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Iraq
Shi’ites renaming Baghdad streets
2003-08-04
Edited for brevity.
BAGHDAD, Iraq — There’s no Yasser Arafat Street in Baghdad anymore, and a main thoroughfare along the Tigris River once named for an 8th century poet has a new name as well. Both have been renamed for Shiite Muslim imams whose memory had no place in Saddam Hussein’s rule, when Sunni Muslims dominated despite being a minority in Iraq.

The obvious tributes to Saddam’s megalomaniacal 23-year-rule went long ago. Signs at Saddam International Airport, Saddam Bridge, Saddam University, Saddam Hospital and the Saddam City neighborhood came down as the capital fell in April, along with countless statues and posters of the dictator. Less dramatic changes in recent weeks illustrate the shifting political tide in Iraq, where Shiites make up 60 percent of the population but have never ruled.

"These old names did not reflect the will of the people," said Abu Sajjid, guardian of a Shiite shrine just off the newly renamed Imam al-Mehdi Street. Most Shiites consider al-Mehdi, who was born in 869, to be Islam’s 12th and last imam, and believe he will return.
I’d leave the plastic on the sofa for this guy.
Saddam had named the street for Yasser Arafat when Israel put the Palestinian leader under virtual house arrest in 2000. Signs bearing Arafat’s name disappeared overnight in late June, and new ones with the imam’s name went up.
Posted by:Dar

#2  "the will of the people"
Do the alarm bells go off for you when you see this?

"I’d leave the plastic on the sofa for this guy."
ROFLMAO!!!
Posted by: ·com   2003-8-4 6:38:11 PM  

#1  al-Medhi: aka Mahdi (the expected one)
Posted by: mojo   2003-8-4 3:51:52 PM  

00:00