[Peace-discuss] From Inside Iraq, what it is really like there ************ BE PEACE and send it out to ALL!**************

Chuck Minne mincam2 at yahoo.com
Tue Feb 11 19:32:39 CST 2003


From: Kathryn L. Nesbitt [mailto:yellow.rose7 at gte.net]
Sent: Monday, February 10, 2003 12:38 PM
To: Undisclosed-Recipient:;
Subject: From Inside Iraq, what it is really like there ************ BE PEACE and send it out to ALL!****************


Here is a message from an American woman peace keeper who is living in Iraq. Love & Light, Jamie 

update from a participant on the CodePink Women's Delegation in Iraq.......heartbreaking.

Kristi
========================================
From: palestine <mailto:palestine at uruklink.net>
Sent: Tuesday, February 04, 2003 1:49 PM
Subject: View from Baghdad


Tuesday, February 4

Dear Friends, Greetings from Baghdad! It is very late here and I am sleepy. the hotel will not stop playing the theme from "The Last of the
Mohicans" over and over again and we have had an exhausting day. once again I will try to give you some idea of what it is like to be in Iraq
during this time. And once again, as I have little time, this may be somewhat disorganized. But first I just have to share some very strong
impressions.

It becomes clear so quickly here that the Iraqis are not and cannot prepare for war. They wait for the terror to come as helpless as any people
have ever been. They are totally unprepared. They are severely lacking medically and only have food to last three months. They have nowhere to go and if Team Bush does as they have threatened, and Baghdad is "leveled to the ground," they will have murdered five million helpless people. These people are sitting ducks. The US is the biggest military might in the world. The Iraqis are a depleted people, stripped of all economic support and without resources. The word genocide has been raised by some of the humanitarian workers here and as the days pass I see it also. It is the murder of a whole people. Do you remember the old movies of Christians being thrown out into the coliseum to be killed by lions? It seems a little like that from the view from here.

The insidious nature of the sanctions become more and more apparent as we go deeper into the society and see the lives of everyday people. Every person in Baghdad receives rationed food. Iraqi cannot supply its own people under the sanctions. The UN oversees the "Food for Oil" program and people receive rations papers based on the numbebr of persons in a family. At one time the Kurds in the north grew wheat which was sold throughout Iraq. But with the sanctions they can no longer sell directly in Iraq. Without a market they have stopped growing the wheat. An ancient agricultural tradition dies as the field grow dusty. And a culture begins to wane.

People are beginning to come to us for medicine. A waiter needs cough syrup for his little boy. A woman is waiting for us at the hotel for
vitamins for her children. Someones uncle has pneumonia and need antibiotics. The waiter has tears streaming down his cheeks and you can see it is humiliating for him to ask. 

Today we saw a part of the food distribution, visited an orphanage and walked in a very poor neighborhood where we were mobbed by children.
Yesterday was a very difficult day as we went to a bomb shelter which was hit in February, 1991. It was filled with over a thousand people, mostlywomen and children. 480 died. The shelter was a very large concrete structure built into the ground. The walls were at least six feet thick made of concrete and rebar. The shelter was two stories deep into the ground. We were told that the people came there from the surrounding neighborhood to feel safe. They made their beds on the floor and slept during the bombing of Baghdad. At 4:30 in the morning a rocket sliced open the roof of the shelter and exploded. A few minutes later another rocket bore in through the hole made by the first and went through to the second level. From the survivors we hear that there was horror and chaos. People in the immediate area were incinerated on the spot. As the inferno grew the temperature was estimated to reach 450 degress. All along the floor of the shelter you can see the marks of incinerated bodies. you can see the shape of the person and sometimes even the features of the face. I will tell you the hardest thing was to see a mother and her child, a black blotchy outline and smears of blood, etched into the floor. I just could not imagine it. There are photos of the victims on the walls and you cannot help but look at the outlines etched on the walls and floor and the photos and wonder, "was that her?"
And I wonder exactly who shot that rocket. Does he or she know the horrible result. what officer gave the command? Who authorized this?

