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Tough Minds and Tender Hearts
I
spent Martin Luther King, Jr's birthday in Washington, D.C. as part of
the Witness Against Torture fast, which campaigns to end all forms of
torture and has worked steadily for an end to indefinite detention of
people imprisoned in Guantanamo, Bagram, and other secret sites where
the U.S. has held and tortured prisoners. We're on day 9 of a twelve day fast to shut down Guantanmo, end torture, and build justice.
The
community gathered for the fast has grown over the past week. This
means, however, that as more people sleep on the floor of St. Stephen's
church, there is a rising cacophony of snoring. Our good friend, Fr.
Bill Pickard, suggested trying to hear the snores as an orchestra, when
I told him I'd slept fitfully last night.
There is a young boy in Mir Ali, a town in North Waziristan, in Pakistan, who also lies awake at night, unable to sleep. Israr Khan Dawar is 17 years old. He told an AP reporter, on January 14th, that he and his family and friends had gotten used to the drones. But now, at night, the sound grows louder and the drones are flying closer, so he and his family realize they could be a target. He braces himself in fear of an attack.
We're told that we will be more secure if the CIA continually attack the so-called lawless tribal areas and eliminates "the bad guys."
In late May and early June of 2009, while visiting in Pakistan, a man from the village of Khaisor, also in North Waziristan, told us about his experience as a survivor of a drone attack. Jane Mayer, writing in The New Yorker, mentioned that the people operating the drones and analyzing the surveillance intelligence have a word for people like him who managed to survive a blast and run away. They are called "squirters." So, I suppose he would have been considered a squirter.
This man, at some risk to himself, walked a long distance and took two buses to meet with us. Because of travel restrictions, we would not have been allowed to visit him in North Waziristan. His village is so remote that there are no roads leading up to it. Five hundred people live there. Often, western media refers to his homeland as "the lawless tribal area." One day, three strangers entered Khaisor and went to the home of vigil elders. For centuries, villagers have followed a code of hospitality, which demands that when strangers come to your door, you feed them and give them drink. It's not as though you can point them toward a Motel 6 or a 7-11. The strangers were welcomed into the home they approached and they left after having been served a meal. They were long gone when, at 4:30 a.m. a U.S. drone, operated by the C.I.A., fired 2 Hellfire missiles into the home they had visited, killing 12 people, two of whom were village elders. Children were dismembered and maimed.
"What do people do?" I asked, "if you've no Emergency Medical Teams, if you've no roads?" I was wearing a "tbutta" the long scarf that Pakistani women traditionally wear. "You see your scarf," my friend said. "We wrap it around the wounded person, as tightly as we can, to stop the bleeding." I could imagine the white scarf I wore becoming blood-soaked, in seconds.
The CIA uses sophisticated technology, extensive education and a great deal of money to collect intelligence. The drone surveillance produces picture images so vivid that when the CIA targeted a Taliban leader, Baitullah Mehsud, they knew that he was on the rooftop of his in-laws' home. His wife's parents, both doctors, were tending him, and had inserted an IV into his arm, giving him fluids. The drone attack killed all of them, and Mehsud's wife.
The CIA made fifteen attempts to kill Baitullah Mehsud. In the fourteen previous attempts, people were killed who may not have been members of a Taliban group. Some may have been family members of the murdered victim. Baitullah Mehsud's successor, Hakimullah Mehsud, was known to be more violent and unpredictable and also media savvy. According to speculation, the Jordananian suicide bomber who killed nine CIA agents, Dr. Al-Balawi, had gained credibility with those same agents by providing information about drone targets. But, the information he supplied named political rivals of Hakimullah Mehsud, or people suspected of disloyalty or people considered to be expendable.
This past weekend, celebrating the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King's birth, we've been guided by his words. One mantra for us, from Dr. King, urges us to develop tough minds and tender hearts. With tough minds, we must ask why we are being told that the drone attacks are successful.
With tender hearts, let us mourn for the families, friends and community members of the nine CIA agents who were killed in the suicide bomber attack at a CIA base in Afghanistan. Their arms will ache, longingly, for loved ones who will never return. In the spirit that says everyone in, nobody out, let us realize their humanity.
The CIA asks "who are the bad guys" so that they can eliminate them.
We are fortunate to be guided by the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, who asked the same question, but Dr. King actually, earnestly wanted to understand the humanity of his adversaries. At the time, he was speaking of the Viet Cong. He urged his listeners to try and understand how they are seen by their adversaries.
We need tough minds and tender hearts to build a world wherein the United States will not be seen as a menacing, fearful force. Let's work toward a world wherein 17-year-old youngsters won't lie awake at night, listening to low-flying drones and readying themselves to die.
