IVAP team member Kathryn Schulz recently wrote an article for the Huffington Post on her recent experience in Syria with Iraqi Refugees. Check out here article that describes some of her learnings from the trip and how Michael Jackson is quite possibly our most successful cultural ambassador. Click here to read the article.
Author Archive
Billie Jean in Baghdad
Monday, November 16th, 2009The Cycle Continues
Monday, November 2nd, 2009
Iraqis outside a UNHCR registration center in Syria. They come to receive news on of any progress on their requests for resettlement. New arrivals come every week.
On Oct. 25, 2009, twin suicide bombs exploded in Baghdad, killing 155 people and wounding more than 500, making it the deadliest attack in two years. This tragedy, occurring just a week after the Iraqi Voices Amplification Project team returned home, is a painful reminder of why Iraqi refugees are not yet returning home in any significant numbers and why, in fact, more are fleeing their country ever day.
I couldn’t help but wonder how many people decided that the Oct. 25 bombing was the last straw, the trigger for them to leave everything they know and start the journey to safety in another country. The question isn’t really if the event triggered anyone to leave the country but, really, how many left? Where did they go? Were they injured as they made the journey? What sort of reception did they find when they arrived in their new place?
With elections scheduled for January 2010, many fear an increase in violence in the months ahead. For those lucky enough to survive these violent atrocities, seeking refuge in Syria, Jordan, Lebanon or a number of other surrounding countries is not without its own perils. While these countries have done their best to host the overwhelming number of Iraqis flooding their borders, there are limitations to what they can and will do.
All of these challenges, and more, were apparent to us on our 17-day trip to speak with Iraqis, and continue to haunt me as a settle back into my life here. I see the faces of those we met, even when I close my eyes. There stories play over and over in my ear. I think about the freedom I have –– to be able to return to my life –– while the Iraqis continue with their lives on hold.
All in all, we had an incredible journey, and are now faced with the even more important task of taking what we witnessed and turning it into compelling artistic pieces that will captivate America and amplify the voices of Iraqi refugees. Stay tuned.
UNHCR, Syria
Tuesday, October 20th, 2009
Women and men wait outside the UNHCR registration center for news of resettlement. It is here that the sheer magnitude of this problem can be viscerally felt. To date, 215,000 Iraqis are registered with UNHCR in Syria. It's estimated that as many as 1.2 million Iraqi refugees are living in Syria.
Can we show your face?
Wednesday, October 14th, 2009As we start our time in Syria, one of the things that is heavy on my mind is the challenge of trying to draw attention to the problems of a people who are in hiding. Many of the Iraqis we meet with do not want their real names used, nor their faces shown in any of the photos or videos. Their concerns are justified and valid, many are still facing persecution and all are living in their host countries illegally. It is a challenge we have been dealing with from day one, and I’ve started to realize that sometimes some of the most interesting things to come out of the interviews happen when I ask the question, “Can we show your face?”
Most of the time the answer is either “Mafi Meshkla” which means “no problem”, or a shy “la, la, la” which means “no, no, no.” However, once in awhile this question sets off an extremely emotional response. Some people get up and leave the room. Sometimes a heated debate breaks out among the family members, with people arguing both sides. These conversations almost never get translated word for word. Our translators usually let the argument go on a moment and then just fill us in on their final decision, but sometimes they do translate it and what gets said is always enlightening. Here are some of the most memorable comments I’ve heard to date:
A husband and wife are arguing. He doesn’t want his face shown, but says his wife and children should agree to be photographed. This makes the wife nervous and she says she doesn’t want to be photographed and he says to her, “what are you afraid of, your brothers dead already!?!” (Needless to say, we did not photograph the wife).
A young mother now raises her five children alone after her husband disappeared a year ago when he had to return to Iraq to help his sick and dying mother. She has had no news of her husband in over a year and has no idea if he is dead or alive. She spoke a lot about the difficulty for her to be the head of the household without her husband who used to make a lot of the decisions. When we asked if we could take pictures she said, “I will ask my daughters, they share my life now.” Her daughters are preteens.
We interviewed a survivor of torture and asked if we could photograph his face as well as his injuries. He responded,
“You can take my picture and show it to the Prime Minister of Iraq, we can only die once and I died a long time ago.”
This afternoon we spoke with a single mom who used to be a professor at a university in Iraq. She has a PhD and lived a very good life before the war and now lives in a one bedroom apartment with her daughter. When asked if we could take her pictures, she refused, but not for the usual concerns about safety. At the question of wither or not we could show her face she broke into tears and responded, “I used to be so beautiful. I saw my cousin last month after many years, and he didn’t even recognize me. I don’t want you to take my picture because this is not me. I don’t know this face.”
