Notice, this is not an AP article.
Long, but good read:
Families' lives measure pace of progress in Iraq
Thu Mar 17, 6:14 AM ET Top Stories - USATODAY.com
By John Diamond, Sabah al-Anbaki, Mohammed Hayder Sadeq and Elliot Blair Smith, USA TODAY
Until recently, it was a bad sign in the al-Taie household when the generator went silent. It generally meant thieves had stolen the family's power source.
Lately, the silence signals something else: Electricity is flowing again to their middle-class neighborhood in Baghdad, so the generator has switched off automatically.
Two years after the U.S.-led invasion that brought down Saddam Hussein (news - web sites)'s regime, progress for typical Iraqi families is measured in small increments.
The al-Taie family has nearly continuous electricity. For the al-Zubaidi family, lucrative jobs in the new government mean an improved lifestyle. But the Muhaisens, a poor family, have not benefited much; they complain about the escalating prices of food and the dangerous roads, which keep them from tending to family graves in a city 100 miles away.
Some changes are apparent: Streets in the capital are lined with fruit markets, furniture sellers, sidewalk kebab stands and neighborhood coffee shops. The number of cars in Baghdad has more than tripled in the past two years. U.S. troops remain a regular presence, but Iraqis increasingly regard the troops as part of the scenery. "I like the guns I see with the American soldiers when they pass in the neighborhood," says 10-year-old Ahmed Abdullah al-Zubaidi.
The outside world has penetrated what was once a closed society. Most homes have satellite television, which brings in Arab news stations and Western programs. Satellite dishes were outlawed under Saddam. Thousands of people now carry cell phones, also forbidden by the former regime. Computers and televisions are pouring into a country starved by years of war and sanctions.
Defying the odds, about 8 million Iraqis came out to vote in national elections Jan. 30. Wednesday, the newly elected Transitional National Assembly met for the first time. People can now speak freely.
Some Iraqis still have not fully adjusted to freedom. When 75-year-old Radiyah Abbas Ali, the matriarch of the al-Zubaidi family, speaks of Saddam, she lowers her voice and looks left and right, as if someone were listening in. "The most important thing is that we got rid of Saddam," says Ali, a mother of 13. "Deaths after deaths, this is what Saddam offered. He did not give us anything."
Political and economic freedom have come at a cost. The al-Taie family can afford four cell phones. But, worried about constant violence, they use the phones mostly to keep track of their extended family. "Explosions are everywhere, and we need to be sure that everyone, especially the children, is safe," says Zaid al-Taie, 38, an engineer who works for a private contractor.
Insurgents continue nearly daily attacks, often with devastating suicide bombs that target Iraqi police and soldiers. Government officials are frequently assassinated. Oil production is struggling, hampered by both inefficiency and sabotage. Lines at gas stations are still long. The Baghdad airport - once named after Saddam - is closed to most commercial flights.
Saddam's reign of terror is over, but most Iraqis are still nervous, vacillating between fear and hope. "If we surrender to fear and terror, we will lose," says Amira Ahmed, 43, the daughter of the al-Zubaidis.
Despite the dangers, Amira commutes from a middle-class neighborhood in Baghdad to teach at a school in Sadr City, a Shiite Muslim slum of garbage-strewn streets. "Nowadays, my fellow teachers come to school from various and distant places with greater determination to continue despite the risk," she says firmly.
The experiences of individual Iraqis can vary dramatically based on ethnicity, location and luck. Some members of the former ruling Baath Party have seen their families' status and income plummet. Some families had loved ones imprisoned or executed under Saddam, losses that cannot be made up by his ouster. There are wealthy Iraqis riding the wave of economic freedom and poor Iraqis trying to cope with rising prices and the loss of the Saddam-era safety net.
USA TODAY visited several families to gauge how Iraqis have fared in the two years since Saddam was ousted. These are their stories.
The al-Taie family
The al-Taie household is a cluster of three generations, a common arrangement in Iraq (news - web sites). The patriarch, Fadhil Abdul Ridha al-Taie, 74, is a Shiite; his wife, Khawla Assim al-Rawi, 66, is a Sunni Muslim. They share several modest houses inside a walled compound with their three sons, all married. There are three grandchildren and two more on the way.
The family got the land in 1965 from the government, which steered choice jobs and land to Sunnis. Khawla is retired from a Baghdad bank where she worked as a branch manager. The job and the connections it brought gave her access to property in the quiet al-Harthiya neighborhood.
The 9,149-square-foot lot is packed. There is one large home flanked by two smaller ones, each two stories high. The large house has a small garden in front.
Family meals are group affairs, and the Iraqi diet, with a few exceptions, would require no major adjustments for Westerners. Saddam's demise has not changed mealtime for this family. For breakfast, there are eggs, cheese, bread, jam, honey, tea and milk. For afternoon and evening meats: grilled meats, especially chicken and lamb, along with salad, yogurt, vegetables, rice and fruit.
Various family members contribute separate dishes during meals. They also help one another with cooking, shopping, cleaning and the family budget.
For dinner, a white tablecloth covers the wooden dining table. The three youngsters - Ihssan, 11; Lina, 9; and Merriam, 6 - eat at a small plastic table and cheerfully ignore increasingly strident demands by the adults to be quiet. "Stop it!" demands Ali Fadhil Abdul Ridha, 39, eldest of the three sons. His son Ihssan teases back: "Or what?"
Essam al-Sudani, AFP
Members of the al-Taie family watch television at home.
A beat-up 1979 Datsun is parked out front. The father and the three sons take turns using it for shopping or visiting friends. "We would like to change it, but we don't have enough money," Fadhil says.