
Oriental Palace Hotel, Baghdad
January 19, 2004
by Mike Ferner
On January 19, 2004, I interviewed singer, songwriter and musician, Bruce Cockburn, at the end of his weeklong visit to Iraq hosted by the American Friends Service Committee. As I write this introduction from a Baghdad hotel, a diesel generator roars on the sidewalk below, providing power for an electrical system savaged by a decade of sanctions and two wars. The generator is drowned out only when U.S. fighter planes and helicopters roar overhead.
Cockburn’s latest release, “You’ve Never Seen Everything,” is one of over two dozen discs the Montreal artist has released, including “Breakfast in New Orleans, Dinner in Timbuktu,” “Dancing in the Dragon’s Jaws,” and “Trouble with Normal.” Cockburn had a few choice comments on some of his favorite topics and then we got down to some questions.
On what he hears from people in Iraq:
Increasingly, people will tell you that they feel one dictatorship has been replaced by another; that they have more freedom of thought now than they had before but they don’t have freedom of movement.