
Kirkuk's master: Ali Mardan's timeless echo
In the heart of old Kirkuk, where Sufi chants once rose with the dawn, the voice of Ali Mardan still echoes—the same sound that once shaped the vision of a blind boy turned master of Iraq's most intricate musical tradition.
Four decades after his death, Mardan is not merely remembered; he is relived—through notes, verses, and the shared heritage of a city that once thrived on plurality.
A Child of Kirkuk's Heart
Born in 1904 in the spiritual heart of Kirkuk—the Talabani Tekyeh—Mardan's first exposure to music came not through conservatories but through the sacred rituals of zikr and Quranic recitation. When he was rebuked by an uncle for singing maqams at home, he fled in tears to the Sufi lodge. The sheikh there, recognizing the child's rare gift, told the family: 'This boy has a voice that will never be repeated. Let him learn.'
From that moment on, Mardan immersed himself in the deep waters of Kurdish, Turkmen, and Arabic maqams. He studied under teachers of diverse backgrounds: Sunni mullahs, Persian masters, and Arab scholars.
A Voice of Many Tongues
Mardan's mastery of maqam defied boundaries. Over his 35-year career, he recorded more than 1,000 songs and 76 Kurdish maqams, blending elements from Arab, Persian, Turkmen, and Kurdish traditions—not as mimicry, but as synthesis.
This was especially vital in a city like Kirkuk, where linguistic and cultural diversity has long been a defining feature. Mardan's musical choices reflected that multicultural fabric: he sang classical Kurdish poetry, played Persian rhythms, and interpreted Arabic maqams on instruments like the oud, kamancheh, and tanbur.
In the 1960s, his voice crossed borders—recorded not just in Baghdad, but in Tehran, Kermanshah, Beirut, Amman, and Damascus. He became the first Kurdish artist to be broadcast widely across Arab radio stations, subtly introducing Kurdish maqam to a regional audience often unfamiliar with its intricacies.
Bridge Across Cultures
Mardan's maqams carried historical memory, linguistic pride, and emotional depth. His musical teaching, especially to students at the Model Institute for the Blind in Baghdad, helped institutionalize this memory for future generations. His son Abdel Qader told Shafaq News, 'My father wasn't just a maqam singer. He was a living school. I still keep his recordings on old records.'
After his death in 1981, his body was returned to Kirkuk, where he was buried near the same Sufi tekyeh that gave him sanctuary as a child. Even in death, he remained close to his origins.
In 2020, a memorial statue was unveiled in his honor in Kirkuk, drawing artists from across ethnic lines. The Ali Mardan Center for Maqam Studies now offers instruction to students in Arabic, Kurdish, and Turkmen musical forms, serving as both a music school and a cultural bridge. Annual festivals continue to commemorate his art, drawing readers, singers, and scholars from around the region.
As one local musician remarked during a recent commemoration: 'Ali Mardan reminds us that Kurdish identity does not close doors. It opens them to every tradition it can carry with dignity.'
Mardan's legacy is a reminder of what is still possible when communities choose to document, teach, and share—not only to preserve culture but to revive the very idea of coexistence.
Hashtags

