Wednesday, July 15, 2009

Holiday in Iraq

News flash: Iraq is hot. And it's kind of boring. I took a minibus from Hakkari all the way to the border near Silopi, hopped in a taxi at the border and got the driver to do all my paper work for me. Took about two hours total, and in true Turkish fashion (Turkish Kurds are still, in my mind, thoroughly Turkish), rather than staying in their cars and arrive at passport control in an orderly fashion car by car, everyone jumped out of their cars and sprinted to the passport control window. They pushed and shoved and raised their palms in the air to emphasize how angry they were when they yelled at each other.

I arrived in Dohuk and stayed at a crap hotel. After I'd paid for it, I went in and pulled the curtain aside only to find a cement wall staring back at me. Sleeping in what was basically a closet wouldn't be so bad, except this is Iraq, it's hot, and the power in the city gets shut off at night. So, the hotel generator kept dying, which meant I woke up every time the ceiling fan stopped. The place was run by a kid who had to have been a good five years younger than me and at least five inches shorter. The bathrooms reflected his youthful devil don't care attitude in that they were disgusting. Of course, squatters will never be inviting, but these were absolutely repulsive.

Nonetheless Dohuk has a bustle to it that's hard not to like. I came to Erbil today and althogh it's big there is nothing to do here. There is a large citadel but it's closed off save for the main road running through the center of it. I ate two felafel sandwiches today at two different places, mostly to kill time. I also spent a whole hour in a rug museum only because it had AC. Now I'm in an internet cafe and updating my blog because I might otherwise go insane from boredom. Although, I am meeting up with a friend of a friend of a friend tonight, so that might salvage my Iraq experience. Whether it does it not, I'm still out of here tomorrow morning, making a B line straight for Istanbul and then American on Monday!

I will write more on Kurdistan and what Kurds think of this place later.

1 comment:

Unknown said...

nice journey
never been there