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The Varsity News

Student newspaper of University of Detroit Mercy

UDM student recalls fear, terror of life in Iraq

Nina Paolini

Issue date: 4/15/09 Section: Features
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Before coming to America, UDM sophomore Faddi Salim lived in the middle of the Iraq War.
Salim was in Baghdad when the war began in 2003. While in Iraq, he lived through the reign of a dictator and terrorist attacks - and was even held briefly at an American army base.
Salim, 20, was driving with a friend when their car broke down in the desert. Unable to see signs of civilization, they began to walk the terrain. Soon, the two noticed a big, gated area and decided to go there to ask for directions.
"As soon as we hit the camp, there was this yelling," said Salim.
Large spotlights glared on them.
They were commanded to get on the ground. Salim and his friend followed the faceless voice's directions.
When Salim spotted an American flag, he instantly realized where he was - at a U.S. army base. He was scared when first questioned, but the soldiers realized Salim and his friend were not a threat and let them go.
The American soldiers were "so nice when they came to Iraq," he said. Only when the terrorists began disguising themselves as civilians and strapping bombs to themselves, did the soldiers' attitudes change, according to Salim. He said they became less friendly and more scared.
Salim does not have an issue with American and coalition forces coming to Iraq, and he dislikes the terrorist groups.
In 2004, one of them took over his neighborhood. "We could not even leave our home," he said.
The terrorists travelled in groups of seven to ten and patrolled the streets, he said. They would not let anybody leave even to buy food, according to Salim.­
"Some people died," he said, "because they were starving." After a couple of weeks, the American army drove the terrorists out of the neighborhood, he said.
Prior to the coalition invasion, Saddam Hussein's rule was so strict that people of Iraq were not allowed the simplest of technologies, said Salim, who said Hussein wanted complete domination over everything in Iraq.
Salim said that there was no cable television, only local channels. The Iraqis were not even allowed to have cell phones, he said.
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