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Soldiers Host Women's Bazaar to Help Iraqi Families
American Forces Press Service
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BAGHDAD, Feb. 23, 2009 – Soldiers with the 63rd Armor Regiment got the
chance to buy homemade products and souvenirs and further the cause of
Iraqi women and their families recently when they hosted a bazaar to
sell the women’s handiwork.
 Soldiers
from Task Force 1st Combined Arms Battalion, 63rd Armor Regiment, buy
from a vendor during a women's bazaar at Forward Operating Base
Mahmudiya in Baghdad, Feb. 17, 2009. U.S. Army photo by Spc. Jamie
Vernon (Click photo for screen-resolution image);high-resolution image available. |
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"This is a great way for local women to improve their small businesses
and take care of their families," said Army Capt. Sara Woods, with the
regiment’s 445th Civil Affairs Battalion. "It also allows our soldiers
to purchase authentic Iraqi souvenirs and gifts."
Many of the
women in the Mahmudiyah area lost their husbands to insurgent violence
and struggle to provide for their families, making them easy targets
for insurgents. The Feb. 17 bazaar served as a way to show them they
can create a better future for their families.
"This is a good
project that is helping widows and people who need the money. I am so
happy to be a part of it," said Madiha Gumar, one of the small-business
owners and a member of the Mahmudiyah Women's Group.
This is
the second bazaar soldiers of the civil affairs battalion of Task Force
1st Combined Arms Battalion, 63rd Armor Regiment, have had the
opportunity to be involved with, and it was much larger than the first,
officials said. Those who took part in the bazaar said they were glad
not only to have something to take home, but also to give back to the
Iraqi community.
"It was very beneficial in what we're trying
to do for Iraq. From a personal standpoint, it was really gratifying to
know we were helping the widows and their children," said Dale
Hamilton, a civilian law enforcement professional attached to the task
force.
The bazaar was considered a success and presented a foundation for each woman present to continue to expand her business.
"They
came in and they sold these products to the soldiers, and I think each
one of them walked out with a couple hundred dollars," Army Lt. Col.
Anne Resty, a coordinator for women's initiatives, said. "So now
afterwards they can buy more fabric and other materials to make more
products that they can sell in the local markets as well."
The
event also helped to increase the good relationship between the people
of Mahmudiyah and the soldiers stationed on the forward operating base
there.
"The more they see us as helpful Americans and they get
to know us, they get to know that we have children, they get to know
that we have spouses, and they get to know that we're just normal
people, … and the benefits are multi-faceted," Resty said. "They're
going to think of us as normal people and [realize] that we can help
them."
(From a Multinational Corps Iraq news release.) |
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