
‘We cleared rubble with our bare hands': Iraqis rejoice as shattered Mosul rises from the ruins
Located in the old Iraqi city of Mosul, right behind the Great Mosque of al-Nuri, their home is part of the local cultural heritage. It was heavily damaged during the occupation by Islamic State (IS) and the battle to reclaim the city by Iraqi armed forces, backed by US coalition airstrikes. Sara and her family were forcibly displaced during the fighting in 2017 and for many years feared they would never see their home intact again.
'It was amazing when we could step in,' Sara says. 'The neighbourhood has changed a lot, but it's still very beautiful and we're optimistic that more and more neighbours will resettle in their home town.'
Most of these old houses have been restored, thanks to a Unesco-led project called Revive the Spirit of Mosul, which includes the renovation of the Great Mosque of al-Nuri and other sites. 'Most of our family members are employed here in the reconstruction of the city,' Sara says. 'Life is still precarious, but we hope that 10 years after Daesh [IS] occupied our beloved city, it will only improve.'
The mosque's leaning minaret, named Al-Habda or the hunchback, has been restored under Unesco's supervision and reopened last month. Built in 1172, it is 45m tall and decorated with ornamental brickwork along its cylindrical shaft and square base. The self-proclaimed caliph of the IS, Abu-Bakr al-Baghdadi, inaugurated the 'caliphate' from the pulpit inside the mosque in 2014.
The renovation of the Great Mosque will be completed during Ramadan, which began on Friday, and 11 years after IS made Mosul its capital. The prayer hall will already be open for Ramadan prayers – for the first time since IS's defeat. 'The citizens of Mosul are very happy. The last finishing touches need to be completed, but we can open the mosque for Ramadan prayers,' says engineer Omar Taqa, responsible of the restoration project under Unesco.
'We are proud to have worked on this project, which is the largest Unesco project in the world, with $50m implemented. For the official opening and inauguration of the Great Mosque, arrangements are being made to hold a ceremony with the Iraqi prime minister.' Last June, during their work, five large IS bombs were found hidden in the site, which postponedefforts for some days.
Huda, who lives next to the mosque, is originally from Baghdad and moved to Mosul with her husband after being displaced in a Christian neighbourhood in Erbil. 'I'm a Christian, the only one living in the old houses for now,' she says. 'Before the Daesh occupation, many more Christians were inhabiting the old city. I have two children and my husband is working on the al-Nuri mosque renovation. I feel at home here.'
Father Raed, a local priest, told the Observer that, even though the large majority of Christians haven't resettled in Mosul, they come to the city daily from Erbil or nearby Christian-majority cities such as Qaraqosh for employment or to attend the church.
Yamama Saleh, a civil engineer employed by the UN agency, has also been involved in the reconstruction of the mosque. 'It's the landmark of Mosul. I used to see the minaret from my rooftop, so when it got destroyed, it was really sad. But after being involved in the rebuilding of the shaft, it has another meaning for me. Now we're done, I will go back to the rooftop to take a picture from there.'
Her colleague, Mustafa al-Zeewany, supervisor of the minaret works, is standing on top of the minaret. 'The minaret is iconic,' he says. 'All our workers here are feeling proud. We felt devastated when the minaret was blown up by IS in June 2017, and now we have the abilities and capabilities to redo it, using international and new techniques.'
Al-Zeewany explains that new techniques were implemented because they allowed work to be done in a similar way to the time of the construction of the mosque and minaret in the 12th century. 'It's a great experience for all of us to know how our ancestors worked, especially in this kind of construction.'
The colourful neighbourhood in front of the old houses and the Great Mosque is called al-Manqusha. It's where young people gather because of the cultural associations and cafes in the area.
Saker Ma'an, founder of Baytuna ('Our house') association, based in an old, imposing two-storey house, says: 'In 2017, after the battle against Daesh, being here felt like living in the desert. We cleaned the neighbourhood of the rubble with our bare hands, we found corpses and unexploded bombs, then we finally managed to restore this traditional house and make it a cafe and office for our activities.'
Ma'an recalls that some locals told him 'you will not last'. In the beginning, the cafe hosted no more than two people a week. 'We now have dozens coming every day,' he says. 'Especially the new generation: they came back to a destroyed city, not having any sense of belonging to the old city. But our association is working together with youth, to make them aware of their cultural heritage. Mosul really needed this place.'
Ma'an remarks that the new generation doesn't know the archaeological sites of the Nineveh province of Mosul, such as the old Assyrian city of Nimrod, 30km south of Mosul, badly damaged by the terrorist group, like many others.
Layla Salih, an archaeologist responsible for the Bashiqa district and head of the reconstruction team of Al-Tahera church (Upper Monastery) project, is an expert on the archaeological sites of Nineveh, the Mosul province. 'Many projects initiated after the liberation of the city were distributed between reconstruction, rescue or excavation work, and there are projects of documentation, archaeological and heritage survey, as well as the restoration of archaeological objects,' she says.
Salih has become very well-known in the city after her discovery back in 2017 of a new archaeological site, the Assyrian Essarhadon's Palace, in a tunnel under the al-Nabi Yunes shrine, dug by IS militants who were searching for antiquities to plunder and sell. 'I expect that the renovation of Mosul will continue for years … and it is remarkable that the international community is so interested in the city for its ethnic, religious and cultural diversity.'
When IS was first driven out of Nineveh province in November 2016, Salih and a colleague, Faisal Jaber, reported on the destruction of Christian sites in the province. 'We hope for more cultural projects that contribute to building peace, promoting stability and coexistence.'
Hashtags

