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(DV) Rubaie: Setting the Record Straight


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Setting the Record Straight
Dancing Around the Dead is Not an Iraqi Tradition
by Mowaffak al-Rubaie
www.dissidentvoice.org
January 10, 2007

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Recently, an interview I had on CNN has been taken out of context and quoted by multiple other sources, unfortunately damaging the image of Iraqis. I mentioned that some of the Iraqis attending Saddam's execution were happy that Saddam's era had come to an end, and that all Iraqis can now work together in starting a new chapter. Some of them expressed their happiness through a traditional dance usually preformed at celebrations and weddings.

 

In no way did I mean that dancing around dead bodies is "an Iraqi tradition." In fact, it is neither an Iraqi tradition, nor an Arab or Muslim one. Our religion and traditions ban any gloating over someone's grief, even if we loathed that person and thought he got what he deserved. Our Arabic traditions and Islamic rules pertaining to death prevent cussing, shouting, vengefulness, and wrath towards those about to die; in addition, we are even prohibited from speaking ill of the dead. Our Iraqi traditions in particular are against sectarian or ethnic taunting. All the mistakes that happened during this execution do not reflect our heritage and religion, and they do not reflect our values in building the new Iraq.

 

We do understand many people's point of view who criticized the execution's timing as well. We did not mean to offend anyone by picking the Holy Muslim days of Eid Al-Adha, and we regret any other offensive technicalities that occurred during the execution, but we urge the international community to remember the bigger picture, and see Saddam's execution as a milestone representing an end of a dark era. We, at the Iraqi government, wanted the trial and execution of Saddam to be a reason for putting Iraqis together and uniting Iraq, but it was used by many political groups inside and outside Iraq as an excuse to divide Iraqis furthermore and to find reasons for increasing the violence.

 

Unfortunately, it seems that many people around the world were distracted from the real issues, which are Saddam's crimes over the last several decades. Our Prime Minister, Mr. Maliki, went as far as threatening to re-think Iraq's relationships to any countries that mourn Saddam or find excuses to criticize his trial and execution. We want to keep the attention focused on Saddam's victims and their sacrifices, and also on the great possibilities of the post-Saddam Iraq.

 

We hope that the Western media will not end up playing into the hands of those who wanted to increase the sectarian tension between Iraqis, and we assure everyone that all the mistakes that occurred during Saddam's execution are condemnable, and that our only intention was to follow our traditions in being respectful and professional during the execution. The Iraqi judicial system will prosecute and punish all the people who transgressed the standards of law and decency during Saddam's execution.

 

I will conclude with a quote from our prayer for the dead, a great example of the tradition of tolerance in Islam: "All Mighty, don't bring about divisions after his death, and forgive us for our sins."

Mowaffak al-Rubaie is currently Iraqi National Security Advisor in the government of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki. Thanks to Raed Jarrar.
 

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