Beauty centers, salons flourishing in Baghdad

Author: 
ASEEL KAMI | REUTERS
Publication Date: 
Thu, 2011-10-13 00:08

As Iraq’s violence ebbs and Baghdad life stabilizes, hair salons, gyms and beauty centers are starting to flourish again in the capital, bringing back a touch of glamour lost during the country’s bloody sectarian strife following the 2003 US-led invasion and the preceding economic sanctions in the 1990s.
“We were deprived because of security, and these centers were not even available. But now it is becoming normal again,” said Ali, sitting with strands of her hair wrapped in foil at a Baghdad salon.
Bombings and attacks have dropped sharply more than eight years after the invasion that toppled President Saddam Hussein, and the country is slowly rebuilding its economy with revenues generated by its recovering oil industry.
But hairdressers, beauty experts and cosmetic surgeons who fled the country or left for the more stable semi-autonomous region of Kurdistan in northern Iraq are now returning to re-establish businesses and tap into the capital’s demands.
For Ahmed Murad, who runs a salon in the Harthiya district near the Green Zone, more and more Iraqi women are these days are relishing a chance to indulge themselves.
“Iraqi women have suffered from pressures and suppression during the economic sanctions and even after the 2003 war,” said Murad. “Now Iraqi women are looking to the latest trends.”
In Baghdad, women often go without the hijab or traditional headdress, especially in private clubs or areas of the city considered less religiously strict. At gyms, they wear shorts and t-shirts. Some cover their heads again when leaving salons.
During the 1970s it was common to see women strolling Baghdad’s streets in miniskirts, although Saddam at times imposed stricter rules in an effort to tighten his political grip.
After the invasion, militias often imposed their radical vision of the religion on the population. Militias were known to demand hair salons remove pictures of women not wearing the hijab or headscarves as they believe is required.
As the worst of the sectarian violence has eased and the influence of fundamentalist groups has waned, Iraqi women are opening businesses and returning to more normal lives.
The country’s fledgling economic revival is now also allowing women to spend up to $100 on highlighting their hair at one of the city’s more upscale salons.
Murad himself was not immune from the war. He was arrested by the US forces in 2005, then released after three months of investigation. He fled Iraq for Istanbul where he stayed for two years before deciding to return.
While in Turkey, he studied hairdressing and came back to open a salon inside a secured area of a social club. After security improved he started again in Harthiya.
Murad has 300 families who come to him regularly at his salon, which is just one offering in a building with a health club, saunas, jacuzzis, facial care products and even a coffee shop for women who enjoy a coffee or smoking a shisha pipe. A Lebanese doctor has been contracted to practice at a cosmetic surgery clinic there. Iraqi women are looking for laser hair removal treatments and skin rejuvenation techniques as well as the whole range of surgery options.
“It is a whole home of women’s beauty and fitness,” said Yassin Taha, the owner of the beauty building which he started last year after selling his home.
Saba Al-Hussein, a laser expert in the Al-Shabakah beauty center in central Baghdad, left Iraq in 2006 and came back in 2009. She learned how to use a cosmetic laser for hair removal while living in Lebanon.
“There are bad things that happened, but the person should take advantage of them for the best. We ran away from Iraq, but leaving turned out to be useful,” Hussein said at her clinic.
“The sectarian period helped me, (as) I went abroad and became an expert in laser.” Al-Shabakah is a full-service center — beside the hairdresser section, gym, laser clinic, saunas and jacuzzis, and coffee shop, it will have a yoga department and will soon hold fashion shows, owner Ali Bulbul said.
Many Iraqi women look to Lebanon as an inspiration for beauty ideals in the Arab world. Glamorous Lebanese female singers and stars grace television programs and music shows seen around the region.
When Iraqis refer to idols of beauty, health care and fitness, they refer to Lebanon.
“The Iraqi women deserve to be pampered like those in the Gulf or Lebanese woman,” said Zeena Rashid, the manager of Al-Shabakah’s gym, where customers ran on treadmills.
“She deserves that after all the hardship she has been through.”

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