Al-Sidara (Arabic:السدارة), also known as theIraqi Sidara (Arabic:السدارة العراقية) oral-Faisaliyya (Arabic:الفيصلية), is a cap that can be folded flat when not being worn. The hat was introduced byKing Faisal I of Iraq shortly after gaining independence from theUnited Kingdom, with the intention to create a national dress for the head and to distinguish the people of Iraq from neighboring countries, most notably the Ottomans, who wore theFez, andArabs of theArabian Peninsula, who wore thethawb.[1] While the headwear's usage declined after the fall of the monarchy, the cap is still worn during special occasions and weddings.[2]
The headwear has also helped to distinguished Iraqis from other Middle Easterners and its introduction into Iraqi society by King Faisal I was regarded as one of the factors that created the modern Iraqi state. it comes in various colors, most commonly black.
Recently, the phenomenon of wearing the Sidara has been revived inBaghdad and other major cities within the country.[3]
While the cap has been associated with various military forces since the middle of the 19th century, the Iraqi Sidara was associated with both military and civilians in Iraq. This began On August 23, 1921, when Faisal I assumed the throne ofMandatory Iraq. King Faisal I dreamed of building a modern state in Iraq, and introducing a number of traditions and modern political and social systems to the country, a country that had just emerged from the Ottoman rule, which lasted nearly four centuries. Among these changes, the king wanted to find a national dress for the head and to distinguish the people of Iraq from neighboring countries, most notably the Ottomans, who wore theFez, andArabs of theArabian Peninsula, who wore thethawb.[1] It was distributed for the first time to ministers byRustam Haidar, one of the king's advisors at the time. The sidara was first worn by King Faisal I to encourage people to wear it, and thus it is also known as aFaisaliyya. The sidara was mainly used in big cities, like Baghdad and Mosul.[1][4][5]
It was also reported that King Faisal I paid close attention to the spreading of the Sidara as a national headwear. According to Iraqi architectHisham Munir, King Faisal I has once surprised his father with a visit; carrying a small bag of paper underneath his arm. Faisal I gifted the Sidara (which was in the bag) to his father and said "I came to you as a visitor, Abu Shawkat, to offer you a gift that I hope you will accept from me!" His father immediately accepted the gift and adopted the hat despite preferring the Ottoman fez.[6]
During the1936 Iraqi coup d'état, there were attempts to abolish the national Sidara to replace it with a European hat in an attempt to globalize Iraq. This was done in a law that was issued by the coup government[3] in which they banned the wearing of the headwear. This policy was inspired byAtatürk's reforms in which he banned the wearing of the Ottoman fez.[6] However, these attempts by the coup government didn't go anywhere. The Iraqi Sidara also representedEffendis, intellectuals, and the civil class inBaghdad. As such, the Sidara is famous for being a Baghdadi headwear too.[3]
Since the fall of the monarchy in Iraq, the popularity of the Sidara has gradually declined. The last major figure to wear it was former PresidentAhmed Hassan al-Bakr. Since the 1980s, it has become uncommon to see a person wearing the Sidara in Iraq, except in some particular places in both Baghdad andMosul, and on occasions that bear a traditional character. The Iraqi Sidara has disappeared from the Iraqi military uniform in the 21st century.[1] The Iraqi Sidara has recently been revived in cultural and artistic circles. Due to the current conditions in Iraq, the headwear represents a form of nostalgia for the past, especially a political one where the Iraqi state existed with proper laws, institutions, and sovereignty. Due to its return as a cultural symbol, the headgear became associated with the educated class too since national dresses are usually linked to a society's heritage and traditions by Iraqi academics.[3]
In Erbil, there's an annual exhibition that celebrates the Iraqi Sidara and its many variants and forms as an expression of adherence to the traditional heritage of old fashions.[3] During the annual festival, the people of the city are encouraged to wear the headgear to remember the past and old heritage and culture of Iraq.[7]
American actorMahershala Ali wears a black cap inspired by the Iraqi Sidara which he notably wore during the 201991st Academy Awards.[8]
Among the notable wearers of the Iraqi Sidara were King Faisal I, former Iraqi prime ministerYasin al-Hashimi,Mulla Abboud al-Karkhi, and Iraqi poetal-Zahawi.[3]