- Posted in


19 Comments so far
Show All"One mantra for us, from Dr. King, urges us to develop tough minds and tender hearts."
Will cons ever learn?
Thank you Common Dreams for posting Kathy Kelly's persistant witness against war that is truly an American war against humanity. God bless Kathy Kelly and all pray to keep her safe.
from the end of Conrad's Heart of Darkness; "The Horror, The Horror"...
Keep up the good works, Kathy Kelly.
An eye for an eye makes the whole world blind.
US troops kill Mesud's kin. Mehsud's Taliban kill American soldiers. The CIA kills Mehsud with a drone. The Jordanian suicide bomber who killed nine CIA agents was providing intelligence to his handlers to target drone attacks upon rivals of Mehsud.
An eye for an eye makes the whole world blind.
Bill from Saginaw
Imagining the panoply of death enacted by my own nation in lands far away and foreign, I want to mourn. I know I should.
But the actual images of death, of severed limbs and exploded children are absent from my experience. I try to imagine. It is unimaginable.
Truthfully, what I mourn most viscerally is the absence of compassion in the leaders of my nation. A complete deficit of the ability to imagine a peaceful world. I mourn the hollow space where a heart was meant to be.
I mourn the smallness of the cries of my peoploe against these crimes.
I mourn our tragic inability to see.
In 1967 at Riverside Church, Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. delivered the sermon and speech, Beyond Vietnam: Time to Break Silence, and addressed three of America’s demons; racism, materialism and militarism.
He called our government; "the greatest purveyor of violence in the world today" and "the war in Vietnam is but a symptom of a far deeper malady within the American spirit."
Being a person of faith, King knew the power that was within and that, "there is nothing, except a tragic death wish, to prevent us from reordering our priorities, so that the pursuit of peace will take precedence over the pursuit of war."
King knew that the only hope for real change "…lies in our ability to recapture the revolutionary spirit and go out into a sometimes hostile world declaring eternal hostility to poverty, racism, and militarism…The choice is ours, and though we might prefer it otherwise we must choose in this crucial moment of human history."
Two years ago, Israeli President Shimon Peres invited Bono to attend a conference in Israel marking Israel's 60th Anniversary and to honor its contributions in medicine, science, and conservation.
Bono didn’t make that trip, but this summer he is scheduled to perform in Israel.
In a recent New York Times op-ed, Bono wrote of his hope "that the regimes in North Korea, Myanmar and elsewhere are taking note of the trouble an aroused citizenry can give to tyrants."
Bono wrote of his hope that "people in places filled with rage and despair, places like the Palestinian territories, will in the days ahead find among them their Gandhi, their King, their Aung San Suu Kyi."
Bono is apparently clueless that an "aroused citizenry" of people of conscience have already responded to the tyranny of Israel's military occupation and apartheid practices by joining the Palestinian civil society’s call for NONVIOLENT Boycotts, Divestments, and Sanctions against Israel until they change their undemocratic behavior.
Bono is apparently also unaware of the thousands of NONVIOLENT resisters to the Israeli occupation who have been imprisoned by Israel without charges or trials.
And so, to commemorate Martin Luther King Day 2010, I spun what King might say to Bono:
In 1985, you joined forces with a group of artists concerned about Apartheid in South Africa and were inspired by your meetings with several of them, to write "Silver and Gold"...
http://wearewideawake.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1559&Itemid=228
Sioux Rose
It's an interesting thing the way physical things like the crust of the earth have to break open to make a space for gemstones or perhaps stalactites to form gradually.
When the human heart breaks, possibly a parallel process ensues.
Between the tragedy that befell Haiti this week, the powerful witness that Kathy Kelly grants by making those our nation calls "enemies" into the precious persons that they are, and a personal loss, it would seem my own heart is bursting open. I know this type of process deepens the capacity for empathy. So many go about this world without feeling. They may know a great deal, amass virtual shopping bags full of facts; but to be vulnerable and allow THE self to stand still and JUST feel... wow. That takes courage. There is, after all, quite a lot to feel badly about these days. And yet there is also beauty radiating everywhere.
I took a drive tonight to sit by the Gulf waters and although still chilly, to be able to remain outside for the entirety of a magical sunset was Creator's gift to those wise enough to take in this bounty. The peace offered by the still waters truly delivers as the ancient poets and prophets related.
Kathy Kelly is the one that should have received the Nobel Peace Prize. Our times support upside down rules, bankrupt laws, appearances substituting for substance, and a worship of the false over the genuine. That helps explain why so many "evil doers" are apparently getting so many blessings, while the decent, kind, humble, generous, and just go without. The law of karma eventually balances the scales.
