The renowned Qadori restaurant was the target of a suicide bomber in 2005. The restaurant reopened last year.
(ANDREA BRUCE/WASHINGTON POST)
Baghdad restaurant returns to business with hope on the menu
Revival symbolizes city's slow steps to normalcy
The renowned Qadori restaurant was the target of a suicide bomber in 2005. The restaurant reopened last year.
(ANDREA BRUCE/WASHINGTON POST)
BAGHDAD - In late 2005, a suicide bomber stepped inside Qadori, a renowned restaurant nestled alongside the Tigris River and detonated his explosives-rigged belt. The blast killed seven employees and 22 customers and shattered a totem of Baghdad life.
"It all happened in a single second," recalled Alaa Hashim, a 30-year-old cook who began working at the restaurant when he was 10. His brother died in the attack.
After two years of unemployment for Hashim, the restaurant is back in business, having reopened last year on a quiet street in a fortified part of the capital. Qadori's revival is a symbol, for some Baghdadis, of the capital's slow return to normalcy.
On a recent day, sweat ran down Hashim's forehead as he stood before a foot-tall fire. He tossed a spoonful of hot grease into a small frying pan, then tomato chunks, minced meat, and eggs - the ingredients of a popular Baghdadi breakfast dish called makhlamah. A slim boy named Ali, whose father was killed in the bombing, handed Hashim the eggs.
Outside, five police officers ran a checkpoint. At the end of the street, another policeman with a machine gun kept watch from a gray concrete tower flanked by 6-foot-high blast walls. Car bombers have often struck Palestine Street, a commercial thoroughfare that runs past the new Qadori.
A young man frisked each customer at the restaurant's entrance. Two other employees checked cars in the parking lot for bombs.
"I trust no one other than my workers," said manager Moshtaq Ali.
Hashim was back at work because the blast walls and body searches made him feel safer, although, he said, still "not 100 percent" safe. He also felt he could help Baghdad revive.
"If I quit and the others quit, then there will be no life," explained Hashim as he deftly assembled one makhlamah after another.
The restaurant's name is the nickname of its owner, Abdul Qadir Ahmed Hussein, a cheerful man with close-cropped gray hair, a mustache, and unshaven cheeks who inherited his savory recipes from his grandmother.
Thirty-five years ago, Hussein launched his business from a pushcart. In 1982, he opened a small restaurant in the capital's Bab al-Sheik enclave, and his reputation soon grew.
A few years later, he moved to Abu Nawas Street, a famous avenue that snakes along the Tigris.
Hussein was unhurt in the bombing, but Iraqis all over the world called him to make sure he had survived. He later suffered a stroke and traveled to neighboring Jordan for medical treatment. He returned to Iraq as soon as he was well.
He settled in Sulaymaniyah, a city in the semiautonomous Kurdish region that has been relatively free of violence.
He was not happy to discover another restaurant called Qadori, selling the very dishes he once sold.
He took the owners to court, where he won the case, but he eventually allowed the restaurant owner to use the name for an additional three months. He also let one of his employees open a Qadori restaurant in Syria.
He reopened in Baghdad in April 2007. The news of Qadori's resurrection spread across the capital.
Hussein, who is 70, can hardly speak.
He walks slowly from table to table, his shoulders sloped forward, greeting customers, especially the regulars. His staff has grown to 27 employees.![]()


