The event began with an opening ceremony presenting all 21 teams to the field and an exhibition of Fallujah’s tae kwon do martial arts program.
Competition began with two of the best teams facing off for an entertaining game opener.
More than 70 invitations were handed out to special guests for seating in the VIP tent for the event. Among those invited were commanding officers and Marines with 3rd Bn.,5th Marines. Also invited were the city mayor, police chiefs and the sheiks, muktars and Imams from the surrounding areas.
“They wanted us here just to be able to see how well things are progressing here in Fallujah,” said Collins. “They’re very proud of everything they’ve accomplished because of the security increase. Everything that is going on is all built through the Iraqi police and through the local leadership taking hold of the city.”
Preparations for the tournament began with local contractors who brought in heavy equipment to remove all extra rubble to clear the fields and locals were paid to help rid the fields of the trash.
A town hall meeting was held a week prior to the event to bring the teams together to collect official rosters and coordinate on the FIFA (Fédération Internationale de Football Association) rules the tournament would follow.
For the remainder of the month, the 21 teams will play it out for the championship of Fallujah.
There are already plans to add a 12-20 youth soccer league. Volleyball, handball and bicycle tournaments are also hopeful additions to the range of sports events for the city.
It is not uncommon to find a Marine with more than one tour in Iraq. There are several over here that are on their second, third, fourth, and even fifth trip. Cpl. Bryce Muhlenberg provides us such an example of a Marine that has fought here and will miss the Iraqi people that he has come to know over the past few months.
HABBANIYAH, Iraq – Sgt. John E. Mejia was walking between two mud and brick houses here when he explained the key to counterinsurgency operations in Iraq.
“You’ve got to be face-to-face with these people to see if a difference has been made,” said the 37-year-old Monterey Park, Calif., native and section leader with Weapons Company, 1st Battalion, 1st Marine Regiment, Regimental Combat Team 6.
The bulk of day-to-day work for the Marines of Weapons Company consists of counterinsurgency operations here. This includes operations that bring medical and educational assistance to the locals as well as presence patrols and plain old neighborly conversation.
“Today we are conducting COIN operations by way of presence patrols in the local area,” said Mejia. “We are going out and reassuring the people they can depend on the Iraqi Police now in the area and they can still depend on us.”
Mejia, and the other Marines of the platoon, made their way across an open dirt patch toward a dingy looking house right on the outskirts of a nearby neighborhood. Climbing up a small embankment and toward the front entrance of the house, Mejia explained that the Weapons Marines have recently moved out of Combat Outpost Red, approximately two weeks ago, due to the increasing reliability of the Iraqi Security Forces and the stability they have brought to the area. But, this move was only possible after the patrol bases in the area were built and the Marines had established their face-to-face relationship in the community.
As he explained this, the Marines were surrounded by small children and women. A Marine began speaking to the lead wife of the household, who was watching over the estate while her husband was out in the fields tending to the sheep. She held a small boy, no more than two years old, who she hummed to, trying to calm him.
“Is your child feeling well?” asked Petty Officer 3rd Class, Charles L. Scott, a Navy Corpsmen with Weapons Company, while an interpreter translated.
The women spoke to the interpreter, explaining that her child was teething and was in a great deal of pain. Scott produced a small bag of pain medicine, which he gave to the mother, along with verbal instruction.
This sight isn’t uncommon for the Marines, said Mejia.
“We spent a lot of time with our neighbors,” he said, talking about his time at “red” While there, the Marines lived and worked right next door to the people and in the community itself, similar to the way Iraqi Police do now.
“We ask them how they are doing with food, water and electricity,” said Mejia. “Do the kids go to school, does anybody need medical attention? Providing medical attention was big and our corpsman does a really good job of helping out. We obviously don’t have a drugstore, but ‘doc’ tries to provide relief. Stuff like this really displayed our concern for them. Now we encourage our Iraqi counterparts to do the same things.”
Scott, known as “doc” to his brothers-in-arms, said that this is an important step that has been taken by the Iraqi Security Forces in his area.