Children
Sunday, October 11th, 2009Yesterday I got to spend the day with children, which I really needed. I didn’t plan it and it wasn’t on the itinerary. While our team met with Iraqis at the Caritas Center near the Italian Hospital in Amman, I played with three Iraqi children while they waited for their mom to finish receiving services at the center. They didn’t speak much English and my Arabic is only good enough to tell them that I’m from America and to find out their ages and that they were from Baghdad. But that didn’t stop us from having a good time.
We played tag, hide and seek and I tried to teach them Miss Mary Mack. They climbed all over me and played with my hair. And in the end it struck me that if we could do only one thing for the Iraqis, one small thing to try and make up for some of the destruction we’ve caused, it would be to do right by their children.
Now I realize that the situation is incredibly complex and that there are many things we really need to do in order to facilitate a positive solution to this crisis. And I also know that children can only have a bright future if their parents are secure and able to provide for them. So I in no means intend to take the focus away from the very real needs of the parents. But I also know that the Iraqis value their children above all else. We have heard this time and time again. “The only thing that matters is that my children have a chance at a good future,” “My life is over now, but my children must have a chance at an education,” “I’ll leave Iraq when my children say it’s time, they are just starting their lives.” And the list goes on…
Childhood is interrupted by war and displacement. Children must leave their house, their friends, their old school and in many cases, their extended families back in Iraq. They have lost loved ones, witnessed daily violence and for some, experienced the terror of kidnapping themselves. Many struggle to be integrated into the school system here in Jordan, experiencing harassment and facing an educational system that’s vastly different than the one in Iraq. The children are often way behind their Jordanian counterparts, partly due to differences in the curriculum and partly because many had been sequestered in their homes for months before the family fled.

These 5 month old triplets live with their mother, father and aunt in a one room apartment where they share a bathroom and kitchen with another family.
But it’s not too late. Their parents are standing by ready to do whatever it takes to give them a brighter future. We must stand with them. The price of doing nothing is just too great.
To learn how you can help Iraqi children, visit http://www.mercycorps.org/countries/jordan or www.thelistproject.org.
A Day with Children and Families
Thursday, October 1st, 2009
Our first day here in Beirut was spent with Caritas Internationalis, 60 plus Iraqi children, and a few brave parent chaperones. On Saturdays, the children are bussed in from various neighborhoods around the city for recreational activities. This Saturday, the activity was an interactive music and arts workshop, featuring Ami Gaston and Kim Schultz, held at one of the Caritas shelters on the top of a beautiful hillside, just outside the city.

The excitement was palpable as the artists boarded the bus to join the children for the ride up the hill. For many of the children, especially those too young to yet be in school, opportunities to interact with other children or to run around and play outside are rare. Chances to talk to Americans are even rarer, and children eagerly called out greetings, questions about our favorite teams and if we were on Facebook.



Ami played traditional African rhythms on her drum while the children accompanied her on small instruments she brought for them. With the help of an interpreter, Kim taught zip, zap, zop, a game where children use eye contact to send energy to each other around the circle without words. Michael Jordan, while not the basketball star some might expect him to be, played a friendly game of soccer with some of the children. 
A magical moment occurred after Ami and Kim had finished the workshop. One of the Iraqi dads that was accompanying the children and had been sitting on the sides watching, picked up Ami’s drum and begin to play a traditional Iraqi song. The children started clapping and dancing, with some of the Iraqi women joining in. And in a moment, the mood of the parents who had been sitting around looking tired and serious, totally shifted to one of joy, laughter and playfulness.
One of the highlights of the day was the chance to hear from some of the Iraqis we meet with last time and to get an update on their situation. Thankfully, several of the families we met with over 14 months ago had just received word that they would be resettled, one next week and one in the next four months. This is happy news indeed, but I couldn’t help but be struck by the incredibly long journey they have been on out of Iraqi, to Lebanon and now to other countries where they will start their lives over yet again. And this was only two families. Many of the families we met last year, along with new friends we made yesterday, are still waiting.
And so it begins…
Thursday, October 1st, 2009On October 1st, the IVAP team (minus Paul and Kathryn P., who are joining us on Monday) boarded the airplane for Paris and then on to Beirut. After 16 hours of travel, we made it safely to Beirut, excited for our journey to begin.

The IVAP Team at JFK airport, ready to depart!
