cousin.
I have two sisters. Their names are Heinine, who is fourteen, and
Sabine, who is eleven. Our cousin Nahan is also with us. She is the same age as me.
We live now in a small apartment in Jordan. Itâs very bare, with
just mats along the walls, no good furniture. We burn incense a lot because it covers up
the smell of damp and worse things. None of us like it here. We are in the Hashimi
section of Amman, where a lot of Iraqis live, but we donât spend time with them.
Itâs hard to know who to trust. A lot of people left Iraq for a lot of reasons.
Just because we are all here now in Jordan doesnât mean we all like each
other.
Our father died seven years ago from sickness. It was harder to get good
health care in Iraq in the time of sanctions. I donât know if he would still be
alive or not if there were no sanctions. Itâs something I donât like to
think about.
Although we lost his salary when he died, my mother had a good job. Our
lives would have been much worse ifour mother didnât have a
job. She was an accountant in the educational system.
She was also a member of the Baâath Party and worked with the Iraqi
Womenâs Union, a non-governmental organization that helped make womenâs
lives easier day-to-day and also encouraged women to participate in the political life
of Iraq. It was a very old organization, around for many years.
After the fall of Saddam, militia groups targeted former Baâath
party members, killing a lot of them. We would hear about the killings, and we worried
that our mother might be targeted.
Eventually she did get a death threat, and thatâs when we left. We
were living in our grandparentsâ house at the time. We gathered together what we
could in a hurry, then left quickly and quietly.
For a while, our mother worked here as a housecleaner in the neighborhood,
but now she is sick and tired all the time. Iâm not really sure how we are
surviving now. I think she borrowed money from someone.
We sold some jewelry and dishes, but a lot of Iraqis are trying to sell
things in order to live, so we didnât get a good price for them.
Our mother is thinking that if she can get a sewing machine, she can do
some tailoring and bring in some money that way. It would be good to see her busy. I
think she would be happier if she had something to do that she liked. Sheâd have
less time then to worry about me.
My sisters and I are back in school this year, because Jordan now lets
Iraqi children attend for free. My teachersare good, very kind and
patient with us. We lost our school year last year because we couldnât afford to
pay the fees, so we are behind and have to work hard to catch up.
School feels safe. We can learn, and we have friends and can laugh and
have fun. During the war we saw dead bodies in the streets, explosions, terrible things.
It helps to be able to laugh and have a bit of a regular life. Both Heinine and I want
to be doctors. Sabine hasnât decided yet.
My mother and grandmother want us to wear hijab. Theyâre afraid for
us because we have no father or older brother to protect us. They say, âYou are
young girls, walking around the streets with your heads uncovered. What if you are
attacked by some bad Jordanian men? We cannot go to the police. They will send us back
to Iraq!â They talk and worry, and sometimes I just get tired of all their worry.
This is the one time I have in my life to be young. I donât want to spend it
hiding and worried and afraid.
We all miss our homeland. We had friends there, and lives that could have
been wonderful.
I think if American girls my age could meet me, theyâd like me. If
they were friendly, we could go look in the shops and talk about clothes and music. Then
they could tell their parents to stop being afraid of Iraqis.
Eva, 17
The United Nations High