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http://www.commondreams.org/views05/0128-35.htm

Published on Friday, January 28, 2005 by the National Catholic Reporter
What the Rest of the World Watched on Inauguration Day
by Joan Chittister

Dublin, on U.S. Inauguration Day, didn't seem to notice. Oh, they played a
few clips that night of the American president saying, "The survival of
liberty in our land increasingly depends on the success of liberty in
other lands."
But that was not their lead story.

The picture on the front page of The Irish Times was a large four-color
picture of a small Iraqi girl. Her little body was a coil of steel. She
sat knees up, cowering, screaming madly into the dark night. Her white
clothes and spread hands and small tight face were blood-spattered. The
blood was the blood of her father and mother, shot through the car window
in Tal Afar by American soldiers while she sat beside her parents in the
car, her four brothers and sisters in the back seat.

A series of pictures of the incident played on the inside page, as well. A
12-year-old brother, wounded in the fray, falls face down out of the car
when the car door opens, the pictures show. In another, a soldier decked
out in battle gear, holds a large automatic weapon on the four children,
all potential enemies, all possible suicide bombers, apparently, as they
cling traumatized to one another in the back seat and the child on the
ground goes on screaming in her parent's blood.

No promise of "freedom" rings in the cutline on this picture. No joy of
liberty underlies the terror on these faces here.

I found myself closing my eyes over and over again as I stared at the
story, maybe to crush the tears forming there, maybe in the hope that the
whole scene would simply disappear.

But no, like the photo of a naked little girl bathed in napalm and running
down a road in Vietnam served to crystallize the situation there for the
rest of the world, I knew that this picture of a screaming, angry,
helpless, orphaned child could do the same.

The soldiers standing in the dusk had called "halt," the story said, but
no one did. Maybe the soldiers' accents were bad. Maybe the car motor was
unduly noisy. Maybe the children were laughing loudly -- the way children
do on family trips. Whatever the case, the car did not stop, the soldiers
shot with deadly accuracy, seven lives changed in an instant: two died in
body, five died in soul.

BBC news announced that the picture was spreading across Europe like a
brushfire that morning, featured from one major newspaper to another,
served with coffee and Danish from kitchen table to kitchen table in one
country after another. I watched, while Inauguration Day dawned across the
Atlantic, as the Irish up and down the aisle on the train from Killarney
to Dublin, narrowed their eyes at the picture, shook their heads silently
and slowly over it, and then sat back heavily in their seats, too stunned
into reality to go back to business as usual -- the real estate section,
the sports section, the life-style section of the paper.

Here was the other side of the inauguration story. No military bands
played for this one. No bulletproof viewing stands could stop the impact
of this insight into the glory of force. Here was an America they could no
longer understand. The contrast rang cruelly everywhere.

I sat back and looked out the train window myself. Would anybody in the
United States be seeing this picture today? Would the United States ever
see it, in fact? And if it is printed in the United States, will it also
cross the country like wildfire and would people hear the unwritten story
under it?

There are 54 million people in Iraq. Over half of them are under the age
of 15. Of the over 100,000 civilians dead in this war, then, over half of
them are children. We are killing children. The children are our enemy.
And we are defeating them.

"I'll tell you why I voted for George Bush," a friend of mine said. "I
voted for George Bush because he had the courage to do what Al Gore and
John Kerry would never have done."

I've been thinking about that one.

Osama Bin Laden is still alive. Sadam Hussein is still alive. Abu Musab
al-Zarqawi is still alive. Baghdad, Mosul and Fallujah are burning. But my
government has the courage to kill children or their parents. And I'm
supposed to be impressed.

That's an unfair assessment, of course. A lot of young soldiers have died,
too. A lot of weekend soldiers are maimed for life. A lot of our kids went
into the military only to get a college education and are now shattered in
soul by what they had to do to other bodies.

A lot of adult civilians have been blasted out of their homes and their
neighborhoods and their cars. More and more every day. According to U.N.
Development Fund for Women, 15 percent of wartime casualties in World War
I were civilians. In World War II, 65 percent were civilians. By the mid
'90s, over 75 percent of wartime casualties were civilians.

In Iraq, for every dead U.S. soldier, there are 14 other deaths, 93
percent of them are civilian. But those things happen in war, the story
says. It's all for a greater good, we have to remember. It's all to free
them. It's all being done to spread "liberty."

>From where I stand, the only question now is who or what will free us from
the 21st century's new definition of bravery. Who will free us from the
notion that killing children or their civilian parents takes courage?


A Benedictine Sister of Erie, Sister Joan is a best-selling author and
well-known international lecturer. She is founder and executive director
of Benetvision: A Resource and Research Center for Contemporary
Spirituality, and past president of the Conference of American Benedictine
Prioresses and the Leadership Conference of Women Religious. Sister Joan
has been recognized by universities and national organizations for her
work for justice, peace and equality for women in the Church and society.
She is an active member of the International Peace Council.

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