Another thing that is becoming clear is the resignation of the people here in Baghdad. They seem to believe that it is inevitable they will be bombed; that war is coming and they will be destroyed. I have come to recognize this kind of sigh when they speak about the coming onslaught. A little shudder. It is difficult for them to talk about the future. Or perhaps it might be better to say "a future."

I have never spent time with people anywhere without hearing about plans for the future. "This child is planning to go to the university" or "this
summer we hope to take a vacation" Or "Tomorrow I will see my friend" or whatever. People in Iraq do not speak about the future. At first I just
could not figure it out, what was lacking in conversations. There was a missing element. It was the future. they do not know if they will have a
future.

When they speak of this inevitable war they just hope that somehow, they and their families might survive. They know that within a few weeks they will lose friends; perhaps family. You can see that parents are overly protective of their children. There is this desperation. And you can see that they want to believe that we can somehow help them. "You are Americans, perhaps you can speak to the president and explain that we are no threat" Today we went to a restaurant high about the city. As we were looking out at the city a young man approached two of us. He wanted to know why Americans wanted to bomb Iraqi people. We tried to explain the oil thing and he kept on asking, with a genuine innocence, "why?" We could tell that he really thought we knew something and could explain it to him. It just did not make sense to him and he really wanted to understand. It's gotten out that there are these American women in town who are working for Peace. Everywhere we go we get a thumbs up. We flash the peace sign and they flash it back. Sometimes we are treated almost like celebrities, with people comiing up in the streets and thanking us. Men in suits, women in chadors, young men and women in jeans with hip haircuts, they all take a moment to thank us. They tell us they know it is not the American people who want to bomb them. They are completely lacking in hostility. When we say we are from the United States at first there is this surprise and then, immediately a smile. Last night three of us also met with this totally wonderful group of 43 Spanish actors, dancers and singers. They plan to take over their embassy here. They embody word "vivacious" completely. After we had talked a whileand described our work here and in the US, one of the reporters with them began to ask us about the American people. Why were they allowing this to happen. How could they tolerate this action by our President? Don't Americas read? How is it possible that Americans would allow their government to commit this horrible atrocity and not take action? Whoa, these were such hard things to describe. ANd we never did completely satisfy their questions. Maybe we don't fully understand it ourselves.


There are many Europeans here. Members of the European Parliament are here. They are all outraged and radical. They speak of the American "Bully" and in one press conference yesterday the US was described as "arrogant" and "full of itself". It's kinda the way I see it. It's embarrasing when you see the common view Europeans have of people in America. We are moving about the city a lot and seeing many things. Orphanages,
hospitals, etc and meeting with officials of various programs. There has not been time for small quiet talks with Iraqi people. We are moving fast. A quick note to Rick Abraham. I am with your friend Diane Wilson and just love her! For the rest of you Diane is a fourth generation fisherman from the Texas Gulf coast. She has spent the last fifteen years fighting enviromental pollution. She has tied in the environmental issues to this war very nicely. Tonight we were talking about the reality that if we had developed or were in the process of developing alternative energy, there would be no iraqi war. Without the need and greed for oil, we would not be bearing down on these people to take control of their oil.


Thursday we go to Babylon!! We will spend the day with a family and see their buffalo farm. Doctors without Borders are here and tomorrow morning we will meet with them. Every night here as i go to sleep I cannot help but think of faces of children I have seen that day. I think of them being put to bed by their parents and how it will be if the bombing starts. It is beyond the imagination that these little children are seen as so expendable, "acceptable collateral damage." What kind of monster finds that acceptable. all fore oil. And I cannot help but think of that one young man who looked at me so direct and asked with such urgency, "Please help us."
Good night all. and Peace, 

Sand




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See photos from the recent Anti-Iraq War Protest in Washington DC, including the “Fighting 4 Peace is like Fu%king for Virginity” poster -- At my website: http://www.angelfire.com/mi4/cmin/


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