Rana Hussein House Of Saddam -
Life inside the Hussein compound was defined by extreme duality. Rana, along with her sisters Raghad and Hala, and brothers Uday and Qusay, enjoyed every material luxury: designer clothes, fast cars, and foreign education (albeit heavily monitored). However, they were also subject to their father’s erratic psychological control. He raised his children to be extensions of his ego. Biographers note that Saddam rarely allowed his daughters to develop independent political thoughts; they were tools for political alliances through marriage. The defining tragedy of Rana’s life occurred in 1995. Saddam ordered his sons-in-law (and Rana’s husband, Saddam Kamel) to return to Baghdad from Jordan, guaranteeing their safety. Rana, along with her sister Raghad, had fled to Jordan with their husbands months earlier, attempting to defect.
Photographs from July 2003 show a haggard, exhausted Rana walking out of a building in Baghdad alongside her sister Raghad. Unlike the defiant images of Saddam’s sons, Rana appeared shell-shocked. She was not detained for long. The Americans, realizing she held no military or intelligence value, allowed her to leave the country. rana hussein house of saddam
While historians debate Saddam’s military tactics and political crimes, Rana’s life serves as a footnote about the women of tyranny. She was a wife whose husband was killed by her father. She was a daughter whose father was killed by a nation. She is a mother trying to ensure that her children are known for nothing at all. Life inside the Hussein compound was defined by