December 14, 2022

As we prepare to head home to America we conclude on a note of both wonderful memories and exciting beginnings… We will miss the warm, friendly Kurdish people…
 

The shop keeper was so very patient with us as he taught Jim how to prepare and wear the Kurdish headdress… which the Kurdish men are so proud to wear…

A frequent site were the men who picked up the litter and garbage- always done by hand. They would tie up the bags and leave them along the road for pickup.


 We will miss the acrobatics of the painting team who worked from their precarious positions walking the pipe ‘tightropes’… worker safety, alas, does not seem a top priority… but these men are excellent in their capabilities!

Many buildings that were under construction came to a halt during the attacks by ISIS throughout the country. Seeing these ‘skeletons’ was a common site... some of these buildings have been standing there for years, all patiently waiting for the future day when construction might begin again. (Bottom Left) This is the building, now under construction and next to our Duhok apartment, where the shooter started firing his AK-47 in the middle of the night with a consequent influx of police and Peshmerga soldiers to take him down...

And it was always interesting to see what the ‘cargo’ folks carried in their little pickups and autos... here a goat... a gaggle of geese... balloons!... and lots of boxes...

...and more balloons!... can't have too many mattresses... and lumber, always hoping it didn't slide out!...

...and (Top) you can’t have too many empty crates... (Bottom) and watermelons, makes it easy to stop anywhere to sell them...

On our 2-hour drive to Duhok each week this was one of the very few traffic lights we encountered just outside of Al-Shikhan. We always referred to it as “Sheik’s Crossing”...


We will miss the wonderful salads.  They got to know us in a few restaurants and the cooks would really dress up Barbara's salad artistically... (Bottom Right) Barbara’s favorite fish dinner... so wonderful!!

We ordered two simple entrees at this restaurant in Duhok and they brought us all this as well!


Our last dinner with our members in Duhok... it was a beautiful evening and we talked together for hours…


And who could forget the yellow watermelons!


We always enjoyed seeing the beautiful brides and the bridal party...

Young ladies on their engagement day... 


The bridal couple’s decorated car...



...and we can never forget the many sandstorms we experienced… it makes breathing a challenge…


A sandstorm in Duhok at sunset…


We had the opportunity to visit a few Muslim cemeteries... this one off the beaten path and in the Nineveh Governorate... a peaceful setting near a small village. We understand the bodies are not placed in coffins.

A cemetery in the city of Erbil...


We will miss our many shepherds and their wonderful flocks of sheep as we traveled throughout Iraq…


   

...all the beautiful sheep everywhere we went... and our devoted shepherds leading the flock almost always with their donkey in tow or meandering among the flock...


We will miss the beautiful, solitary countryside...

...often miles of nothingness...


We will miss our archeological explorations... this is a former Assyrian Temple within the city of Duhok and now covered by the ages... awaiting more formal excavation...


...another view of the buried Assyrian Temple in Duhok.

Jim enjoyed the responsibility of purchasing these twin vehicles on behalf of the Church... though it took him weeks to locate, purchase, and register them on behalf of Latter-day Saint Charities.

We will also miss working with Parosh at the Korek phone company. Parosh always helped us renew our service each month.


We will also miss the beautiful warm summer evenings and relaxing at the end of the day on our apartment balcony in Erbil…


Barbara fed the birds on our balcony ledge each morning and came out one day to find this... a coincidence or a message...?...

We will miss our Iraqi LDS members... here our Sulaymaniyah group and our Duhok group came together for a combined meeting in Erbil...


We leave Iraq happy with the knowledge that ground has now been broken on the pediatric cancer center that we worked with the Church and Heavenly Father’s inspiration to fund….


We are also excited to know that ground has been broken for the Nursing and Midwifery Development Center that we worked so hard, again with inspiration from Heavenly Father, to bring about with Eva at the helm.  We have been promised we will be brought back at its completion for the ribbon cutting ceremony.


Good bye, Kurdistan and Iraq! We will miss you and your wonderful people. But we are so looking forward to being with our family again at last!!


Homeward bound! We are landing in Atlanta, Georgia, USA at last!!


First stop Atlanta!  Hello Roberta, Travis, Alida, Canon, Zara, and Eli!!


In the USA at last!!  God bless America!!


❤️❤️🇺🇸🇺🇸


So happy to be with family in Cedar Rapids, Iowa!! Happy to be together at last!!


 Hello Beatrice, Kirk, Skylar, Carter, and Fennick!!


❤️❤️🇺🇸🇺🇸


Thank you all for your support and for all of the Zoom-get-togethers every two weeks throughout this long mission ❤️❤️❤️❤️




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