“The overall goal is to transition responsibility from coalition forces to the Iraqis, so they can handle their own problems,” said the 22-year-old. “By us performing the constant COIN operations here in this area, we have provided a steady platform for them. It’s important for these men to handle their own country.”
To the Salem, Ore., native and 2003 North Salem High School graduate, this process, although sometimes monotonous, he said, is going well and makes sense for the long term goal.
Scott is part of a team who has accomplished something greater than themselves, and as the battalion is soon approaching the later portion of their deployment, it is something they will remember, said Mejia.
“Of course we are excited to be heading home soon…this is my fourth time over here and away from home,” Mejia admitted. “To be honest, I’m also going to miss some of the Iraqi friends I’ve made out here with the locals and the Iraqi Police, but we are going to be able to go home on a positive note, with the Iraqis on their feet. We will know that we have done our part to significantly improve the lives of these people.”
In the story below it tells about Marines with 3rd Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment, Regimental Combat Team 6, visiting people in their homes in Fallujah, Iraq. This is an introduction written by Pfc. Brian Jones about the some of the circumstances of Iraqi culture that Marines have discovered for themselves and have curiously questioned.
As violence subsides in Fallujah, “the city of mosques”, Marines find time to indulge in investigating their cultural curiosities of the Iraqi people who surround them. Marines communicate, work and in some cases live with them offering ample amounts of opportunity to get to know them.
The Arab populace of Fallujah is dominantly made up of Muslims and religion is central part of the Iraqis’ daily life. Proverbs from the Quran can be seen written on walls everywhere. Daily prayers can be heard all over the city from the loudspeakers atop of mosques drowning out the noise below of an active neighborhood.
The social makeup of the communities is made of closely tied tribal and extended family relations. It’s the mold of their society. Iraqis’ family honor is very important. Insults and criticism are taken very seriously. Marines have learned to associate people with others who are apart of the same tribe. One can think of it as almost a “if you mess with one you mess with the whole trailer park” approach.
Commonly, children ask Marines how many wives and children they have back home in the States. The children’s curiosity is sprung from a value system of a man’s worth or success by the size of the family he supports. Marines have jokingly told them they have five wives and eighteen children just to see the surprised and impressed look on their faces.
Marines inquire about an Iraqis’ marriage, or marriages in some cases, with those they meet. To our fascination,
arranged marriages are still practiced here by some families, but the couples usually have some say in the match making. The greatest concern in these arranged marriages is the man’s capability to provide for the woman and children in the future. The husband is expected to provide the house, food and clothes for his family.
Depending on a man’s financial wealth he may marry multiple wives and raise children with all of them, provided he financially supports the many homes they all live in.
Many of the Marines here have responded to the sound of
gunfire only to find out that it is a common practice among Arabs to fire
weapons into the air during weddings and celebration of other things, such as
an big win for a favorite Iraqi soccer team.
As Marines stop and knock at doors and enter a home they usually find an entire extended family living closely
together under one roof. Large families are the norm. In a single household there may be the father, wife or wives, unmarried sons and daughters, their married sons and their families, the father’s mother and unmarried sisters. Children typically don’t leave the home until they are married.
Large families have more economic benefits for a family as a whole by providing the family with more hands to supply income. A large family also provides the father with the prestige of virility with the signs of responsibility, wealth and success.
Sons are generally preferred because a son will take the responsibility to care for his parents in their elderly years. Some children may attend school, but in poorer and more rural areas children may spend their days working, if the work can be found, to help support the family.
In Iraqi society gender roles are clearly defined. Throughout the Arab culture, authority is generally related to older men. Wisdom and experience is associated with age. Women have a protected role in society with respect for their privacy. Men and women are segregated much of the time, especially when business is involved. Women are expected to be quiet and modest around men, especially outside the home.
As an example, women are seen in the city with men and they
may stop to get something to eat. The women may
have to sit facing the wall to
protect her privacy as she eats so that she is not seen by the passerby. In their culture the women are considered
respected as opposed to being oppressed as westerners might see it as.
Within the home women hold authority over their children and household affairs. The man’s mother takes the role as the overall authority.
