It may sound as if Baghdad resident Majed Abdennour is playing the lute, but on closer inspection the Iraqi musician is clutching a repurposed Kalashnikov. Wearing a blue blazer and dark tie, Abdennour strummed the strings of his unusual instrument which has an ammunition case as a sound box. The Iraqi teacher in his fifties had the assault rifle at home to “protect” himself and his family during the worst years of sectarian violence in the Iraqi capital. From 2006 to 2008 militants and extremist Islamists ruled Baghdad, while Sunnis and Shiites hid behind closed doors in their respective communities. “All of a sudden, it was as if all the ties that had connected us didn’t matter anymore, Iraq became a huge battleground, war was everywhere,” said Abdennour.