Introducing the Iraqi Voices Amplification Project Artistic Team
Thursday, September 24th, 2009
The IVAP Artistic Team, which was assembled by Megan Hoelle and C. Eduardo Vargas, includes: Michael Jordan, Kathryn Schulz, Paul Gordon Emerson, Tim Frakes, Kathryn Pilkington, Kim Schultz, Amikaeyla Proudfoot Gaston, and Alissa Everett.
After months of planning and interviewing a highly competitive pool of applicants, Intersections is pleased to announce the delegation of artists that will travel to the Middle East in October for the Iraqi Voices Amplification Project.
The delegation, which was assembled by Megan Hoelle and C. Eduardo Vargas, includes: Michael Jordan, media messaging expert and advertiser; Kathryn Schulz, writer and former magazine and newspaper editor; Paul Gordon Emerson, choreographer, artistic director and co-founder of City Dance; Tim Frakes, videographer and international video producer; Kathryn Pilkington, dancer at City Dance; Kim Schultz, actress, writer, teacher, improviser and stand-up comedian; Amikaeyla Proudfoot Gaston, singer and performer; and Alissa Everett, documentary photographer and writer.
“I am thrilled with the passion, artistic caliber and creative energy we will be taking with us in these artists,” said Hoelle. “I am confident that we will be able to shine a light on this important issue.”
“It is our hope that through programs such as IVAP, we will be able to amplify the voices of displaced Iraqis and influence people of good will to pressure our government to do more to help those that have been displaced,” said Vargas.
Vargas was part of a trip Intersections staff made to Jordan, Lebanon and Syria in August 2008 in order to explore how to bring the stories of Iraqis back to the United States. “We saw many Iraqis refugees, without much hope of being resettled abroad, who were struggling to survive in the countries they were living in,” he said. “[They] were adamant about not returning to the violence of Iraq.”
The delegation will meet at Intersections’ office in New York City Sept. 13-14 for a planning session, and will work in the Middle East from Oct. 2 through Oct. 17. You can follow the artists on the trip on the new IVAP blog, coming soon. Once the artists return, they will develop a multimedia production that captures their experiences and highlights the stories of the Iraqis they meet.
Intersections hopes to mobilize public interest to improve the situation of Iraqi refugees. Find out more about Iraqi Refugees and the IVAP project by contacting C. Eduardo Vargas at cevargas@intersectionsinternational.org.
Amikaeyla Proudfoot Gaston: Singer and Performer
Tuesday, September 1st, 2009Proclaimed one of the “purest contemporary voices in the jazz, world and folk industry since Eva Cassidy” by National Public Radio, power house performer and master percussionist Amikaeyla Proudfoot Gaston embraces the best of many types of music.
Listen to her soulful style from Sacred Sounds.
Ethical Exit Strategies from Iraq
Monday, June 8th, 2009
Colonel Michael J. Meese, Director Robert Chase, Megan Hoelle, Kirk W. Johnson, Ambassador Cynthia P. Schneider, Moderator Damian Bednarz and C. Eduardo Vargas
On Thursday, April 2, Intersections concluded its conversation series, “The Cost of War at Home & Abroad,” with a panel discussion, After the Surge: Ethical Exit Strategies From Iraq.
Panelists included Cynthia P. Schneider, former U.S. Ambassador to The Netherlands and Georgetown University faculty member; U.S. Army Col. Michael J. Meese, Ph.D.; and Kirk W. Johnson, The List Project founder and director. The conversation explored American strategies of withdrawing from Iraq while fulfilling political, military and humanitarian obligations.
“From the military perspective, the importance of the ethical withdrawal is to turn over security in a way that minimizes the chances of a return to sectarianism,” said Meese. For that reason, the military method is to “thin forces and continue to maintain transition teams.”
Johnson noted that some 3,000 Iraqis have contacted him in fear for their safety because they aided U.S. efforts. “I am praying and hoping that the people [developing the exit strategy] are taking into consideration what happens to these Iraqis who have helped us, because if we abandon them, I don’t see how we can ever claim any mantle of an ethical withdrawal,” he said.
“I think it’s so important that we define this beyond military security, that we define it in terms of a viable life for people in Iraq,” said Schneider. This means “economic development, education, adequate health care, water, power grid, electricity [and] restoration of their cultural institutions.”
The “Cost of War” series “raised awareness about how the global war on terror has impacted different sectors of our society in ways that people are unaware of,” said Eduardo Vargas, Intersections’ project manager.
To hear an audio recording of the presentation, please visit www.intersectionsinternational.org/costofwarlectures.
See below for a highlight video from this discussion.



