Abu Abbas knew extra in regards to the Iraqi Marshes than most, having lived there his whole life.
So when the Iraqi authorities of former dictator Saddam Hussein drained the wetlands of southern Iraq within the early Nineteen Nineties, Abu Abbas witnessed the devastation.
Then a decade later, as younger males with picks and small water pumps started flattening the embankments that saved water out of the previous wetlands after Hussein’s fall, he was amongst those that watched water re-enter the marshes.
It has not been plain crusing since. The marshes are struggling because of local weather change and mismanagement. And but, Abu Abbas’s optimism has remained.
Early final yr, mendacity in mattress along with his well being failing, he obtained a go to from his nephew, Jassim Al-Asadi.
“What’s the standing of the marshes?” Abu Abbas requested.
“Issues are depressing,” Jassim replied.
Earlier than Jassim might proceed, Abu Abbas reduce him off.
“Don’t be afraid for the marshes,” he mentioned. “They may survive, even when the water is salty, so long as there are individuals such as you who will defend them.”
The marshes had been as soon as among the many largest wetlands on the planet, protecting 10,500sq km (4,050sq miles) in 1973, an space roughly the dimensions of Lebanon.
They had been residence to a various vary of natural world and by the center of the twentieth century supported a human inhabitants estimated at 500,000.
The good cities of Ur, the place most biblical students imagine Abraham was born, and Uruk, the biggest metropolis on the planet in 3200 BCE, lay adjoining to the marshes.
Whereas a lot of the wetlands lie inside Iraq, a smaller part generally known as Hawr al-Azim is in Iran.
Throughout his lifetime, Abu Abbas noticed the pure cycles of creation and destruction of the wetlands as floods and drought affected conventional livelihoods primarily based on fishing, looking, reed manufacturing and farming.
On the identical time, he skilled the rising influence of human actions on the marshes: warfare, upstream dams, oil growth and agricultural air pollution.