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


Shafaq News
3 hours ago
- Shafaq News
Painting Iraq's past: Man's mission to reclaim al-Anbar's heritage
Shafaq News – Al-Anbar In Iraq's western al-Anbar province, local historian Rashid al-Alousi is leading an initiative to document the region's fading heritage and safeguard its cultural identity after years of conflict and destruction. Al-Alousi, who also serves as a legal researcher, has spent more than a decade building a personal archive of al-Anbar's historical landmarks—many of which have disappeared or remain at risk. His project includes images, records, and written documentation of religious, social, and commercial sites, as well as traditional crafts, professions, and customs dating back to the early 20th century. 'Our past strengthens the present and guides the future. My archive reflects the identity of al-Anbar,' al-Alousi told Shafaq News. For him, the initiative is about ensuring continuity between generations. The project's visual dimension is powered by a group of local artists, most notably veteran painter Naif al-Alousi. Working from archival images and data, they recreate the province's lost landmarks through fine art. While Rashid handles the documentation, the artists transform the material into visual storytelling—breathing life into historical memory with every brushstroke. To expand access, al-Alousi plans to convert the archive into both a mobile and digital exhibition once the collection is complete, aiming to reach homes, schools, and cultural institutions alike. However, since launching the effort in 2009, he has faced no shortage of challenges. 'The biggest difficulties are collecting archival photos, verifying their information, and preserving them properly,' he said. Today, his archive spans from 1900 to 2025, encompassing everything from daily life and crafts to well-known figures in religion, art, and sports. Despite operating largely on his own, al-Alousi credits support from local institutions for helping him acquire official documents and maintain the archive's credibility. Community backing, he added, has also played a critical role. The work has also resulted in a published volume in 2022—the co-authored "Ramadi: History and Heritage" with researcher Majid Hamid Ahmed al-Alousi, turning part of the project into a public historical reference. Even in a region where art and cultural heritage are often undervalued, he remains committed. 'I do this out of love for my city. Constructive feedback is welcome—destructive criticism changes nothing." Ultimately, for al-Alousi and his team, the archive is more than a record—it's a cultural resistance to erasure, reclaiming memory in a province still healing from its turbulent past.


Shafaq News
17 hours ago
- Shafaq News
Water and fuel scarce: Gazans struggle to survive
Shafaq News – Gaza With fuel nearly gone and prices soaring, Gaza residents are improvising dangerous methods to power vehicles and survive under conditions where risk takes a back seat to necessity. Lacking any stable fuel supply, some have begun converting plastic waste into crude fuel, with Abu Hamza Hamad—who runs one of these makeshift plants—explaining to Shafaq News that plastic is shredded, heated into a thick liquid, and refined into a substance that keeps cars running. Although not identical to standard fuel, Hamad maintained the product doesn't harm engines, noting that prices are so extreme that workers now rely on these hazardous alternatives. He also described the physical toll, saying that even basic hygiene is impossible without soap or clean water. 'We risk being targeted just to gather materials.' Despite offering a sliver of income, these unregulated plants expose workers to toxic fumes and chronic illness. 'The smoke is choking and unbearable,' Mohammad Sarour, who works at one of the plants, told Shafaq News. 'I earn 100 shekels [about $29.11] a day, most of it goes to food and medicine.' The United Nations has warned that Gaza's fuel crisis is at a breaking point, as nearly 60% of Palestinian Civil Defense vehicles sit idle after nearly two years of Israeli bombardment by land, air, and sea. That shortage has now sparked a full-scale water emergency, forcing groundwater pumps to run on weak generators and leaving residents to find water by any means available. Muath Mokhaimer, 23, walks nearly a kilometer multiple times a day to fetch water, hauling containers for both drinking and washing on a handcart for his family of 22 sheltering in tents. His mother, Um Muath, 53, said the children are always thirsty and that even tomorrow's supply is uncertain. Meanwhile, Oxfam's Bushra Khalidi warned that without a ceasefire and full humanitarian access, people will continue dying from waterborne illnesses as daily consumption drops to as little as three liters per person. Danish Malik of the Norwegian Refugee Council said residents now choose between drinking water and washing, while Palestinian water official Munther Salem noted that children have become full-time water carriers, chasing trucks and hauling jugs. Long lines at fill points often break into fights, and as families focus on food and shelter, children are increasingly left to shoulder the burden of finding water in a crisis with no end in sight.


Shafaq News
3 days ago
- Shafaq News
President Barzani hails BCF's 20 years of service
Shafaq News – Erbil On Monday, Kurdistan Region President Nechirvan Barzani congratulated the Barzani Charity Foundation (BCF) on its 20th anniversary. According to the Kurdish Presidency, Barzani said, 'I extend my heartfelt congratulations to the foundation's leadership, administrators, and staff. I deeply value their dedication and the humanitarian and charitable services they have provided, and I wish them continued success.' He added that the foundation's work 'has set a remarkable example of compassion and philanthropy, embodying the highest human values and earning it broad respect and admiration.' — Kurdistan Region Presidency (@KurdistanRegion) August 4, 2025