Lt. Col. Eric Price, the commander of the 8th Military Transition team in Mosul, told reporters at the time that the U.S. Army doesn’t often award medals to foreign troops. But the Americans were especially impressed with Barwary’s courage.

The Americans began calling him “Crazy Fakhir” for his willingness to face any danger.

Iraqi civilians and officials were equally fond of Barwary. He was famous for removing the bombs terrorists planted in Iraqi homes. But his fame wasn’t without consequences. While both Americans and the citizens of Mosul loved him, insurgents hated him.

Militants tried no fewer than five times to assassinate Barwary. He escaped unscathed until June 28, 2008, when a bomb exploded unexpectedly. He’d gone to defuse an explosive device, without realizing that the terrorists had buried a second remote-controlled munition under his feet.

The insurgents were ecstatic. They boasted on jihadi Websites that they’d killed Crazy Fakhir. The news even made its way into some international media outlets.

But he wasn’t dead.

The explosion took his right leg and partially smashed his right shoulder, but he soon told Kurdish reporters from his hospital bed that he was very much alive. There’s video of the aftermath—warning, it’s graphic.

“I know that my enemy, the terrorists are very happy, because they wounded me,” Barwary said. “Therefore, I hope to go back to my work very soon.”

Kurdish director Shinwar Kamal had covered Barwary between 2006 and 2010 and even made a documentary film about him called Jiyan bo Jiyane—meaning “Life for Life”—that aired on Kurdistan TV.

After that, there was little news about Barwary. But he resurfaced when Islamic State militants invaded Kurdish territory this year. Whenever Peshmerga liberated an area from the militants, photos emerged on social media—posted by Peshmerga fighters and by Barwary himself—showing Crazy Fakhir disabling bombs.

“When Islamic State attacked Kurdistan and many Peshmerga had been killed because of bombs, I remembered Fakhir,” Kamal told War is Boring, “[I] thought if he could be there, he would be able to disrupt those bombs.”

When Peshmerga fighters liberated Hassan Sham village near Mosul Dam, Kamal went there to film it.

“I saw Fakhir there,” Kamal recalled. “I asked him what he was doing there. He said that he volunteered to work again. He had a prosthetic leg and came to help Peshmerga and civilians.”

Kamal decided to make another documentary about Barwary. Kamal said that top Kurdish military officials repeatedly asked Fakhir to stop working.

They insisted that Barwary had already retired and had sacrificed enough for the Kurds. But Barwary insisted that he should be there—that he would be ashamed to ignore the war.

According to Kamal, Barwary was a celebrity on the front line. Whenever they arrived in a liberated civilian area, Peshmerga would rush to greet him and point out bombs he should clear.

The civilians and Peshmerga knew Barwary by his car.