Building Peace in Iraq
A Careful Reordering of our Priorities and Assumptions
Recently I had the opportunity to spend two weeks in the state of Colorado, giving poetry readings and speaking to communities about a unique American-Iraqi partnership called Direct Aid Iraq (www.directaidiraq.org). In Durango, a mountain community of 16,000 in the northwest corner of the state, I read a poem to audience members at Ft. Lewis College. The setting of this poem is Samawa, a predominantly Shiite city south of Baghdad. And the dramatic situation in the poem is an actual interview, at three in the morning, with Suad, a Sunni mother of four, as she is packing her belongings and preparing to flee with her children at dawn.
I'd read the poem in public many times before, and my main purpose was to share Suad's experience and perspective. Her hope:
My dreams for my children are simple dreams, the same as other mothers. To live in safety and security in a country where they can be educated...
And her fears:
Of course I'm afraid for my children. Their future is uncertain now. I'm afraid they will be kidnapped, or maybe they will die from a bomb... It's everyday. Everyday we see killing. What did we do?
The poem suggests that Suad's words are jagged and sharp enough to lacerate the paper and cause it to bleed, and that that blood will mark the hands of everyone who reads this book. During an open comment and question period after the presentation, a college student referenced the poem and asked if I thought we all had Suad's blood on our hands. I responded that my point in using the image was different: I wanted to signify that encounters with Iraqis, with their stories, words, and perspectives, would mark us and could, if we were open to them, transform and inspire us. He wasn't, however, willing to let me off the hook so easily. "Don't you think our consumptive lifestyle-especially our enormous energy use-drives this kind of war?" he asked. "Don't you think it makes us partners in crime?"
I'll leave the question there, unanswered, and I'll reframe and ask it in a different form: Five and a half years into this festering invasion and occupation, what is our responsibility to Iraq and to Iraqis? What is our responsibility to Suad and her family? To Mustafa, whose back was broken in a US missile attack in the first weeks of the war, who needs physical therapy and social support if he is ever to walk again? To Hussein who lost his eye and part of his skull, barely surviving the explosion of a car bomb while walking to classes at a university? To eight year-old Lateifa who lost her entire family-both parents, three sisters, and three brothers-when a bomb exploded during their visit to a holy site in Najaf? To nine year-old Leila whose legs were run over by a US Humvee?
Every day in the Middle East, a team of Iraqi refugees asks themselves these same questions. Their particular answers give flesh and bone, breath and life to the humanitarian aid and peacebuilding program, Direct Aid Iraq (DAI). They asked themselves these kinds of questions recently when they met Haifa, a fifty year-old Iraqi woman, who had been shot in the face by a militia using phosphorous munitions most likely made in the US. These hideous munitions are designed to cling to and burn a person's flesh. The munitions that struck Haifa's face, burned out not only her left eye but the bone structure around it, leaving a gaping hole where her eye had been. They also damaged Haifa's remaining eye, blinding her.
Two years later, under the auspices of an international NGO, Haifa came to Amman for medical care. She would need at least three operations: to rebuild the bone structure in her left eye socket; to insert a prosthetic eye; and to attempt to restore sight to her remaining eye. Operating with a mandate to cover only the first of these surgeries, the international NGO referred Haifa to DAI for the other two. Raising the funds and arranging these operations would be one challenge, but Haifa would need to remain in Amman for a number of months, waiting for and then recovering from surgeries. Because Haifa was blind, she would need full-time care-someone to cook, clean, and shop for her, someone to help her with a hundred things she previously did for herself. And how would she manage travel back and forth to medical appointments? Haifa would also need social support to help her ongoing efforts to deal with both the trauma of losing her eyesight and the challenge of facing an uncertain future. When Najlaa Al-Nashi, DAI's coordinator in the Middle East, visited her, Haifa would always cry. "I can't do anything," she would say. "I can't even go to the bathroom by myself." Najlaa stepped in and became an important part of Haifa's social support.
These kinds of medical social work considerations and the tasks they engender may not be glamorous or newsworthy, but they are an essential component of peace-work among Iraqis displaced by violence, an essential part of helping people maintain intact lives. This, after all, is the goal: how to support people so that they can participate in building Iraq's future.
