Layla Karim Shaikley

Conflict and capital

Posted by Layla Karim Shaikley on September 29, 2011
Sep 292011

Below is an excerpt from my blog, loveandfashism.blogspot.com, that I found incredibly relevant after addressing crisis and conflict. Conflict is profitable, as the stark juxtaposition in  the entry below may suggest:

April 2011–Peppered with business savvy folk of all ethnicities, the Emirates Air Basra flight surprised me a little. Once Iraq’s most romantic riverside town, Basra is a governance in Southern Iraq located on water and oil. Having been warned of potential danger, I was told to stick to my second tongue of Iraqi dialect Arabic. Yet, this plane had business men from China, Eastern Europe, India, and America. I was baffled. I took my seat next to an American government personnel in camouflage shorts and an arm camouflaged in war scene tattoos. A California girl, I couldn’t help but wonder if our similarities were more than our hypersensitive differences. Ironic, I thought, that I am most appalled by the man on the plane that I could probably carry the longest conversation with. Just saying.

There’s a widely accepted notion that the first impression is the most lasting.  Judgments are formed as a result of being deeply intrigued, bored, or entertained by somebody when meeting them for the first time. In visiting a foreign land, I see the trip from the airport to the city in a parallel manner.

Upon arriving to Basra, our driver and bodyguard Saad jumped into the car and proceeded to simultaneously slip a gun into his holster while fastening his seat belt. Impression formed.

We pulled up to the first set of homes, arguably slums, from the airport. At first glance, the lot is merely a sea of satellite dishes.  Masonry homes with cloth draping off of conjunctive tents swayed with the wind. Next thing I knew, I found my mother, sister, and I in a GMC with an armed man that we just met. In the middle of the desert. Baba’s car drove behind us. A great beginning to a Hollywood tragic ending.

Then we pulled up to a hotel…square in the middle of some of the worst slums that I have ever seen, our palace awaited.

 

Basrah International Hotel, lobby

Photo credit: Layla Shaikley

Basrah International Hotel, courtyard view

Photo credit: Layla Shaikley

 

And the surrounding urban fabric..

Photo credit: Layla Shaikley

 

Basrah International Hotel, photo from balcony

Photo credit: Layla Shaikley

 

 

Who is the audience for such extravagance?  Just a suggestion…

Photo credit: Layla Shaikley

 

Sep 212011

 

Crisis via conflict

Layla Shaikley, Baghdad

 

A photo journal// The term crisis is often referred to in a plethora of ways–the outcome of war is often defined as a crisis, water shortages fall under the scope of crises, and one may have an identity crisis. A crisis refers to intense difficulty or trouble. To analogize between Newtonian physics, crisis to the 3rd Law of Motion is the reaction to conflict. To narrow my scope, I will focus on crisis in conflict. To use the example that pertains directly to my field of study, the subject is the most current turmoil in what was once the cradle of civilization, Iraq. Via a personal photo journal that I maintained upon my last visit to Iraq in April of this year, I will provide a visual journey of my definition of crisis.

 

Crises can be physically confined within barricades
Layla Shaikley, Baghdad

Crisis represents destruction

Layla Shaikley, Baghdad

 

Crisis represents death

Layla Shaikley, Najaf

 

Crisis includes the inability for a municipality to support an economic system that provides opportunities to its constituency.
Layla Shaikley, Karbala

Crisis results in the creativity of a people to sustain normalcy via innovation, as implied in this photograph of DIY power wires draped throughout Baghdad. The home of the wires
Layla Shaikley, Baghdad

Crisis effects the academic quality of the population at whole
Layla Shaikley, University of Baghdad Medical School (top school in country)

Crisis represents destruction

Layla Shaikley, Baghdad