Published on Tuesday, April 15, 2003 by the Independent/UK
Library Books, Letters and Priceless Documents are Set Ablaze
in Final Chapter of the Sacking of Baghdad
by Robert Fisk
So yesterday was the burning of books. First came the looters, then the
arsonists. It was the final chapter in the sacking of Baghdad. The National
Library and Archives a priceless treasure of Ottoman historical documents,
including the old royal archives of Iraq were turned to ashes in 3,000
degrees of heat. Then the library of Korans at the Ministry of Religious
Endowment was set ablaze. I saw the looters. One of them cursed me when I tried
to reclaim a book of Islamic law from a boy of no more than 10. Amid the ashes
of Iraqi history, I found a file blowing in the wind outside: pages of
handwritten letters between the court of Sharif Hussein of Mecca, who started
the Arab revolt against the Turks for Lawrence of Arabia, and the Ottoman
rulers of Baghdad. And the Americans did nothing. All over the filthy yard they
blew, letters of recommendation to the courts of Arabia, demands for ammunition
for troops, reports on the theft of camels and attacks on pilgrims, all in
delicate hand-written Arabic script. I was holding in my hands the last Baghdad
vestiges of Iraq's written history. But for Iraq, this is Year Zero; with the
destruction of the antiquities in the Museum of Archaeology on Saturday and the
burning of the National Archives and then the Koranic library, the cultural
identity of Iraq is being erased. Why? Who set these fires? For what insane
purpose is this heritage being destroyed? When I caught sight of the Koranic
library burning flames 100 feet high were bursting from the windows I raced
to the offices of the occupying power, the US Marines' Civil Affairs Bureau. An
officer shouted to a colleague that "this guy says some biblical [sic]
library is on fire". I gave the map location, the precise name in Arabic
and English. I said the smoke could be seen from three miles away and it would
take only five minutes to drive there. Half an hour later, there wasn't an
American at the scene and the flames were shooting 200 feet into the air.
There was a time when the Arabs said that their books were written in Cairo,
printed in Beirut and read in Baghdad. Now they burn libraries in Baghdad. In
the National Archives were not just the Ottoman records of the Caliphate, but
even the dark years of the country's modern history, handwritten accounts of
the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq war, with personal photographs and military diaries,and
microfiche copies of Arabic newspapers going back to the early 1900s. But the
older files and archives were on the upper floors of the library where petrol
must have been used to set fire so expertly to the building. The heat was such that
the marble flooring had buckled upwards and the concrete stairs that I climbed
had been cracked. The papers on the floor were almost too hot to touch, bore no
print or writing, and crumbled into ash the moment I picked them up. Again,
standing in this shroud of blue smoke and embers, I asked the same question:
why? So, as an all-too-painful reflection on what this means, let me quote from
the shreds of paper that I found on the road outside, blowing in the wind,
written by long-dead men who wrote to the Sublime Porte in Istanbul or to the
Court of Sharif of Mecca with expressions of loyalty and who signed themselves
"your slave". There was a request to protect a camel convoy of tea,
rice and sugar, signed by Husni Attiya al-Hijazi (recommending Abdul Ghani-Naim
and Ahmed Kindi as honest merchants), a request for perfume and advice from
Jaber al-Ayashi of the royal court of Sharif Hussein to Baghdad to warn of
robbers in the desert. "This is just to give you our advice for which you
will be highly rewarded," Ayashi says. "If you don't take our advice,
then we have warned you." A touch of Saddam there, I thought. The date was
1912. Some of the documents list the cost of bullets, military horses and
artillery for Ottoman armies in Baghdad and Arabia, others record the opening
of the first telephone exchange in the Hejaz soon to be Saudi Arabia while
one recounts, from the village of Azrak in modern-day Jordan, the theft of
clothes from a camel train by Ali bin Kassem, who attacked his interrogators
"with a knife and tried to stab them but was restrained and later bought
off". There is a 19th-century letter of recommendation for a merchant,
Yahyia Messoudi, "a man of the highest morals, of good conduct and who
works with the [Ottoman] government." This, in other words, was the
tapestry of Arab history all that is left of it, which fell into The
Independent's hands as the mass of documents crackled in the immense heat of
the ruins. King Faisal of the Hejaz, the ruler of Mecca, whose staff are the
authors of many of the letters I saved, was later deposed by the Saudis. His
son Faisel became king of Iraq Winston Churchill gave him Baghdad after the
French threw him out of Damascus and his brother Abdullah became the first
king of Jordan, the father of King Hussein and the grandfather of the
present-day Jordanian monarch, King Abdullah II. For almost a thousand years,
Baghdad was the cultural capital of the Arab world, the most literate
population in the Middle East. Genghis Khan's grandson burnt the city in the
13th century and, so it was said, the Tigris river ran black with the ink of
books. Yesterday, the black ashes of thousands of ancient documents filled the
skies of Iraq. Why?
© 2003
Independent Digital (UK) Ltd