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War on Iraq

Iraq's Brutally Wounded (Photo Essay)

By Nina Berman, AlterNet. Posted October 18, 2007.


As Americans try to help the many wounded veterans returning from war, many more thousands in Iraq have suffered, yet have no way of receiving care.
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AlterNet and multimedia co-sponsor BAGnewsNotes are pleased to host the above slideshow of images from "Iraq, brutally wounded," followed by an interview with the photographer, Farah Nosh, conducted by Nina Berman.

Nina Berman: When did you go to Iraq to take these pictures? Was it your first trip?

Farah Nosh: I began the project a few days before the Samarra shrine was bombed in February 2006 and continued it just after the 10-day curfew was lifted. I spent six weeks on the project.

Berman: And what locations were you working in?

Nosh: I was committed to shooting the portraits in the homes of Iraqis who have been amputated in this war. I feel that the Iraq coverage has largely been disconnected from Iraqis, and I felt that an intimate setting would be more humanizing. I moved around to several different neighborhoods in Baghdad.

Berman: What inspired you to do these portraits? And how did you find the subjects?

Nosh: I was becoming despondent at only seeing images of American soldiers returning from Iraq with brutal wounds. The Iraqi side -- which is much higher in number and mostly civilian -- was not being shown. A few months before I left for Iraq, the New York Times ran a photograph of a series of wheelchairs (valued at around $20,000 each) from a VA hospital. That was a decisive moment for me. I knew right then that I would go to Baghdad. Months later I met Ali, who is missing both his legs. He had to sell furniture from his home to buy an old beat-up wheelchair for $50 that he fixes himself from time to time.

I have an Iraq friend that helps me when I am working there. Sometimes we went searching to hospitals and clinics together. If the neighborhood were too dangerous, he would often go alone and find subjects he trusted; he would then bring me in.

Berman: You speak Arabic and are of Iraqi descent. Did this allow you to move more freely?

Nosh: My parents are Iraqi, and I speak a slightly broken Iraqi Arabic. I may not have done this work if it wasn't for my disguise! It allowed for people to be less suspicious of me, and without the filter of a translator, I am able to communicate to those that I am photographing why the work was important.

Berman: I have been unable to find any current statistics on the numbers of Iraqi wounded, civilians and/or combatants.

Nosh: Who knows? When I was feeling the push to do this story, I had read somewhere that for every American soldier killed or wounded there are 10-20 times the number of Iraqis.

Berman: Describe the medical care or lack of medical care for those who are wounded.

Nosh: It depends on the neighborhood and whether they are civilians or military.

Out of those missing a leg (or two), not one amputee I interviewed was given a wheelchair when they left the hospital. Some described the humiliation at having to be carried out of the hospital by family members without legs. Generally, they are left on their own with their brutal wounds. Iraqis are not fitted for modern prosthetics or being cared for by a physiotherapist. Remember also, that these men have families to look after. For a lot of them, there is frustration and shame that they are not able to work and feed their families themselves. They rely on extended family for support.


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See more stories tagged with: iraq, civilian casualty, iraq war, iraq wounded, amputees, slideshow, multimedia

Nina Berman is a photographer and the author of Purple Hearts: Back From Iraq.

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View:
Nice!
Posted by: TT17 on Oct 18, 2007 1:02 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
For one's somebody is describing the REAL VICTIMS of this war, and not just the damn yankee MERCENARIES!

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: Nice! Posted by: Rolomax
» RE: Nice! Posted by: Phenix
» RE: Nice! Posted by: leafsong1
» bu--sh-- Posted by: Rolomax
» RE: bu--sh-- Posted by: leafsong1
» RE: bu--sh-- Posted by: Rolomax
Sick
Posted by: andrushka on Oct 18, 2007 4:05 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
is the word for what that illegal war has inflicted upon the Iraki population. Thank you Ms Nosh for showing these pictures. What is going to happen to these maimed persons? Nothing I am afraid. They'll be forgotten as collateral damage. No medical treatment no physiotherapy, no prothesis. All that because a nut in the White House has decided to invade a country for oil.

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» RE: Sick Posted by: bobtr900
I helped...
Posted by: willie.horton on Oct 18, 2007 4:35 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When my son went to Kuwait in 2002 to prepare for the invasion, I sent him everything I could think of that might help him.
Most importantly, besides the food and baby wipes and such, I sent any improved military equipment I could find: larger magazines for his Beretta pistol, a custom holster, and anything else that might give him an edge in the fighting.
This is what he cut with that edge I gave him.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: I helped... Posted by: clvngodess
» RE: I helped... Posted by: farhada
» All of them. Posted by: willie.horton
Interesting Note
Posted by: Rolomax on Oct 18, 2007 5:36 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Look who is being called a Neo-Liberal now..

http://edition.cnn.com/2007/US/10/16/Dobbs.Oct17/

Take your best guess, then click the link and read.. the 5'th paragraph.