Battlefield Without Borders Kathy Kelly and David Smith-Ferri read from Battlefield without Borders
and Kathy Kelly shares thoughts about continuing to help victims of the
Iraq War in spite our feelings of despair at the way things have been
going. "We can borrow courage from the Iraqis themselves," she says. SEE ROBERT SHETTERLEY'S PORTRAIT OF KATHY KELLY |
This does not mean we must relocate to the Middle East. Being "in relationship with Iraqis," however, may mean a careful reordering of our priorities. It means seeking opportunities to expose ourselves to Iraqi stories and perspectives, through firsthand accounts of encounters with Iraqis, public presentations, face-to-face meetings with Iraqis in our communities, and so on. It requires cultivating an openness. It means listening to Iraqis' stories, and carrying them with us. It means a willingness to be "drawn in," not uncritically, but in such a way that we grant the "inside" perspective the validity and centrality it deserves.
Being "in relationship with Iraqis," may also mean a careful reordering of our assumptions. It means learning to trust that Iraqis are the best source for information about their own experiences. It means shedding the notion that the US somehow knows best what Iraq needs. No, Iraqis are the best source of information about how peace can be achieved and sustained in their country. It means shedding the notion that the US is going to rebuild Iraq. No, it is Iraqis who will rebuild their country. Do they need and deserve assistance? Of course. Does the US bear enormous responsibility to support that rebuilding? Certainly. Does the international community bear responsibility? Yes-at the very least for not mounting a stronger and more effective opposition to the invasion in the first place, a charge, in fact, that can be laid at all of our feet.
If we want to support Iraqis in building peace, we can start by genuinely facing the same difficult questions they are facing: what is my responsibility to Iraqis? How can I live it out? My own effort in this respect has lead me to conclude that Americans are best cast in a supportive role. The question for us as individuals and as organizations is the same question that our government should be weighing: who are the wisest Iraqis? What are the best plans and efforts among Iraqis, and how can we support them?
![]() | |
The Iraqis we've met through DAI want us to listen and to care. They want us to care enough to look closely at our lives, and yes, as the Ft. Lewis College student suggested, to examine our lifestyles. They want us to care enough to reorder our priorities, to be smart and strategic so that we are in a strong position to support them. They want us to ask some obvious questions about the ways we use our resources and to act on the answers: Do we really need the new furniture, the new wardrobe, the new entertainment center? They want us to learn to live with less so that we have something to share with them. They want us to be generous. They want us to take some risks, to trust that generosity now will not condemn us to poverty in the future.
Here's a slightly different angle on it. The Iraqis we've met through DAI don't want charity. They want justice. These aren't people who have been injured and displaced by a natural disaster, but by war-by human folly, greed, violence, and criminality. They want actions that will help restore their capacity to build a productive future. For Americans who also want justice, the question becomes: what are we willing to risk, change, sacrifice in order to be a part of this restoration?
Twitter
StumbleUpon
Facebook
Delicious
Digg
Newsvine
Google
Yahoo
Technorati


12 Comments so far
Show All"Conserve and use alternative renewables of our own and it will be harder for the political and corporate elites to misuse the army for wars for oil."
Excellent point. As is the comment on restraining consumerism.
If America would get rid of its macho egotistical maniacal disease as well as the rampant consumerism disease, we wouldn't be fighting wars for oil just to gather up cheap petro-manufactured shit. Plus, we need to over turn the ban on cannabis and let some of that substitute for oil as well. Conserve and use alternative renewables of our own and it will be harder for the political and corporate elites to misuse the army for wars for oil.
Is this a joke? The responsibility is enormous. The US owes Iraq ,and indeed the world, the incarceration of George Bush and Dick Cheney AT THE VERY LEAST. Then the US must provide billions in reconstruction reparations payments for a prolongued period of time and no less than 500 billion over the next 10 years. Then the US must promise never to do this again to Iraq OR ANY OTHER COUNTRY IN THE WORLD. That is simply the truth.
Compensation?
Iraq under Saddam enjoyed the best edcuational standards and the best
health standards in the middle east. Saddam was able to provide that
because they bought the rights to their own oilfields, and the oil
companies accepted generous payments for what arguably belonged to Iraq
in the first place.
And then the US installed, US supported, Hussein
government made a mistake. Saddam sought permission to invade Kuwait,
and with the President not available, he obtained it from the US
Ambasador.
