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But, surprisingly, the biggest day-to-day threats they have had to look out for so far when running are coils of razor wire littering the Green Zone. `Stitches are usually
the result of this,' says one Hasher. The tradition has spread worldwide, with more than 1,500 fraternities, or `Hashes', from Antarctica to Milton Keynes. Being as much about the chase as the after-parties, the two normally overlap – which explains why they describe themselves as `a drinking club with a running problem'. |
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Early
days: The original Hash House in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia |
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Billed as `the Most Dangerous Hash House in the World', the Baghdad Hashers have been on the go since 1981. `Back then, it was bloody huge,' says Alan Kennedy, one of the earlier members. `And very international – we had people from all over... and 60 Irish nurses!' Even then, Iraq was not very safe. During the Iran-Iraq War, Kennedy recalls: `Before one particularly hairy run, the Iraqi army decided to illuminate our camp. site with frequent bursts of shell fire.' On another occasion, drinking antics did not go down well with the local police force; one unfortunate expat was arrested and beaten for smelling of beer. In 1989, the club had further problems. The first Gulf War saw many of the Hash retained in Baghdad as `guests' of Saddam Hussein – but it still kept running. The Iraq group eventually faded but restarted in 2004. A mix of reconstruction contractors, the odd private security guard, a nurse or two and a handful of military personnel, they have to face very similar dangers to the group's founders. `We frequently deal with mortar and rocket impacts, car bomb warnings and all other war-zone obstacles to drinking,' says current member Ben Thomas. However, none of these stops them having a good time. `Each run is an adventure all its own,' comments a Hasher from the US. `Twice now, we've ended up on the police blotter, which is quite an accomplishment in a war zone.' With riotous initiation schemes involving bare bodies, blocks of ice and lots of beer, running routes entailing a touch of danger and parties that make them forget a war is on, they succeed in `always maintaining an enjoyable stress relief at the end of a long week,' says Thomas. Risky business What makes them gather in the face of danger? `The strong bonds forged hashing in Baghdad in often trying conditions is no doubt the thing that keeps us together,' argues Kennedy, who is planning to meet with 80 other ex-Baghdad Hashers this year in Snowdonia. The Baghdad Hashers agree: `It is this friendship and camaraderie that makes life in the Green Zone more like a home. |
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