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


Scotsman
4 days ago
- Scotsman
Last Words by Richard Holloway review: 'a warm and moving memoir'
Sign up to our Arts and Culture newsletter, get the latest news and reviews from our specialist arts writers Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... A few years ago Richard Holloway, former Bishop of Edinburgh, published a book of reflections concerning old age entitled Waiting for the Last Bus. Happily the bus has not yet turned up - perhaps it has been rerouted - so now we have Last Words which, we hope, will not yet be the last. Richard Holloway | Colin Hattersley It is an affectionate and moving memoir of his early life and of a working-class youth in Alexandria (Dunbartonshire, not Egypt). The depiction of his parents is loving and moving; he doesn't shrink from their difficulties in what seems to have been an up-and-down marriage. Likewise, the depiction of conditions in Alexandria during the war and the next decade is both warm and critical; living conditions were deplorable yet loving families survived them. It is good to be reminded just what an important part was played by the cinema in these pre-television years. Programmes in Alexandria changed in the middle of the week, presumably because there were usually full houses. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Make sure you keep up to date with Arts and Culture news from across Scotland by signing up to our free newsletter here. It is well known that Holloway is a bishop who lost his faith, though on the evidence of this memoir he retains a deep loyalty to the Church. He has written before about his gradual loss of faith, a process which occurred even while he continued to serve his flock, many of whom, in the second half of the 20th century, must have had their own doubts and misgivings. What became impossible for him was the belief in personal immortality, life after death, and this belief has indeed withered in much of Christian Europe and America. Many still find comfort in the thought of being united with husband, wife, parents and friends after death, though, mischievously, Holloway recalls a woman who, hearing the minister promise that she would be united with her late husband again, muttered that this would give her no pleasure for she had "hated the old bugger" when he was alive. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Like so many who contemplate the decline of the Christian faith, Holloway quotes Matthew Arnold's lines in Dover Beach, about faith being on the ebb. Well, that was almost 200 years ago now, and, while the tide may be well out, the beach will welcome its return. Happily this little book isn't all about the loss of faith - it is also a warm and moving memoir. Now it seems that Holloway is content to live in uncertainty; yet his affection for the church remains. Reflecting on on the closure of a church where he worshipped as a boy, he seems to suggest that, while it served and strengthened so many, its relevance, or the need for it, has simply vanished. Yet though he doubts the existence of God and the afterlife, he doesn't deny the consolations of faith.

South Wales Argus
4 days ago
- South Wales Argus
Chepstow Tennis Club revised clubhouse plan approved
Plans were first approved for a replacement base for Chepstow Tennis Club four years ago in July 2021. But while a fourth court, for juniors with a practice wall, and LED floodlights approved in 2021 have been put in place at Mathern Road the not-for-profit community sports club was struggling to finance the new clubhouse. In May this year it submitted revised plans for a lower-cost above-ground clubhouse structure in place of the originally approved design which would also have a reduced height, at a maximum of three metres, and a smaller floor area compared to the original plans. The originally proposed building was to be finished in render with timber cladding while the alternative will be finished in timber cladding with part natural colour and part grey. The roof will be grey coloured bitumen sheets. Monmouthshire County Council planning officer Kate Young said no third parties would be affected by making the building smaller or by altering the finishing materials and the difference in materials aren't so signficiant the impact would affect the street scene and the changes could be accepted as non-material amendments and approved. When the revised application was made, by club official Ben Durman, he said it had around 50 per cent of the funding required will be looking for support from grant giving bodies and it has worked with a quantity surveyor to manage costs. Mr Durman said at the time of the application: 'We hope to be able to go full steam ahead with fundraising once the planning permission hopefully comes through.'


Spectator
5 days ago
- Spectator
Does Canopus have a connection with canopy?
I spent some time looking for the connection between the ancient city of Canopus and the English canopy. Nelson won the Battle of the Nile in Aboukir Bay. The bay was named after the city of Abu Qir, which was named after a Christian martyr, St Cyrus. Abu Qir stands on the site of the city of Canopus, to which ran the Canopic Way, from Alexandria. Canopus was said to have been founded by Menelaus, the King of Sparta who figures in the Iliad. Canopus, the pilot of his ship, was fatally bitten by a snake, and around the monument built by Menelaus grew the city. At Canopus, the Egyptian god Osiris was worshipped under the form of a jar with a human head. Modern antiquaries gave the name Canopic jars to other such jars with quite a different purpose: to hold the entrails of mummified bodies. The helmsman Canopus was also remembered in ancient times by a star in the constellation of Argo, itself named after Jason's ship, a beam of which killed him. Argo was among the 48 constellations named in the 2nd century ad by the astronomer Ptolemy in a book that we call the Almagest, from its Arabic name, deriving from Greek meaning 'the greatest'. The star Canopus is the second brightest in the sky, and it seems that the south-eastern wall of the square-built Kaaba in Mecca faces the rising point of Canopus, and the orientation of early mosques was taken from this. Mosques perhaps, but not mosquitoes. The Ancient Greek for mosquito was kōnōps, which does not come from konos ('cone') and ops ('face'), but perhaps from some pre-Greek word. Still, the Greek konopeion 'a couch with mosquito curtains' developed in two ways. One was into the French canapé 'sofa', hence a little bit of bread with something sitting on it: our party canapé. The other development, in the Middle Ages, was into canopy, a hanging, sometimes a hanging of honour. So Canopus has no connection with canopy, but I enjoyed finding that out.'