Following
is an excerpt from an Al-Arabiya TV
report, which aired on August 2, 2011:
Studio anchor:
"The Orange" has appeared again, this time on Facebook. The
Facebook "Orange" is none other than Hajja Umm Riyadh.
Reporter: For
over two years, the Facebook page of "The Orange" has been
preoccupying young people, who wish to befriend this beauty. Investigation,
however, has revealed that "The Orange" is, in fact, the 75-year-old
Umm Riyadh, whose longing for her sons, who emigrated from Iraq, drove
her to learn how to use a computer.
Within four years, she
managed to transform herself from an illiterate woman, who could not
read or write, into a politician and critic.
Umm Riyadh’s husband:
The wife kept nagging me, so I bought her a computer and a camera, and
she learnt and began to use the camera and to talk with her children.
Reporter: "The
Orange" posts her suggestions about the political process in Iraq,
and about the contest between Allawi and Al-Maliki, as well as about
singing in the Arab world, and the transition from traditional singing
to dance music. The Orange's homepage is full of renowned singers, including
Umm Kulthum, Fayrouz, and Saadi Al-Hali. She maintains regular contact
with her friends and her children, to the point that she feels as if
they continue to be close to her.
Umm Riyadh: I
sit facing my son and can see him in front of me. I switch on the camera.
I have friends there, as well as my children.
Reporter: Strong
willpower enabled this woman to transform herself from an ignorant woman,
who could not read or write, into a political pundit and a music connoisseur.
The maternal instinct in Iraq still leads to inventions with first-rate
results.
[…]