AFP
Basra
As a child, Adnan Khalaf used to marvel at the Iraqi city of Basra's"shanasheel", finely crafted bay windows complete with intricate wooden latticework and ornate stained glass.
Today, the Iraqi retiree can only watch as the hallmarks of his hometown --"the city of shanasheel"-- crumble out of neglect. Authorities in Basra, the capital of Iraq's richest oil province, are struggling to provide the bare minimum of services to its inhabitants, as nepotism and corruption divert lucrative revenues from the black gold.
But the southern port city's"golden age"was not all that long ago. At 71, Khalaf remembers it well. He can still name the city's wealthy old families -- Jewish, Christian and Muslim -- who lived behind elaborate shanasheel in traditional homes along canals of Basra's Old City.
"But the city has been neglected, rubbish has been dumped into its waters,"said Khalaf."No one cares about it anymore."
The latticework windows -- also known as mashrabiya -- date back to the 16th and 17th centuries, according to Abdelhaq al Moudhaffar, head of the city's Palace of Culture and Arts.
They spread to other cities in Iraq, including Baghdad, and across the Levant and to Egypt.
When lights are turned on at night inside the traditional homes, inspired by a mix of Indian, Persian and Islamic influences, a patchwork of orange, green, red and blue light is cast from the stained glass windows onto the streets below. All the houses in the Old City, built by the commercial bourgeoisie and local aristocracy, were once adorned with shanasheel.
The wooden beams, coated with a natural wax to resist water and fire, made for strong homes.
Whenever King Faisal II, the last monarch of Iraq, visited Basra, he would stay with the governor on the river running through the city, now just a trickle of water where waste floats.
But with the fall of the monarchy, Saddam Hussein's rise to power and Iraq's multiple wars, the situation in Basra has slowly but surely deteriorated.
The 2003 US-led invasion was the coup de grace.
"The original inhabitants have gone, others have arrived. I've seen some dismantle the pieces of wood from their houses to sell them,"said Khalaf.