• Africa
    • East Africa
  • Entertainment
  • Finance
  • Business
  • Health
  • MULTIMEDIA
    • Radio
    • Television
  • E-Paper
  • Tourism
No Result
View All Result
SUBSCRIBE
  • Africa
    • East Africa
  • Entertainment
  • Finance
  • Business
  • Health
  • MULTIMEDIA
    • Radio
    • Television
  • E-Paper
  • Tourism
No Result
View All Result
No Result
View All Result
Home News

Centuries-Old Black Community Still on the Margins in Iraq!

74
SHARES
1.2k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

By HOMELAND MEDIA/AGENCIES

You might also like

UCC Blocks 500 Porn Sites, Admits VPN Challenge!

New Best Hotel Busega Faces Closure over Promotion of Nudity!

NRM Retreat Deepens Ideological Grounding of Newly Elected MPs, Says Party Finance Director

Adnan Abdelrahman shows off the drums he learned to play at age 12. He belongs to Iraq’s centuries-old black minority, guardians of musical traditions but relegated to the margins of society.

Centred in the city of Zubair near Basra in the far south of Iraq, the community has its origins in East Africa.

Like other remote parts of Iraq, Zubair is a place of poverty and decaying public services, where dusty roads are lined with simple cement houses.

While activists denounce the community’s marginalisation, talk of racism or discrimination offends Zubair’s inhabitants, who prefer the euphemism “dark skin” in Arabic to the word black.

Abdelrahman, 56, is a member of one of the popular music troupes that have made Zubair famous throughout the country and in Kuwait, only 30 kilometres (20 miles) away.

“It’s a profession you inherit,” he said, explaining that his uncle sang and his father played the drum. “If someone dies, his son takes his place so that the art doesn’t disappear.”

Equipped with darboukas, tambourines and large goat skin drums, musicians liven up weddings by leading the “zaffa”, a procession of song and dance to celebrate the bride and groom.

Abdelrahman, who has played for four years in a heritage group sponsored by the culture ministry, said the majority of players are black and added that he does not feel discrimination.

“Racism is something we have never seen,” he said.

– History of slavery –

But many activists within the black community disagree, among them 32-year-old Majed al-Khalidy.

“Those with dark skin are fifth-class citizens, not even second-class,” said Khalidy, who works for an oil company in Basra.

“Since the establishment of the Iraqi state, we have not seen anyone from the community occupy a senior position in the state. We have not seen a governor, a minister or a lawmaker.”

He said the community faces a high drop-out rate from school, poor job opportunities and offensive language, even from religious clerics, with many people still using the Arabic term “slave” to designate a black person.

The minority numbers 250,000 to two million people, according to a wide range of informal estimates. Their ancestors came from Kenya, Ethiopia and Sudan, said historian Ibrahim al-Marashi of California State University.

They are centred in Iraq’s southern Basra region, where black slaves were brought from East Africa “for the backbreaking work of draining the salt marshes” east of the city, said Marashi.

“In the historical record, the first mention of the community is in 869 CE when they revolted” against the Abbasid Caliphate, he said.

Today “black Iraqis continue to face systematic discrimination and marginalisation”, according to the Minority Rights Group International.

The London-based MRG says in an online report that Iraq’s black community suffers disproportionately high illiteracy and unemployment rates and that “many cannot find employment other than as labourers or domestic workers”.

– ‘Below poverty line’ –

In a recent sign of progress, a state-run TV news channel hired a young black woman, Randa Abdel Aziz, as a presenter — but such steps remain rare.

More change is needed, said Khalidy, the activist.

In a multi-faith, multi-ethnic country, he demanded the inclusion of his community in the quota system which reserves parliament seats for certain minorities, including Christians and Yazidis.

“To claim your rights, you have to be close to the decision-makers,” he said about a political system where lawmakers can open the doors to all kinds of state largesse, especially public sector jobs.

Saad Salloum, an expert on religious and ethnic diversity, agreed that “discrimination is seen at all levels” against black Iraqis.

“Politically, they have no representation. Socially, certain stereotypes remain rooted in the dominant culture. Economically, the majority live below the poverty line.”

The group MRG recalled that after the fall of former dictator Saddam Hussein, “black Iraqis began to organise and develop a political consciousness for the first time”.

