The Lost Images of Iraq’s Memory
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Dates2003 - 2024
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Author
The Lost Images of Iraq’s Memory traces what was never photographed: childhoods erased, cities breathing through war, and silence that spoke louder than headlines. A personal and visual record of what memory refuses to forget.
The Lost Images of Iraq’s Memory is a photographic narrative that moves between what was seen and what was silenced. Built over more than twenty years, the project weaves together personal memories, forgotten testimonies, and photographs taken in the shadows of war and exile. It is not a book about history as written in textbooks, nor a collection of war’s most visible scars. It is a search for what was never documented. A quiet journey into the missing images that once shaped a generation. Ali Arkady was born in Khanaqin, near the border of Iraqi Kurdistan and Iran. Like many, he grew up in a country where identity was a battlefield and memory was constantly erased or rewritten. There are no photos of his childhood, no visual evidence of the days he walked to school, whispered in Kurdish at home, or hid with his family from falling bombs. That absence became the seed of this project. When he first picked up a camera in 2003, it wasn’t to document events. It was to reclaim what was lost. His lens followed the unseen. Children learning in broken classrooms. Families sharing bread during power cuts. Mothers resisting through routine. From the fall of Baghdad to the war with ISIS, from refugee homes to border crossings, this book gathers the emotional traces left behind. It is not told through grand images of violence, but through small human moments that survive it.
The book unfolds across four chapters, guided not by time, but by feeling. Absence The photographs that never existed. Childhoods without documentation. The weight of exile. The stillness of things left behind. Silence Daily life in cities that breathe between bombings. The rhythm of ordinary things in extraordinary times. Survival Moments of resistance that go unnoticed. A child playing in rubble. A grandmother’s prayer. The courage of continuing. Memory Images that do not explain, but remember. A spiritual archive of a country that refuses to be forgotten. Each chapter includes short reflections and fragments written in a personal voice. Not analysis. Not description. But thoughts that drift between memory and imagination. Field notes from someone who witnessed too much, and is still trying to understand what remains.
Book Specifications:
Title: The Lost Images of Iraq’s Memory
Author and Photographer: Ali Arkady
Format: 24 x 30 cm
Estimated Length: 120–160 pages
Languages: Arabic & English (bilingual layout)
Paper: Matte 170g with a soft texture to echo the fragility of memory
Print: Digital or offset, depending on partnership and funding
Cover: Artistic design reflecting themes of fragmentation, silence, and nostalgia
P.S: The book file I have uploaded is a demo version intended only to illustrate the perspective, structure, and visual language of the project. It is not the final layout. The full book is still in development, with editing and sequencing in progress.