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Brief Description
The photographic exhibition Eden: Marshlands of Mesopotamia
took place in the framework of the Rodos Ecofilms Festival,
20-25 June 2006.
Eden portrayed in the exhibition is the largest wetland in
the Middle East. It is an expansive oasis flooded by waters
of mountains in Turkey and Iran that then flow into the Gulf
of Persia. Home to the civilization of the Sumerians, it is
also important for communities of Marsh Arabs who have lived
in that area for centuries. A population of about 100,000
Ma’dan, as they are known live in Messopotamian wetlands
today and their well being is linked to the wise use of the
wetlands.
As about one third of the wetlands of Messopotamia have been
drained and lost over the last 30 years it is important to
protect what remains.
Thirty seven color prints with portraits of Marsh Arabs,
village life, wildlife and landscapes taken during a
Biodiversity Survey organised in 2005 will be displayed in
the exhibition. The photographer, Mr Mudhafar Salim
participated in the Survey undertaken as part of a
Canada-Iraq Marshlands Initiative (CIMI) to restore the
wetland.
The exhibition was organised by the Embassy of Canada in
Greece, MedWet and the Ecofilms Festival who subsequently
collaborated with the Hellenic Society for the Protection of
the Environment and Cultural Heritage to bring it to Athens.
In Rodos the Exhibition was also supported by the
Organisation of Cultural Development / Prefecture of the
Dodecanese islands, Greece.
A limited number of copies of the catalogue are available
free of charge and can be ordered by following the link
below.
Languages: English, French, Greek
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