[lbo-talk] Talking to troops: VITW in Baghdad

LouPaulsen LouPaulsen at attbi.com
Sun Apr 13 06:20:18 PDT 2003


This letter was sent to us because we are on the Voices in the Wilderness e-mail list. I would really like everybody in the United States (and the imperialist world) to read it. I suppose this may be a utopian desire, but what the hell.

Kathy Kelly, of Chicago, is one of the real American heroes of this war and really of this last decade. Living in the same city with Kathy (when she is here) is the source of the same kind of civic pride for an anti-imperialist that living in the same city with MJ's Bulls was for a basketball fan. If there were any justice she (and Voices) would be getting considered for the Nobel Peace Prize. Pacifists with this level of strength, sincerity, dedication, selflessness, and flat-out heroism are raising the bar for us Marxists to a thoroughly challenging height. While some of us are trying to figure out how to approach "the troops" here in the states, she is talking to them in an intersection in occupied Baghdad. There was a thread on lbo-talk about "what can we do these days that would be the equivalent of the Abraham Lincoln Brigade?" - well, this kind of example is worth thinking about. (Obviously the above goes for the International Solidarity Movement in Palestine as well.)

The last time I saw Kathy it was at a public meeting at DePaul University here back in January where she and I both spoke. If she has a sectarian cell in her entire body, she has kept it a secret. She talked about the Iraqi people in a passionate and compassionate and very realistic way. When anyone tried to bait her into talking about the evils of Saddam Hussein, she diverted all the moral outrage toward U.S. militarism. When I do that it gets put down to my being a statist authoritarian apologist for dictators etc., but when Kathy does it somehow it completely disarms the questioner; nobody could ever imagine her as being an apologist for any kind of evil. Knowing that she has been in Baghdad throughout the war has been a continual source of worry to me. She and the other members of the peace team repeatedly visited the hospitals which have now been sacked. I can only imagine the feelings of horror which she had to put aside in order to write this letter. You have to have a remarkable degree of inner strength to care *personally* for people in the gunsights of the imperialists, knowing that their suffering will then be your suffering, and to not distance yourself from it by any kind of avoidance, denial, philosophic rationalization, or despair.

When she gets back, Inshallah, she (and Voices) are of course facing government persecution over various fines which they have incurred for their Iraq solidarity work over the years, defying sanctions, etc. They paid their fines in Iraqi dinars at the 1990 rate of exchange. I don't think the administration will be satisfied with this somehow.

Louis Paulsen Chicago

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Dear Friends,

It was with great relief that we received an update from Kathy today. Only through unreliable satellite connection have we received sporadic word from our team still in Baghdad. We think Kathy's letter which follows, speaks volumes to the current tragedy playing itself out on the streets of Baghdad and undoubtedly, throughout Iraq.

Please bear with us as we discern next steps, not just with our team in Iraq but here at home as well. As government and media pundits alike insist that this war is "ending," we urge the doubling of efforts to call attention to the fact that war doesn't end for those who have lost limbs, loved ones, homes, and precious sense of security to blind greed.

Hello Friends, April 10, 2003

Early this morning, Umm Zainab sat quietly in the Al Fanar lobby staring at the parade of tanks, APCs and Humvees that slowly rolled into position along Abu Nuwas Street. Tears streamed down her face. "I am very sad," she told me. "Never I thought this would happen to my country. Now, I think, my sadness will never go away."

Wanting to give Umm Zainab some quiet time, I took her two toddlers, Zainab and Miladh, outside to enjoy the sunshine and fresh air. Several soldiers stood guard not far from me and the children. I wanted to bring the children over to them, to let them behold these tiny beauties. But, no, too much of a risk-what if it would add to Umm Zaineb's pain?

Eun Ha Yoo, our Korean Peace Team friend, unrolled a huge artwork created by a Korean artist, Chae Pyong Doh, and sweetly laid it out in the intersection just outside the Al Fanar. As I write, Neville Watson and Cathy Breen are taking their turns sitting in the middle of it.

A map of the world covers the top third; grieving victims of war fill the middle third; piles of ugly weapons with various flags scattered over them bulge out of the bottom third. Neville has set up his prayer stool and a small wooden cross where he sits. Cathy is wearing her "War Is Not The Answer" t-shirt.

At least a dozen soldiers have stopped to talk with us since we began the vigil at 3 this afternoon. "OK, can you tell us your side of the story?" asked one young man. "Can I sit there with you for awhile?" asked another. Each of them has assured us that they didn't want to kill anyone. One young man said he was desperate for financial aid to care for his wife and child while struggling to complete college studies and work full time. He felt he could gain some respect in this world and also help his family by joining the Marines. He's relieved that he was stationed at the rear of a line coming up from the south. His role was to guard prisoners. He didn't shoot anyone. But he saw US soldiers shoot at a civilian car with three passengers as it approached. The child in the car survived - both of his parents were immediately killed. "They could have shot the tires," said the soldier. "Some just want to kill."

One soldier offered earnest concern for us, saying "You're sitting in a dangerous place." We smiled. "Thanks," I said, "But we've been in a dangerous place for the past three weeks." He was puzzled. "What do they mean," said a soldier standing next to him, "is that they've been here all through three weeks of bombing."

"Do you try to put yourselves in our shoes?" asked one soldier after he'd respectfully listened to me explain major contradictions between US rhetoric and practice regarding Iraq. "Well, yes," I said, "We try. We're taking the same risk as you by being here, and perhaps an even greater risk since we're unarmed and unprotected. Actually, just now we're lucky not to be burdened by all that heavy gear."

"Yeah," said the soldier, "It's really hot. I don't have much of an appetite. I just give away most of my rations, - give 'em to these people."

Hassan, one of the shoeshine boys, came over to join us, carrying a ration packet. He opened it, came across processed apple spread, and a few other curious items, then decided to donate it to us. Now the flies have discovered it.

It looks like we're on "lock-down" for a while longer. Iraqi minders are gone, --US soldiers are here. They're uncoiling barbed wire at the intersection. Anyone wanting to walk across the street is stopped, questioned and searched. Since I began this letter, there have been four huge explosions nearby. Looting and burning continue, here in Baghdad. I'm sick of war-disgusted to the point of nausea. I think all of us at this intersection, residents of the Al Fanar, journalists in the Palestine Hotel next door, and soldiers on patrol, share the same queasy ill feeling. The line, "War is the health of the state" makes no sense whatsoever here.

With love,

Kathy Kelly

We hope Kathy's words have moved you as much as they have us. There is not a single person who partakes in or experiences this war, these acts of violence, who is not profoundly effected, be they a soldier or a civilian. War, and all the misery that it brings, is truly our common enemy.

Peace and hope,

Stephanie Schaudel, for Voices in the Wilderness



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