Thirty four years after the chemical attacks in Halabja, Shno and Roshna Hamamin recount their memories of March 16th. For them it's a day that haunts their calendar, the same as it haunts the city they've remained since they were girls, among the youngest survivors of the attacks.
The chemical attacks in Halabja have defined the city, and defined its resilience both in spite of the atrocities committed and because of them. The Hamamin family now continues into the next generation, both sisters are now mothers, while their family tree's leaves continue to fall, in part due to the medical and psychological effects of 1988.