Iraqi music school battles violence, persecution
By Haider Salahuddin and Aseel Kami
BAGHDAD (Reuters) - Gunmen threaten to kill their relatives, roadside bombs make journeys to school hazardous and religious hardliners persecute them -- but the children of Iraq's Music and Ballet School have an antidote to war: music.
"When I play my oud, I defy violence in society," said Haneen Imad, 17, referring to her traditional Arabic lute, as she played an old folk song on its strings. "When I hear the sound of a helicopter droning over my head, I play louder."
Baghdad's only musical academy for school-aged students has been in decline since the early 1990s, when United Nations sanctions imposed on Iraq for its invasion of Kuwait wrecked the economy and left many families destitute. But things got a lot worse after U.S. forces ousted Saddam Hussein's regime in 2003.
Daily violence in Baghdad has endangered many a child's journey to the classroom, but pupils and teachers at this school in an upmarket Baghdad suburb fear the added threat of being attacked by religious militants for their love of music.
The emergence of a new breed of militants, who target people practicing arts they consider "un-Islamic", has led several worried parents to take their children out of the school.
The 200 students who attended in 2006 have dwindled to just 140, headmistress Najiha Hamadi said.
"After 2003, religious movements started to gain influence on Iraqi life. This has had a negative impact on us," Hamadi told Reuters. "People fear for the safety of their children."
The rise of Islamism was an unintended consequence of the U.S.-led war to remove Saddam, whose secular Baath party had ruthlessly suppressed religious movements.
While most Islamists reject the idea of enforcing their views at gunpoint, attacks by a militant minority have surged. Shi'ite militants in Basra have lobbed grenades at music shops. Sunni Islamist al Qaeda has planted bombs in women's beauty salons and cut off people's fingers for smoking.
The school has been targeted twice -- in 2003, when a mob looted it and in 2004, when arsonists burned down half of it. Hamadi said it was never clear who was behind either attack.
"The whole school was unusable for a while after (it was burned), then we had to repair it," she said.
Since then, fear has persuaded many to move their children to conventional schools -- especially girls as they reach adolescence, when their figure-hugging ballet costumes might start to raise eyebrows in more pious circles.
FORBIDDEN
In a huge hall hung with mirrors, ballet teacher Zina Akram played the piano while six-year-olds practiced their ballet steps, the girls in pink leotards, the boys wearing black shorts and white T-shirts.
For Iraq's more zealous Islamists, music and dancing are not things that should be taught in schools. Citing the Koran, they say it is "haram" -- forbidden. Moderate Muslims dispute this. Continued...