Marines experience the politeness and generosity of Iraqis everyday. Marines are offered to share tea and meals with them almost with certainty on many visits. Iraqis seem to have a passion for talking a lot and speak loudly full of emotion and gestures. Their dress is governed by their concerns for modesty. Their approach to time is more relaxed than in western culture. They’re very affection people. It’s a common sight to see men greet one another with a kiss on the cheek and hold hands as they walk and speak with one another. However, public affection between men and women is discouraged.
Their loyalties lie with the immediate family and then the tribe, but Coalition Forces are trying to spread a greater
sense of national unity among the Iraqi people to encourage them to pull together as a stronger nation rather than subdividing themselves.
When Marines patrol through the city streets of Fallujah
they are typically greeted, swarmed, followed and sometimes
even chased by
children. These Iraqi children who eagerly compete for our Marines’ attention
are the future of Iraq
and if Coalition Forces have had any success at winning the hearts and minds
and having a positive influence on anyone, it’s those children.
Story by Lance Cpl. Randall Little
March 18, 2007
FALLUJAH, Iraq -- Iraqi soldiers and police delivered pens, paper, art supplies and other assorted school supplies to approximately 600 students enrolled at the Al Anbar School here March 18.
The Iraqi soldiers with 2nd Battalion, 2nd Brigade, 1st Iraqi Army Division and Fallujah police, known to the locals as the “Sons of Fallujah,” loaded a trailer with the school supplies, as well as toys, soccer balls and candy to pass out to the children.
“The mission was entirely Iraqi-run. The (soldiers) and Fallujah police worked together to bring the supplies to the students,” said 1st Lt. Mark Peckham, a 28-year-old native. “We wanted to get the Iraqi Army and Police working together to show the populace the IA and IPs run the city, not the insurgents.”
Military Transition Team Marines advising the 2nd Iraqi Army Brigade took a backseat role, posting security around the school to allow the Iraqi soldiers, or “jundi” in Arabic, and Sons of Fallujah to show their faces to the public and children in the school in a positive way without having to worry about insurgent reprisals. Iraqis serving in the army and police force are high-profile targets for anti-Iraqi forces more concerned with building their own power base than seeing a stable Iraq.
“We posted several security positions around the school to watch for any insurgent activity,” explained Peckham. “If things got crazy we would be there to help them, but we wanted them to operate on their own. That’s one of the only ways they are going to have a positive impact on the people.”
Although the Marines were present, they showed little to no force in the mission. One of the main reasons for having Marines go out with the jundi and police is to boost the morale of the Iraqi forces, Peckham said.
The jundi see Marines and know if anything goes wrong the Marines are there to support them. It is a confidence booster for the Iraqis, knowing their American counterparts are nearby.
“It’s important to get the IA and IPs in the city to show they are doing good things for the people,” Peckham explained. “If the people notice the IA and IPs making life easier for them, they will realize as long as the insurgents are in the city it makes it difficult for the good guys to do good things.”
The jundi and Sons of Fallujah worked hand-in-hand to deliver the school supplies to the children of the school, who greeted them with smiles and laughs.
Although the mission was to deliver school supplies and candies, the Iraqi soldiers and police were also showing they could work together to the people. While the Sons of Fallujah are a familiar sight on the city streets, the residents of the city are still adjusting to having Iraqi soldiers operating in their hometown.
“The IA and IPs want to show the people they are cooperating with each other,” Peckham explained. “This will hopefully make the populace of Fallujah, which is mostly Sunni, more comfortable with the Iraqi Army, which is mostly Shia,” he continued.
The mission was successful all around. The children were very pleased with the supplies given to them by the Iraqi Army and Fallujah police. It was positive feedback for both groups of Iraqis, letting them know their efforts do make a difference.
The Iraqi Army, Police and Marines were pleased with how the mission was carried out. The Iraqi forces not only showed a positive presence in the area but they accomplished the mission in a timely manner, Peckham explained.
The more the jundi and Fallujah police show their presence throughout Fallujah, the more cooperative the people will become. The Iraqi forces want the people feel comfortable enough to approach them and provide vital information about insurgent activity. By taking school supplies to the children attending Al Anbar School, and passing out candy and soccer balls in the city, the Iraqi forces create an essential positive image required to build the trust of the Fallujans.