Suddenly, Saddams's government, only recently held in high enough esteem
to be provided with chemical weapons, 3 billion dollar with of "aid"
tied to military spending, and visits from Donald Rumsfeild, bore the
full force of western media demonisation.
The the US military reported that Iraq was totally dependent on the
water processing plants and the power stations that powered them.
Without that, they reported, Iraq would suffer from epidemics of disease.
http://www.gulflink.osd.mil/declassdocs/dia/19950901/950901_511rept_91.html
The US proceeded to bomb the water treatment plants and the power
stations. And then applied a decade of sanctions that prevented the
rebuilding of the water treatment plants and the power stations. The
result was 1.5 million deaths - 500,000 of them children.
Then after years of Whitehouse lies, we had shock and awe when cities
were bombed with depleted uranium missiles. The gift that keeps giving:-
http://www.anti-bases.org/depleted_uranium/background.htm
http://www.thepeoplesvoice.org/cgi-bin/blogs/voices.php/2006/04/29/p7926
Now we have an Iraq where power for a few hours a day and scant running
water is STILL the norm. An Iraq where there is almost no education.
An Iraq where most people stay in doors because of fear. An Iraq with
another million dead and with 4 million refugees. An Iraq with a US
puppet government. An Iraq that can never have its freedom from the US
until the oil runs dry. An Iraq whose scars of traumatisation will not
be eradicated in a century.
Compensation? I have yet to HEAR of compensation from the
Whitehouse. But how can you compensate for DU babies, a million dead,
4 million refugees. How can you compensate for being under the jackboot
of the US military.
And to top it off, with 10 trillion debt, with its
economy about to go belly up, the US in no position to compensate.
The U.S. is obligated by the rules of war to put Iraq back the way we found it...we will put it back better than we found it because thats what Americans do
much like Japan and Germany, we kicked their asses and now they are pretty good places to be...we'd rather have them as economic competitors than adversaries...
SnowWolf
You are fighting an uphill battle here my friend. Most simply do not understand the military realities of the US and what it means to the world.
Picking a small piece its projected as the whole magilla. Much as they say the worlds economies are global now and what happens in the US no longer matters to the rest of the world.
Iraq will be whatever it will be, I don't think we can restore it, in the end they may have to clean up our mess. We'll see. They have never been a Democracy and I don't see why they should adopt our system unless they want to. We can't choose for them, its their country.
"much like Japan and Germany, we kicked their asses and now they are pretty good places to be"
you don't seem to understand, they're kicking our asses.
4k plus deaths, 20k plus wounded, $10 billion per mth & despite the "success of the surge", there's no end in sight.
"we will put it back better than we found it because thats what Americans do"
and i assume we decide what is "better" , in other words, rebuild it in our own image.
sadly, your ethnocentrism is far too common in this country.
But what we're talking about are these NGO's with the CIA's backing going in and deliberately creating fear based conditions in Iraq, just as they have done time and time again; where the farmers can't get their produce to market, where the markets are unsafe to shop, where children can't go to school, where women are terrified inside their homes as well as outside their homes, where people can't go to church, where government utilities grind to a complete halt and fail, where the hospitals are treating wounded people instead of sick people.
They use terror. This is a technique that they're using to traumatize the society so that it can't function. I don't mean to abuse you with verbal violence, but you HAVE to understand what your government and its agents are doing. They go into villages, they haul out families. With the children forced to watch they castrate the father, they peel the skin off his face, they put a grenade in his mouth and pull the pin. With the children forced to watch they gang-rape the mother, and slash her breasts off. And sometimes for variety, they make the parents watch while they do these things to the children. This is nobody's propaganda. This is the USA's shame.
Make-Believe Maverick
A closer look at the life and career of John McCain reveals a disturbing record of recklessness and dishonesty
By TIM DICKINSON
http://www.rollingstone.com/news/coverstory/make_believe_maverick_the_real_john_mccain
Direct democracy. No politicians. It can work in Iraq too.
Really? It can work in Iraq too?
Where else is it working?
Direct democracy has given the Swiss no boom and bust economy, no wars in over 150 years though surrounded by warring nations, no drug war and no drug problem, few immigration problems, the best healthcare and educational systems, a healthy environment and the highest per capita income in the world though lacking natural resources. For more information on Direct Democracy:
http://ni4d.us/