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Indonesian
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Iraq
/ Baghdad / The City
Baghdad
is a real city, not just a large town, and its lights
are still twinkling in the river at half past one in
the morning. It is the river that 'makes' Baghdad. The
Tigris, brown and swift, is the heart and soul of the
City of the Caliphs.
For- one might as well declare it at once- Baghdad is
not a city of stately majesty. It is not ornate and
grand. It does not take your breath away like Venice,
or make your heart beat a little faster like New York.
It is, so to speak, a water colour, not an oil painting.
It is flat and dusty - indeed, from time to time it
is enveloped in maddening storms that fling dust into
your room, your car, food, eyes, ears, mouth. Baghdad
has muted values.
It is an ancient city struggling awkwardly to be modern.
If it lacks glamour, it has considerable charm. And
if even the charm must be delved for, to me such delving
seems worthwhile because, more than many cities, Baghdad
reflects the most unusual, country that frames it. Iraq,
after all, is the old, old Mesopotamia of Sumer, Babylon,
Assyria, of the glorious sun-burst of the Abbasid Empire
of Harun al Rashid, of Persian intrusions, and the affliction
of four hundred dead years of Turkish rule. In other
words, Baghdad is the still-beating heart of a former
cradle of civilisation, a country as historically dramatic
as Ancient Greece or the Nile Valley.
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