
From Canvas to Courtroom: Iraq's dual battle for women's safety
Shafaq News/ In Baghdad, inside the walls of the Iraqi Fashion House—a space more commonly associated with textile design than activism—a vibrant yet somber exhibition titled 'Brush and Scream' opened this week.
Organized under the auspices of the Ministry of Culture, the visual arts showcase offers more than an aesthetic experience; it is a bold and defiant response to the unrelenting tide of violence faced by women in Iraq.
The exhibition unfolds like a visual protest, with each canvas telling its own story of pain, resilience, and defiance. Scenes of broken homes, veiled despair, and quiet resistance dominate the gallery, inviting viewers to not just observe, but to feel. It's a space where silence is pierced by the colors of protest and the bold strokes of those refusing to be invisible.
Government representatives, artists, and members of civil society—including the Iraqi Women's Association—gathered to affirm the exhibition's message: that women's rights are not a peripheral issue but a central struggle in the country's path toward peace and justice.
The artworks, some abstract and others starkly literal, reject the roles imposed on women by tradition and patriarchal norms. Many depict scenes that resonate with the realities of daily life for countless Iraqi women, trapped in cycles of silence and subjugation. Beneath the paint lies a clear message: the fight against gender-based violence cannot remain confined to courtrooms and policy documents. It must live in the streets, the homes, and in the very fabric of cultural expression.
There is a shared understanding among the organizers and participants that the exhibition is more than a commemoration of struggle—it is a call to action. Advocates emphasize that while legal frameworks exist to protect women, they remain insufficient without cultural transformation. As one painting portrays a woman screaming into a void while holding a broken law book, the symbolism is unmistakable: legislation without enforcement, without empathy, without change, is powerless.
This reality is underscored by grim statistics. In 2023 alone, Iraq recorded over 14,000 cases of domestic violence, with women making up a staggering 73 percent of the victims. These numbers, drawn from official government sources, paint a dire picture of how pervasive and normalized such violence remains, despite ongoing reform efforts.
In tandem with these artistic expressions, Iraq has taken procedural steps to address gender-based violence through strategic policy frameworks. On April 16, UN Women and the National Directorate for Iraqi Women convened a high-level dialogue to officially launch Iraq's Third National Action Plan on Women, Peace, and Security. The event drew participants from across government ministries, civil society organizations, and international missions, reflecting a broad consensus on the urgent need to institutionalize protections and empower women in peace-building roles.
However, critics caution that progress on paper doesn't always translate into change on the ground. Iraq's Penal Code, under Article 412, stipulates prison sentences of up to 15 years for acts of domestic violence. Yet the implementation of these laws remains uneven, and cultural taboos often discourage women from reporting abuse or seeking justice.
This disconnect between legislative intent and lived reality forms a recurring theme in both the exhibition and public discourse. There is a growing belief that the law alone cannot undo centuries of structural inequality. True reform, many argue, must come from a cultural awakening—one that reimagines gender relations not as a hierarchy, but as a shared human experience defined by mutual respect.
For some, art provides that much-needed entry point. The brush becomes a tool of resistance; the canvas, a courtroom in its own right. Iraqi poet and literary critic Mohammed Sadiq sees this intersection of art and activism as essential to catalyzing lasting change. 'True deterrence requires more than laws,' he notes. 'It demands a collective moral awakening rooted in knowledge, equality, and shared responsibility between men and women.' For Sadiq, literature, music, and painting are not escapist luxuries but foundational to the moral architecture of society.
As the exhibition continues to draw visitors, it becomes clear that 'Brush and Scream' is not merely an artistic event—it's a mirror. It reflects both the scars borne by Iraqi women and the transformative possibilities that emerge when culture confronts cruelty. Whether that confrontation will ripple into policy, behavior, and broader public consciousness remains to be seen.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Iraqi News
3 hours ago
- Iraqi News
Iraq in touch with the US and Iran to keep out of conflict
Baghdad – Baghdad has asked Tehran not to target US interests on Iraqi soil, a senior security official said Saturday, as Washington's ally Israel and Iran traded blows, heightening tensions across the region. The government in Baghdad is a close ally of Tehran but also a strategic partner of Iran's arch-foe the United States, which has some 2,500 troops in Iraq as part of an anti-extremist coalition. Fearing being caught up in a regional escalation, the Iraqi government asked Tehran not to strike in its territory, a senior Iraqi security official told AFP. 'The request was made. They promised us positive things,' said the official, requesting anonymity to discuss sensitive matters. The official added that Tehran has shown understanding with regards to Baghdad's request. Before the current escalation, which began early Friday with a series of Israeli attacks on military and nuclear sites in Iran, Tehran had threatened to strike military bases hosting US forces in the region in the event of a conflict triggered by the possible failure of nuclear talks with Washington. Throughout the Gaza war, which began in October 2023 and has pitted Israel against Iran-backed Palestinian group Hamas, Tehran-aligned armed factions have launched dozens of rocket and drone attacks targeting US forces in Iraq and in neighboring Syria. Before the wave of attacks began, the United States on Wednesday announced it was reducing staffing at its Baghdad embassy, citing security reasons. Several pro-Iran groups in Iraq called on Friday to accelerate the departure of US forces from the country, with the powerful Kataeb Hezbollah warning of 'additional wars in the region.'


Iraq Business
3 hours ago
- Iraq Business
Will end to Pipeline Feud revive flow of Iraqi Oil to Israel?
From Amwaj Media. Any opinions expressed are those of the author(s), and do not necessarily reflect the views of Iraq Business News. Deep Dive: Will end to pipeline feud revive flow of Iraqi oil to Israel? After a glimpse of progress, Baghdad's spat with the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) over the future of the Iraq-Turkey Pipeline (ITP) is flaring up. While a budget amendment in March raised hopes of a breakthrough and the reopening of the pipeline, which has been closed since an international arbitration ruling in 2023, negotiations have broken down. Amid heated rhetoric, the crisis has led the federal government to cut salary payments to the 1.2M public sector workers on the KRG's payroll. The full article can be viewed here.


Shafaq News
4 hours ago
- Shafaq News
Missile debris falls in northern Iraq amid Israel-Iran escalation
Shafaq News/ Debris from suspected Iranian missiles landed in Iraq's Nineveh and Saladin provinces Sunday, as regional tensions soared following a sharp military exchange between Iran and Israel. Security sources stated that the missile remnants fell in unpopulated areas, causing no casualties or damage but prompting immediate investigations and local alarm. In Nineveh, a security official reported that fragments of a missile struck a remote area in Tal Abta subdistrict, west of Mosul. The projectile landed in Tal Ajjour village, an uninhabited zone, and was discovered by Iraqi security forces. In Saladin, another security source confirmed that parts of an unidentified missile landed on the outskirts of Tuz Khurmatu, east of the province. 'Preliminary assessments indicate the object was part of a long-range missile launched from Iran during the Saturday night strikes targeting Israel,' the source noted. The incident comes amid a severe regional escalation that began with Israeli airstrikes on Iranian military and nuclear facilities late Friday, which killed several senior IRGC commanders. In response, Iran launched waves of ballistic missiles and drones at Israeli territory on Saturday night, marking the most dangerous direct confrontation between the two rivals in years.