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Iraqi Shiite garbage collectors say they make about $60/month in Karbala, Iraq, Wednesday, July 23, 2003. "While we make more now than before the war, it's still not enough. You can barely buy anything for the house; it's not enough for the family." Models of self-determination, Shiite controlled areas like Karbala are safer and starting to thrive more than under Saddam Hussein's regime. As the Shiite spiritual leader Ayottallah Ali Sistani has told his people to have patience with America, their patience is wearing thin with what they perceive as an occupation.

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Iraqi-Exiles107.jpg
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2009 Jeffrey Sauger Photography, INC.
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Iraqi Shiite garbage collectors say they make about $60/month in Karbala, Iraq, Wednesday, July 23, 2003. "While we make more now than before the war, it's still not enough. You can barely buy anything for the house; it's not enough for the family." Models of self-determination, Shiite controlled areas like Karbala are safer and starting to thrive more than under Saddam Hussein's regime. As the Shiite spiritual leader Ayottallah Ali Sistani has told his people to have patience with America, their patience is wearing thin with what they perceive as an occupation.
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Jeffrey Sauger Photography

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