Something stinks here.

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» RE: Interesting Note Posted by: Centavo
I hope this shocks America, but it won't!
Posted by: Jammer2 on Oct 18, 2007 6:42 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm not shocked because I remember Vietnam like it was yesterday. We were incapable of taking proper care of our own broken servicemen, let alone anyone else. I'm sure that there are a lot of folks out there that will say that we need to help care for civilian casualties of war, but we won't! It's not in our psychological makeup, and definitely not in the Bush budget.

We have a sociopath in the White House who refuses basic medical care for millions of children in our own country. Bush tried like hell to cut the funding to the VA to take care of our own soldiers coming back maimed and broken. Why would anyone think that he gives a tinker's damn about a bunch of foreigners? He doesn't lose one second of sleep over the suffering of any human being, sociopaths never do! Now, Bush & Company has set their newest game plan into motion which will ignite a worldwide crisis prior to the upcoming elections. His motivation? That he be able to save the GOP from certain destruction, and he will probably succeed too. If there's one thing that I learned since Vietnam, it’s that our yuppie baby boomers will always vote for the party with any plan that allows them to deny all responsibility for their own government’s actions.

There is an old saying: "Keep it up stupid, Hell ain't half full". For anyone who continues to support this madman’s agenda, the blood is on your hands and you’ll never escape it. The world already knows that Bush is insane; but American’s, blinded by either fear or greed, refuse to accept the fact that we have become the most dangerous terrorist organization on this planet. God help us!

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uh
Posted by: kelt65 on Oct 18, 2007 7:00 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Where is the 'slideshow'? It doesn't appear in any of the links anywhere here ...

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This guy's misunformed
Posted by: Gun Bunny on Oct 18, 2007 7:42 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm here to tell you that military (Navy and Army) and VA hospitals put me back together after I was severely (including 26 broken bones) wounded in May 1970. I was stabilized at thr Navy hospital in Yakota, Japan and then medevacked to, and stabilized at Walton Army Hospital at FT Dix, NJ.

After I was discharged from the Army, I had some follow up orthopedic surgery at the VA Hospital in Jamaica Plain, Mass. I have nothing but good things to say about the quality and adequacy of medical care I received.

GunBunny

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» RE: This guy's misunformed Posted by: blackfeminista
some people have all the luck
Posted by: solrev on Oct 18, 2007 8:20 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The thing that amazes me about these photos is the level of care that these people did receive. I bet for every one of these people who survived amputation surgery there was a 1000 who never even got treated. They died a slow death from infection and blood loss. These are the lucky ones.

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The horrors are just beggining
Posted by: Ambrose Pare on Oct 18, 2007 10:04 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What horrible suffering those people have been through.
America is going to attack Iran soon, I shudder thinking about how horrible the future is going to be.

The depleted Uranium babies in Iraq are truly horrifying.

The elites behind-the-curtain want 50-90% of earth's human population gone by war and disease. I didn't want to think such evil exists. These are the same people who were behind Hitler. Hitler was killed, but his financial backers were not. His financial backers are the ones leading us to WW3 and the eventual collapse of the US dollar...

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Light to the Iraquis
Posted by: magiquarian1969 on Oct 18, 2007 10:35 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I feel so sad that so many have been held responsible for crimes that so few committed. I feel sad that in America these decisions are being made by the few in opposition to what so many feel. I wish for it to stop, as each day passes so the healing process gets longer and longer. I wish I could offer more comfort to everyone affected on both sides. The darkness is growing. NEVER allow the light to go out.

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» RE: Light to the Iraquis Posted by: bobtr900
This Article by Ms. Berman points out ...
Posted by: bobtr900 on Oct 18, 2007 11:13 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...the tragedies of this illegal and totally criminal war. The right winger conservatives have learned nothing from WWII and the Holocaust.

Death for oil profits is the true agenda of the pro-lifers.

Tens of millions of people have not yet gotten over/ recovered from the effects and affects of WWII. And yet the killing just goes on and on.

Quite obviously the perpetrators of WWII and the Holocaust are still doing the very same things under the rubric of PRO-LIFE.

Damn the right wingers and their religions/ religious supporters and their Death Agenda of Pro-Life. May they all rot in hell.

