I'm fortunate enough to get to meet and work with some very adventurous people. One of them is writer Sean McLachlan, who contributes regular travel and adventure stories at Gadling.com just like I do. Sean has recently returned from a visit to Iraq, which is one of those places steeped in history and culture, but is viewed by many as far too dangerous to actually go and visit themselves. He's been posting stories of that amazing journey over on Gadling for the past few days, but he has also graciously offered to share one with Adventure Blog readers as well. You'll find that story, about a visit to an ancient Arab city below. Enjoy!
Hatra: Exploring an ancient city in Iraq
By Sean McLachlan
The first thing you see as you approach Hatra is a giant
crane looming over a Greek-style temple. The crane was from a reconstruction
project during the Saddam era, finished now just like Saddam. Our guide told us
the crane has been standing there rusting for more than a decade. What should
have been an eyesore seemed, upon reflection, to be an appropriate addition—another
relic of dead imperial ambition.
Hatra’s kingdom has little left above the surface except at
this site. As we approached, we passed low mounds that may have been Roman
siege works like those at Masada, Israel. Then we came to the walls, which two
thousand years of desert winds couldn’t entirely destroy. Even now they look
formidable, and I wasn’t surprised that the Romans, parched under the Middle
Eastern sun, failed to take them.
Our guards seemed as impressed as I felt. None of them spoke
English, so we relied on my 200-word vocabulary of badly pronounced Arabic.
They found my repertoire vastly amusing and soon I had a small crowd of them
following me around the ruins. They kept calling friends on their cell phones
and having me try to talk to them. One guy called up his wife. All she heard
was some foreign voice saying salaam
aleykum and her husband laughing in the background.
She hung up.
We discovered a dark staircase piercing the cyclopean walls
of the main temple. Treading carefully, we ascended and came out on top, our
eyes blinking at the harsh sunlight. From there we looked out at the crumbled
foundations of temples and homes. The Iraqi police filmed the scene with their
cell phones and had me wave at the camera.
One stood next to me at the edge of the wall, smiling as he
surveyed the ruins.
“Zeen,” I said.
“Good.”
“Ha ha,” he
laughed and nodded. “Zeen zeen.”
Our guide had told me that during the Saddam era the schools
didn’t teach ancient history, instead only teaching the history of the Baath
party and Saddam’s life. I wondered if this policeman knew anything about this
place, knew that he was standing in the first great city of his people. I
wondered what he thought about that.
I never found out. I lacked the words.
Sean McLachlan is the
author of numerous
books, including the Civil War novel A
Fine Likeness. Visit him on his blog and read more about his travels in
Iraq in the special series on Gadling, Destination: Iraq.
4 comments:
Thanks for having me!
Wow is all I can say, Sean. Very interesting that the people who have grown up under one regime may not know their own history. It's such a shame when history is suppressed by anyone.
Great photos, as always.
Enjoyed this post, Adventure Blog.
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