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Nuha al-Radi

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Nuha al-Radi
Born(1941-01-27)January 27, 1941
Baghdad, Iraq
DiedAugust 30, 2004(2004-08-30)(aged 63)
Beirut, Lebanon
NationalityIraqi
Known forPainting, Ceramics, Sculpture, Writing
Notable workBaghdad Diaries

Nuha al-Radi(January 27, 1941 inBaghdad– August 30, 2004 inBeirut) was anIraqidiarist,ceramicistandpainterand noted author of theBaghdad Diarieswhich vividly recounts the horror of living through the first Gulf War.

Life and career

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She was born into a distinguished Iraqi family which includedMahmud Shevket Pasha,Prime Minister of theOttoman Empire.In 1919, her fatherMohammed Selim al-Radiwas one of the first Iraqis to be educated in the United States when he studied agriculture inTexas.He marriedSuad Abbas,became an Iraqidiplomatand was appointed ambassador toIranin 1947 and then to India from 1949 to 1958, where Nuha al-Radi grew up. She was educated at privateEnglish-speakingschools inDelhiandSimla,except for a brief spell in 1956 when she attended a boarding school inAlexandriato improve herArabic,but this was interrupted by theSuez Crisis.[1]

After theIraqi Revolutionbroke out in 1958 and the monarchy was overthrown, Nuha al-Radi became a ceramist, having joined theByam Shaw School of ArtinLondonand later worked withChelsea Pottery.She returned to Baghdad and exhibited in Iraq, Britain and Europe. In 1969, her family moved to Beirut and where she graduated in liberal arts from theAmerican UniversityinBeirutShe also taught there and continued to work and exhibit as a ceramist, but the outbreak of theLebanese civil warforced her to return to Baghdad.[2]

In 1991, after the first three days of bombing inOperation Desert Storm,she began writing a diary in English. This was first published as "Baghdad Diary”and then translated intoDutch.She continued updating it until 1996. In 1998 her eyewitness account of theGulf Warand its aftermath was published as "Baghdad Diaries"and translated into several languages. The 2003 edition of the book includes a postscript with remarks on the American invasion of Iraq.[3]

She died in 2004 fromleukemia.[4]She and her family believed that the leukemia may have been caused by the depleted uranium allies had fired at the tanks during the Gulf war.[5]

Work

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Her works have been exhibited throughout the Arab world.[6] Her ceramic works are often inspired by Iraqi folklore.[7]

She has been praised for offering a uniquely female perspective on the male-centred business of war, occupation and economic sanctions in both her writing and her artwork.[8]

Publications

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Her book,Baghdad Diariesrecounts the horrific experiences of living through the first Gulf war.[9]

Select list of publications

  • Baghdad Diaries: A Woman's Chronicles of War and Peace,Vintage Books, (1998) 2003

See also

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References

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  1. ^al-Radi, N.,Baghdad Diaries: A Woman's Chronicles of War and Peace,Vintage Books, 2003, p. 7; "Nuha al-Radi," [Obituary],The Guardian,7 September 2007Online:
  2. ^"Nuha al-Radi," [Obituary],The Guardian,7 September 2007Online:
  3. ^al-Radi, Nura (2003).Baghdad Diaries: A Woman's Chronicle of War and Exile.New York: Vintage Books. pp. 213–217.ISBN1-4000-7525-4.
  4. ^"Nuha al-Radi," [Obituary],The Guardian,7 September 2007Online:;"Baghdad Diariesauthor Nuha Al Radi dies in Beirut, "Gulf News,8 September 2004,Online:
  5. ^"Memory of late Nuha al-Radi lives on through her art,"Daily Star,(Lebanon), 8 September 2004Online:
  6. ^"Nuha al-Radi," [Obituary],The Guardian,7 September 2007Online:
  7. ^Hann, G., Dabrowska, K. and Greaves, T.Y.,Iraq: The Ancient Sites and Iraqi Kurdistan,Bradt Travel Guides, 2015, p. 109
  8. ^Mehta, B., "Dissidence, Creativity, and Embargo Art in Nuha Al-Radi'sBaghdad Diaries,"Meridians: Feminism, Race and Transnationalism,Vol. 6, No. 2, 2006, pp. 220-235
  9. ^Gomaa, F.M.A. "Re-membering Iraqis in Nuha al-Radi’s Baghdad Diaries: A Woman’s Chronicle of War and Exile,"Feminist Formations,Vol 29, No. 1, 2017, pp. 53-70doi:10.1353/ff.2017.0003