Shafaq News– Erbil
Mam Khalil Cafe in Erbil’s historic
Qaysari Bazaar has become a living archive of Iraq’s modern political life,
with walls covered in photographs collected since the cafe opened in 1952.
The cafe was founded by the late Khalil Mohammed and is now run by his son, Mohammed Khalil, who told Shafaq News that the images include Iraqi political figures, cultural personalities, and foreign visitors. Some were taken during visits to the cafe, while others were gathered to document key moments and figures in the country’s history.
“The photos were never meant as
decoration,” Mohammed Khalil explained. “They became the identity of the
place.”
Regular patrons say the cafe offers
more than drinks. Mehdi Saleh, a longtime customer, recalled that the images
reflect eras he personally lived through, turning each visit into an act of
remembrance.
The venue has also drawn younger
visitors, creating a rare mix of generations in a city where politics remains a
constant topic of discussion. Mahmoud Omar told our agency that the surrounding
photographs give political debates “context and depth.”
In a country marked by decades of upheaval, residents say Mam Khalil Cafe has remained largely unchanged, preserving collective memory outside official institutions. Locals now commonly refer to it as Erbil’s “political cafe.”