The Free Iraqi Movement, the first group to defend the rights of black Iraqis, was founded in 2007 and encouraged by the election in the United States of Barack Obama as president.

Several members of the movement ran for the 2010 provincial elections in Basra, though none were elected, MRG recounted. In 2013, its founder Jalal Thiyab was murdered in the city.

“There is still a long way to go to achieve equality for this and all other minorities,” said Salloum.

Email:homelandnewspaper@gmail.com

Share30Tweet19Send
Homeland Digital

Homeland Digital

Related Posts

UCC Blocks 500 Porn Sites, Admits VPN Challenge!

by The Homeland Newspaper
April 15, 2026
0
UCC Blocks 500 Porn Sites, Admits VPN Challenge!

The Uganda Communications Commission (UCC) has directed telecommunications operators to block at least 500 websites found to be distributing pornographic content, in a move aimed at enforcing national...

Read moreDetails

New Best Hotel Busega Faces Closure over Promotion of Nudity!

by The Homeland Newspaper
April 15, 2026
0
New Best Hotel Busega Faces Closure over Promotion of Nudity!

The Pornography Control Committee has warned that New Best Hotel in Busega could be shut down if allegations of facilitating explicit content persist, as authorities intensify enforcement against...

Read moreDetails

NRM Retreat Deepens Ideological Grounding of Newly Elected MPs, Says Party Finance Director

by The Homeland Newspaper
April 15, 2026
0
NRM Retreat Deepens Ideological Grounding of Newly Elected MPs, Says Party Finance Director

The National Resistance Movement says its nine-day leadership retreat at NALI has strengthened newly elected MPs’ understanding of party ideology and the manifesto, preparing them for more aligned...

Read moreDetails

Prisons Van Crushes Media Person Covering Ggaba Murder Suspect!

by The Homeland Newspaper
April 15, 2026
0
Prisons Van Crushes Media Person Covering Ggaba Murder Suspect!

A TikTok content creator was critically injured when a Uganda Prisons Service van carrying a murder suspect lost control and rammed into journalists ahead of a mobile court...

Read moreDetails

Police Recover Illegal Firearm in Entebbe Operation, Arrest 16 Suspects

by The Homeland Newspaper
April 12, 2026
0
Police Recover Illegal Firearm in Entebbe Operation, Arrest 16 Suspects

Police in Entebbe Municipality have recovered an illegal pistol following an intelligence-led security operation conducted on April 11, 2026, across multiple locations in Wakiso District, resulting in the...

Read moreDetails
Next Post
Rwanda’s LGBTQ+Community Still Faces Discrimination!

Rwanda's LGBTQ+Community Still Faces Discrimination!

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related News

Spain counts cost of agribusiness in rising desertification

February 14, 2026
Go to Court, Minister Baryomunsi supports UCC’s directive on suspending journalists

Go to Court, Minister Baryomunsi supports UCC’s directive on suspending journalists

May 4, 2019
Kasese district MP Winnie Kizza Retire from elective Politics

Kasese district MP Winnie Kizza Retire from elective Politics

July 15, 2020

Browse by Category

  • 2021 Elections
  • Africa
  • Agriculture
  • Analysis
  • Business
  • CLIMATE CHANGE
  • Columnists
  • Corporate Profile
  • Crime
  • Culture
  • Diplomacy
  • Economy
  • Editorial
  • EDUCATION
  • ENTERTAINMENT
  • Entertainment
  • Feature News
  • Health
  • International
  • Investing
  • Local/Government
  • News
  • Parliament
  • Politics
  • PRESS RELEASE
  • Religion
  • SECURITY
  • Special Reports
  • Sports

The Homeland Newspaper, is a product of THE HOMELAND MEDIA GROUP LTD. Uganda's Weekly Newspaper of choice. Registered by the Media Council of Uganda and Regulated by Uganda Communication s Commission [UCC] as Digital and Online Data Communication Services.
Email:homelandnewspaper@gmail.com

E-Peper

Copyright © 2006-26 homelandmedia.co.ug

No Result
View All Result
  • Africa
    • East Africa
  • Entertainment
  • Finance
  • Business
  • Health
  • MULTIMEDIA
    • Radio
    • Television
  • E-Paper
  • Tourism

Copyright © 2006-26 homelandmedia.co.ug