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Songs of Sadr Provide Soundtrack for Shiite Militia

Ali Delfi's song "Taste the IED" praises the fighters of the Shiite cleric Muqtada al Sadr and has been banned by the Iraqi government for inciting violence. He is shown at his recording studio in the Sadr City neighborhood of Baghdad.
Kais al-Jelele for NPR
Ali Delfi's song "Taste the IED" praises the fighters of the Shiite cleric Muqtada al Sadr and has been banned by the Iraqi government for inciting violence. He is shown at his recording studio in the Sadr City neighborhood of Baghdad.

As part of its campaign against the Shiite cleric Muqtada al Sadr and his militia, the Iraqi government has imposed a ban on distributing and even playing in public a genre of war-like songs that praise Sadr's fighters.

The ban went into effect earlier this month. Four Shiite militiamen fighters ignored it, however, when they drove through the battle-scarred streets of Baghdad's Sadr City this week, blaring distorted music from loudspeakers.

The song they played, with its driving beat and chorus of male voices, is one of scores of war-like anthems that have effectively become the soundtrack for Sadr's Mahdi Army.

This month, the Iraqi government banned this kind of music. Qassem Adda, a spokesman for Baghdad's Law Enforcement Operations Department, says these songs promote terrorism, sectarianism and rebellion against the elected Iraqi government. Anyone caught playing them will be arrested and charged with inciting terrorism.

The spread of these CDs "instigate violence against the coalition and Iraqi forces, mostly in Sadr City," Adda said in a recent interview.

Adda is talking about songs like "I Am the IED," which refers to improvised explosive devices, the weapon of choice among Iraqi insurgents. The song is basically an up-tempo version of traditional Shiite religious chants known in Arabic as ashid husseiniyah. But instead of praising Shiite saints, this song glorifies roadside bombs.

The video of "I Am the IED" features a bearded young man who smiles and dances, gesturing with his hands as he chants lyrics such as "If an armored vehicle passes, I will blow it up / If I get thirsty, I will drink blood from a Hummer."

This cheerful, lip-synched performance is all the more jarring because it runs over a violent backdrop of insurgent video clips, which show American Humvees and tanks exploding while driving over Iraq's heavily mined roads. Sound effects, including explosions and machine-gun fire, are mixed in with the music.

Songs such as "I Am the IED" have become a pop-culture phenomenon in Iraq, particularly among young Shiite men.

Until the government ban, many taxi and bus drivers played the pro-Sadr songs as they ferried their passengers around the city. The music is a form of defiance against Iraqi authorities and a way for Sadrists to identify each other in the street.

Supporters: Music Is 'Patriotic'

The ban is now driving this music underground — or in the case of a CD salesman named Ali, under the table.

He now hides his stock of Sadrist songs in a box under the table of his stall in a Baghdad market. If he trusts you, he will sell you the latest album for the equivalent of a U.S. dollar.

Ali says several new songs were released after the Iraqi government launched a crackdown on Sadr's fighters in the southern city of Basra last March.

"These songs are patriotic," Ali says. "Sometimes customers use them as ringtones for their cell phones."

Singer Opposes 'Unjust' Occupation

One of the most notorious Sadrist singers is Ali Delfi. His hit single, "Taste the IED," even can be heard sometimes playing at wedding parties in Sunni Muslim neighborhoods.

"Taste the noble IED, taste it, taste it," the chorus repeats. "Describe it to Bush and his slaves," Delfi then sings, "and tell him his army and his threats will burn like a house of reeds."

In person, Delfi is a slender, polite 26-year-old — hardly what one would expect from the firebrand who sings lyrics such as "Taste my bomb and feel its pain."

When asked whether he thought "Taste the IED" encourages listeners to plant bombs, he replies that it does — but only "against the occupation."

But, he adds, "I don't think those who listen to me would plant IEDs. There are special people who plant IEDs. Ordinary people don't make these bombs."

The singer insists he is trying to inspire resistance against what he calls an unjust U.S. military occupation — not against the Iraqi government, whose soldiers have also been fighting against the Mahdi Army.

Delfi has been singing Shiite chants since he was a child. But until 2003, he had to make and distribute his records secretly, because Saddam Hussein banned recordings of these Shiite chants.

Today, the singer's studio is located in the heart of Baghdad's embattled Sadr City, where Shiite fighters have used IEDs to fight American and Iraqi forces.

"Sometimes battles rage [outside] while I am chanting," Delfi says. "There is shooting and people are falling down and getting killed, but we go on recording our chanting."

Delfi steps into his small, sweltering recording studio, which, due to chronic blackouts, relies on power from a small generator. Here, he sings an a capella version of his favorite song, "Hel el Binna" or "The Strength Within."

Copyright 2023 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Ivan Watson
Ivan Watson is currently based in Istanbul, Turkey. Following the 9-11 terrorist attacks, he has served as one of NPR's foreign "firemen," shuttling to and from hotspots around the Middle East and Central Asia.

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