It seems my dear friend, my life mentor, was taken from this world perhaps because his superhuman capacity for compassion was needed on the other side at this time. I used to think that when AIDS first impacted the gay community, it was so that a lot of hip gay males (granted the soul is without gender, given that it's a compilation of all prior lifetimes lived) would "cross over" first to get the tables ready. Most of the best Maitre d's I've known were gay... and since predictions of earth changes go back many decades and they appear to be currently escalating, lots of tables may in fact be waiting on the "other side." Eventually, we all spend time there. And I wonder if people truly understood the eternal nature of what we term life, if they'd treat this blue-green sphere with greater love for the simple knowledge they'd face their inevitable return to this place... much like a time-share vacation plan.
Sioux Rose, thank you. Your thoughts are wise, nurturing and beautiful.
Sioux Rose
IOWA: Thank you for the gracious compliment. My spirit needs it as nourishment these days!
In a world of video-game war (and video-games about war) the attacks of armed drones is the ultimate dehumanization of "the enemy," down to pixels on a monitor. So what if they fly apart in pieces? It's not really real to the operators -- there is no empathy, no compassion, no sense of the tragedy involved.
No blood and guts.
Thank you Kathy for reminding us of the reality of the wars we fight -- if "fight" is the right word for a remote-control conflict -- maybe "wage" is a better term. How innocent people get maimed and die. How clueless is the average American getting his or her "news" from the Fawning Corporate Media.
You put human faces to the "collateral damage."
Thank you.
Gary
the everlasting truth is that someone needs to run against obama in the 2012 new hampshire primary. announce now, so obama will feel heat and pressure from the left. mccarthy got 43% of the vote aginst johnson in 1968, so surely in these turbulent times of perpetual war and near depression, someone who started early could match or exceed mccarthy's figure. to consider, too, is the fact that new hampshire is now more democratic than before, the democrats having won the vote there in the last two presidential elections, and gore barely losing there in 2000. who's got the courage to take up the progressive cause and stick it to obama, the white house's first neo-tom?
The day the ignoble peace prize was given to Oboma, I said it was a travesty that it was not awarded to a real peacemaker like Kathy Kelly. It should have been called the Orwellian Peace prize. Obama was not worthy of it. I wonder who came in second,Dick Cheney! According to the Noble Peace Prize committee, the saying should be: blessed are the warmakers. Kathy Kelly: blessed are the peacemakers like you.
"With tender hearts, let us mourn for the families, friends and community members of the nine CIA agents who were killed in the suicide bomber attack at a CIA base in Afghanistan. Their arms will ache, longingly, for loved ones who will never return. In the spirit that says everyone in, nobody out, let us realize their humanity."
Why, man, they did make love to this employment,
They are not near my conscience. --
Hamlet, Act 5, Scene 2 56-57.
Žižek has scathing commentaries for those who urge us to 'realize [the] humanity' of such.
First we lose our faith and then we lose our humanity when for any purpose we allow violence to beget violence, condone killing of innocent children, and make our way into darkness. May the good in us all help find peaceful resolution of our differences. Thank you Kathy Kelly.
"Let's work toward a world where 17 year-old youngsters won't lie awake at night, listening for the sounds of low flying drones and readying themselves to die."
For Wall Street.
I don't pretend to know how to map an alliance between conservatives and progressives, but I know the starting point: Wall Street.
What is the profit margin on a single Hellfire missile?
What about two?
Why should bankers profit from war or debt?
Do you really believe Martha Coakley AND Scott Brown even care?
"With tender hearts, let us mourn for the families, friends and community members of the nine CIA agents who were killed in the suicide bomber attack at a CIA base in Afghanistan. Their arms will ache, longingly, for loved ones who will never return. In the spirit that says everyone in, nobody out, let us realize their humanity. "
Not much "humanity" in the US/CIA prison at Bagram, where last December, writer Andy Worthington told an audience at London's Cochrane Theatre, that not one lawyer had ever been allowed to set foot. Makes that other US shame on humanity, Guantanamo, look like a holiday camp.
My admiration for what you do is boundless, Kathy, however, I cannot agree with this. Any precious human life lost is tragedy. But these people chose to be in a far away place, of which, like Iraq, they knew nothing or little and they, undoubtedly, would have killed without losing sleep. That's what they do.
US personnel, in the name of liberation, have imprisoned, tortured, raped, burned, pillaged, wiped out villages, wedding parties, funeral mourners. Those people have no choice as to whether they are killed by US personnel, the CIA and troops have every choice not to be in Afghanistan for the oil/gas pipeline the pre-invasion government refused the US Administration - or Iraq for the oil. 'Nuremberg' is write large on both invasions.
Kathy Kelly you are still the one. I really love you.
Also I have tremendous admiration, respect and awe for all you do. The awe is about how you always, always show up when and where we need you. And where I know I can't go cause I do not have your courage.
Stay well dear friend.