Iraqi Americans: Witnessing a Genocide

In Witnessing a Genocide, Weam Namou shares her visit to Iraq in 2000, a journey where she embraced Easter with relatives, remembered her magical childhood in Baghdad, and enjoyed her ancestors’ town of Telkaif in Mosul. The trip, held dear to her heart and preserved through pictures of extravagant picnics, tours of ancient monasteries and other lively explorations, is soon drowned by the events that follow the 2003 US-led invasion.

Like the rest of the Iraqi American community, Namou watches from a distance the destruction and devastation befalling her birth country. The violence and persecution of Iraqi Christians causes most of her relatives still living in Iraq to flee. The emergence of the Islamic State further ravages this community. But Iraqi Christians are not the only targets. Over three million Iraqis, of different ethnic and religious background, have been displaced by the conflict in Iraq since January 2014.

Witnessing a Genocide, the second book in the Iraqi Americans book series, provides the Iraqi American view on Iraq and the Islamic State. Their perspectives, told through personal stories, have sentiments and information not found in mainstream media.

“I hope that people who read Witnessing a Genocide can start viewing the East’s vision as a counterpart to that of the West,” Namou writes. “Today, Mesopotamia, the biblical Garden of Eden, is a flat desert, thanks to inflation, overuse of agricultural land, and enemy invasions. The past is a warning of how our current civilization could destroy the environment of the future.”

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Iraqi Americans: Witnessing a Genocide

In Witnessing a Genocide, Weam Namou shares her visit to Iraq in 2000, a journey where she embraced Easter with relatives, remembered her magical childhood in Baghdad, and enjoyed her ancestors’ town of Telkaif in Mosul. The trip, held dear to her heart and preserved through pictures of extravagant picnics, tours of ancient monasteries and other lively explorations, is soon drowned by the events that follow the 2003 US-led invasion.

Like the rest of the Iraqi American community, Namou watches from a distance the destruction and devastation befalling her birth country. The violence and persecution of Iraqi Christians causes most of her relatives still living in Iraq to flee. The emergence of the Islamic State further ravages this community. But Iraqi Christians are not the only targets. Over three million Iraqis, of different ethnic and religious background, have been displaced by the conflict in Iraq since January 2014.

Witnessing a Genocide, the second book in the Iraqi Americans book series, provides the Iraqi American view on Iraq and the Islamic State. Their perspectives, told through personal stories, have sentiments and information not found in mainstream media.

“I hope that people who read Witnessing a Genocide can start viewing the East’s vision as a counterpart to that of the West,” Namou writes. “Today, Mesopotamia, the biblical Garden of Eden, is a flat desert, thanks to inflation, overuse of agricultural land, and enemy invasions. The past is a warning of how our current civilization could destroy the environment of the future.”

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Iraqi Americans: Witnessing a Genocide

Iraqi Americans: Witnessing a Genocide

by Weam Namou
Iraqi Americans: Witnessing a Genocide

Iraqi Americans: Witnessing a Genocide

by Weam Namou

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Overview

In Witnessing a Genocide, Weam Namou shares her visit to Iraq in 2000, a journey where she embraced Easter with relatives, remembered her magical childhood in Baghdad, and enjoyed her ancestors’ town of Telkaif in Mosul. The trip, held dear to her heart and preserved through pictures of extravagant picnics, tours of ancient monasteries and other lively explorations, is soon drowned by the events that follow the 2003 US-led invasion.

Like the rest of the Iraqi American community, Namou watches from a distance the destruction and devastation befalling her birth country. The violence and persecution of Iraqi Christians causes most of her relatives still living in Iraq to flee. The emergence of the Islamic State further ravages this community. But Iraqi Christians are not the only targets. Over three million Iraqis, of different ethnic and religious background, have been displaced by the conflict in Iraq since January 2014.

Witnessing a Genocide, the second book in the Iraqi Americans book series, provides the Iraqi American view on Iraq and the Islamic State. Their perspectives, told through personal stories, have sentiments and information not found in mainstream media.

“I hope that people who read Witnessing a Genocide can start viewing the East’s vision as a counterpart to that of the West,” Namou writes. “Today, Mesopotamia, the biblical Garden of Eden, is a flat desert, thanks to inflation, overuse of agricultural land, and enemy invasions. The past is a warning of how our current civilization could destroy the environment of the future.”


Product Details

BN ID: 2940152871081
Publisher: Weam Namou
Publication date: 02/20/2016
Sold by: Smashwords
Format: eBook
File size: 4 MB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Born in Baghdad, Iraq as a minority Christian, Weam Namou came to American at age ten. She is an award-winning author of eight books - three novels, one poetry book, and the Iraqi Americans Book Series. Her recent memoir series about her experience with Lynn Andrews' 4-year shamanism school reveals how the school's ancient teachings helped her heal old wounds and manifest her dreams. Namou received her Bachelor's Degree in Communications from Wayne State University. She studied fiction and memoir through various correspondence courses, poetry in Prague and screenwriting at MPI (Motion Picture Institute of Michigan). Her essays, articles and poetry have appeared in national and international publications. As the co-founder and president of IAA (Iraqi Artists Association), Namou has given poetry readings, lectures and workshops at numerous cultural and educational institutions. In 2012, she won a lifetime achievement award from E'Rootha. Her rich Babylonian heritage, her educational background, her apprenticeships with spiritual masters, and her travels around the world have helped her make connections with people from different walks of life - Spanish, Italian, Greek, French, British, Portuguese, Czechs, Israeli, Mexican, Moroccan, Tunisian, Jordanian... the list goes on. Namou hopes to pass on her cultural and spiritual teachings to her readers.

Table of Contents

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS vii
INTRODUCTION ix

Part One: The Development of the Islamic State
1 Small History 1
2 Baghdad, the Gift of God 4
3 Mosul, Once the Home of Christians 12
4 The Restart of Iraq's Christian Persecution 17
5 Attack on Our Lady of Salvation Church 21
6 The Battles in Fallujah 34

Part Two: ISIS Announces the Creation of an Islamic State
7 Camp Speicher Massacre 46
8 The Islamic State Attacks Nineveh Plains 50
9 Protests Against the Islamic State 59
10 The Yazidi Genocide 66

Part Three: Iraqi Americans Try to Pick Up the Pieces
11 Finding an Alternative to Ryan Road 74
12 Speak the Truth Even if Your Voice Shakes 80
13 Teachers Educating and Creating Hope 89
14 The Compensation Project 94
15 Under the Umbrella of Bishop Francis 99

Part Four: The Archaeological Riches of Mesopotamia
16 The Museum and Famous Sites 106
17 Babylon, Walking on Cracked Ice...From Babylon to USA 113

Conclusion 117
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