Three years under the oppressive and violent rule of Islamic
State and the military campaign which drove it out in 2017 left
much of the northern city in ruins. Thousands were killed,
rendered homeless or maimed. Those who survived are deeply
traumatized.
"I still jump awake at night thinking an air strike is about to
hit or that they are coming to take one of us," Fathi, 36, said.
"Everyday is a struggle."
Fathi's work is on display in "Return to Mosul" - the city's
first art exhibition since before it was seized by Islamic
State, whose ultra hardline version of Sunni Islam prohibits
most art forms.
Artists from across Iraq are taking part in the six-day show,
including many who lived in Mosul when it was in the militants'
grip.
Hawkar Riskin's haunting work 'destruction' depicts a giant
skeleton standing on one leg, while Mohammad Al Kinani's series
of paintings - 'Caliphate I', 'Caliphate II' and 'Caliphate III'
represents the beginning and end of Islamic State, and Mosul's
rebirth.
Fathi said the artists who stayed in the city lived in constant
fear and despair.
"There was a time when we considered killing ourselves. We
reached that low. But then we thought, what would happen to the
children?" Fathi, a professor of fine arts, said.
JONAH AND THE CITY
The show is in the newly re-opened Royal Hall of the Mosul
Museum, which was looted and destroyed by Islamic State and in
the ensuing war to wrest control of the city.
Ahmed Mozahem, another Mosul-born artist, continued to work in
secret while the city was under the militants'. Using a writing
pad he kept hidden to avoid discovery, Mozahem produced 40
pencil drawings which are now among his most cherished
possessions, an expression of what he and his family suffered.
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For "City of the Whale", his painting in the exhibition, Mozahem
drew on the story of the prophet Jonah and the whale, which features
Nineveh, the ancient Assyrian city which stood roughly where Mosul
is today.
Following their capture of the city in 2014, Islamic State went on a
rampage, destroying many of Mosul's ancient sites and artefacts,
including a shrine believed by many to be Jonah's tomb.
The militants not only destroyed the city, Mozahem said. "They also
killed something inside, our spirit."
But Matthew Vincent, an American archaeologist, says technology can
help preserve some of what was lost. Vincent is a co-founder of a
crowdsourced, digital preservation project called Rekrei, which
collects photographs of damaged or lost monuments and artefacts to
re-create these in 3D representations.
At the Mosul Museum, visitors are now able to catch virtual glimpse
of ancient Assyrian treasures destroyed by Islamic State. One of
them, the Lion of Mosul, was a colossal Assyrian guardian lion from
about 860 BCE, one of two which stood at the entrance of the Temple
of Ishtar at Nimrud, Iraq.
"It is never going to replace the original but new technology is
giving us a path we simply didn't have before," Vincent said.
(Reporting by Ayat Basma; Editing by Raissa Kasolowsky)
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