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World

Iraqi ambassador visits horse farm in Kentucky

Tom Eblen - Lexington Herald Leader

January 30, 2009 06:59 AM

It takes a lot to rattle an ambassador, especially when the country he represents is Iraq.

So Samir Sumaida'ie, Iraq's ambassador to the United States, had a fine time during a whirlwind visit to Lexington, arriving after dark Thursday at a horse farm crystalized by the ice storm.

He came to Walnut Hall Ltd. to attend A Night of Literary Feasts, a fund-raiser for the Lexington Public Library Foundation. He was the guest of Meg Jewett and Alan Leavitt, who opened their home to more than 40 people who paid $500 each to dine with several authors from around the world.

The ambassador probably didn't realize the circa 1852 mansion had lost electricity and was being powered by a big generator. He seemed to think the dim lights were just part of the historic ambience.

"It's the way I'll always remember it," he said of his first visit to Kentucky.

"I love horses. I can't claim to know very much about them," he said. "But I have a sister and a niece who are crazy about horses. My father always was a great horse-lover. But I never had the opportunity to indulge."

The authors included Qanta Ahmed, who wrote In the Land of Invisible Women about Saudi Arabia, and Hooman Majd, who wrote The Ayatollah Begs to Differ, about modern Iran.

Read the complete story at kentucky.com

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