Hitler, the Nazis, and the religious support he/they got are still doing the same thing only now they support the Republican Party.

I abhor what these people have done, and will continue to do.

For me I'll focus my mind on that liberal Jewish guy who lived some 2000 yrs ago. And, I'll do my best to forget those who have created man-mad religions buried in the hypocrisy of their "moral relativism".

Death stalks the lands and it is the right wingers and their corrupt religious enables,including my own religion.

Why do we get thugs and criminals like George W. Bush and the Bush family and the Republican monolithic, absolutist, dogmatic, authoritarian when we have good and decent people around like Jimmy Carter, Bishop Desmond Tutu, Nelson Mandela, Fr. Michael Pfleger of St. Sabina Parish in Chicago, Bishop Ingham(Anglican Bishop in Ontario, Canada, the currnt Presiding Bishop of the Episcopalian Church in America, Jim Wallis of Sojourner, Joel Osteen, Dennis Kucinich, and so many others too numerous to mention.

Instead all we get are people like O'Reilly, Hannity, Scalia, Thomas, Roberts, Alito, Wolfie, Rumsfeld, Jeb Bush and the entire Bush family, Guiliani, Santorum and all the other right wing pro-life killers and various other merchants of death.

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America under attack.
Posted by: PJAW on Oct 18, 2007 12:23 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's true, "they" hate us for our freedom, President Bush was right. Our "way of life" is being threatened, and we will respond.

But what is that "freedom"? The freedom to take whatever we want, regardless of how it may affect anyone else? The same freedom that allowed us to invade the "reservations" going after Black Hills gold or "annex" the Arizona, New Mexico and California territories to create a continuous land "from sea to shining sea". And what of our "way of life"? Is it our strange way of building huge stadiums where 100,000 can gather to cheer on our "heroes" engaging in meaningless games. How much energy is used just transporting 100,000 people to one place so they can watch a handful of their "heroes" drive at breakneck speed, round and round in circles, using increasingly scarce resources to finish at the same point where they began? How much arable land is occupied by lawns, that produce nothing of intrinsic value but consume more resources and require tons of poisonous chemicals to maintain? We could go on with this thought, but we've already occupied enough pixels and electrons to get the point.

Iraqis are dying and being horribly maimed every day so that we can be assured we will have enough oil to continue our "American way of life", and many Americans are okay with that. Maybe they've simply become accustomed to the practice, having seen it so many times before in other places around the world. Are we unique in our greed and willingness to plunder, of course not. But we've elevated the practice to unprecedented levels. And since I was brought up believing that we were better than that, it just comes as a bitter, heartwrenching disappointment.

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A GENERATION OF UNEDUCATED CHILDREN
Posted by: 1984NOW!!! on Oct 18, 2007 1:58 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Iraqi children's future has been destroyed. Only a few are
getting educated. All of this is so unfair and so unnecessary.
Today Bush's veto of the SCHIP program was not overridden by the House.
Bush only cares about embryos but not living children, until they are 18 and then he can send them to exotic countries, where they can meet interesting people and shoot them. MADNESS REIGNS.

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A Deliberate Strategy for the USA and Israel
Posted by: sofla100 on Oct 18, 2007 6:07 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If you look at the Israeli invasion of Lebanon, you will find equally horrific atrocities, much of it with USA supplied weapons. But, the fact is, many of the US weapons are designed to do this. To maim and disfigure and cause as much suffering as possible. The idea is to break the back of perceived resistance in the civilian population. To this extent, civilians may even be perceived as "legitimate targets." Consistent with this, the USA approach is to show "the people of Iraq who the boss is." This approach using terror, again is not only the approach in the Middle East of the USA, but it has been honed and developed by the Israeli and the IDF. That is the reason for the many civilian casualties when she invades the territories. To force the civilian population to capituate. And, that is America's goal in the Middle East. The people will buckle and fold, or America will teach them a lesson.

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New Leadership
Posted by: Schroeder on Oct 18, 2007 8:28 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I would pray that a new Administration (President) for America would begin to do what is necessary to help the Iraqi's. I feel the guilt for their suffering and for the suffering of our military. May God forgive us for what we have done!

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HALF the story
Posted by: Allison on Oct 19, 2007 6:41 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Remember that (presumably because of cultural modesty concerns), this display doesn't even include any women, many of whom have also had their arms and legs blown off at the market, on the street, or in a vehicle.

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POPE JOHN PAUL II
Posted by: fg on Oct 20, 2007 11:16 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is why he ranted to Bush against the war whenever he could.

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