Then, two months later, came what she considered to be
a disturbingly placid meeting with President Bush.
While she found him to be a "man of faith," she also
said later that he seemed "totally disconnected from
humanity and reality." 

Entire article below:

http://tinyurl.com/a5qgp

VACAVILLE, Calif. - Before her son was killed in    
Iraq, before she began a peace vigil outside    
President Bush's Texas ranch, before she became an
icon of the anti-war movement and the face of grieving
mothers, there was a time when Cindy Sheehan's life
was, by all appearances, incredibly normal. 
 
She grew up in a suburb of Los Angeles, and married
her high school sweetheart, Patrick Sheehan. They had
four babies, one almost every other year. They drove
their growing clan in a huge, yellow station wagon
nicknamed the "BananaMobile." She volunteered at a
Vacaville church and later, as the children grew, she
worked there.

Normal life ended for Cindy Sheehan in April 2004,
when her oldest son Casey, 24, a father of twin girls,
was killed in Iraq.

First, she says, "I was a Mom in deep shock and deep
grief."

Then, two months later, came what she considered to be
a disturbingly placid meeting with President Bush.
While she found him to be a "man of faith," she also
said later that he seemed "totally disconnected from
humanity and reality." And when she later heard him
speak of soldiers' deaths as "noble," Sheehan felt she
had to do something.

"The shock has worn off and deep anger has set in,"
she said.

Sheehan co-founded an anti-war organization and began
talking, demonstrating, speaking at a congressional
hearing. She got a Web site, a public relations
assistant (financed by an anti-war group), an
entourage of peace activists and a speaking tour.

But while her message was strong and widely
disseminated, she didn't become world famous until
about a week ago when, after speaking at the annual
Veterans For Peace national conference in Dallas, she
took a bus to Crawford, Texas, site of Bush's ranch,
to have a word with her president.

For the record, here's what she said she wants to tell
him: "I would say, 'What is the noble cause my son
died for?' And I would say if the cause is so noble
has he encouraged his daughters to enlist? And I would
be asking him to quit using Casey's sacrifice to
justify continued killing, and to use Casey's
sacrifice to promote peace."

Sheehan's peaceful vigil, her unstoppable anguish, her
gentle way of speaking, have captured attention for an
anti-war movement that until now hasn't had much of a
leader. Over the past week she appeared on every major
television and radio network and in newspapers around
the world.

Critics have started calling her a pawn of the
left-wing. Some conservative organizations, talk show
hosts and even some of her own extended family accuse
her of shifting her position and say she is lowering
troop morale.

"To be perfectly honest, I think it is disgraceful,"
said bookkeeper Diana Kraft of Vacaville, whose son is
in the Navy. "I don't know the loss she's feeling to
lose a son because, thank goodness, I haven't had
that, but we're in this war and we have to support the
troops."

Other friends, neighbors and church members argue that
she is a hero, and say they're proud of what she's
doing.

Dozens of people have joined her and others have sent
flowers and food. Other "Camp Casey" demonstrations
and vigils are springing up around the country, with
signs calling on Bush to "Talk To Cindy." Activists in
San Francisco rallied on her behalf Friday; others
planned to gather Monday in New York's Union Square.

Bush acknowledged her on Thursday, telling reporters
at his ranch that "she has every right in the world to
say what she believes. This is America. She has a
right to her position."

But Bush said Sheehan is wrong on Iraq: "I thought
long and hard about her position. I've heard her
position from others, which is: Get out of Iraq now.
And it would be a mistake for the security of this
country and the ability to lay the foundations for
peace in the long run if we were to do so."

Sheehan, a lifelong Democrat, said that until her son
died, she'd never spoken out about her views. She was
too young during the Vietnam War — "I only saw it on
the news and I thought it was horrible," she said. She
didn't agree with the first     Gulf War, but only
talked about it with friends and classmates.

As a child in Bellflower, about 20 miles south of Los
Angeles, Sheehan was opinionated, but not outspoken,
says her sister, Dede Miller. She was enrolled in
programs for gifted students. 

She married her first serious boyfriend, Patrick, whom
she met when she was 17. They soon had Casey, followed
by Carly, Andy and Jane. 

"She was an earth mother, a very devoted mom," said
Miller. 

In 1993, the family moved to Vacaville, midway between
San Francisco and Sacramento, where Patrick worked as
a sales representative. 

The stress of Casey's death prompted Sheehan and her
husband to separate, she said. 

Sheehan has vowed to remain in Texas through Bush's
August vacation, unless he meets with her. 

"My whole family would rather I was home more than
gone," she said. "Some people have tried to discourage
me from doing what I'm doing but I can't be
discouraged, I can't be stopped because I know what
I'm doing is so important. It's a matter of life or
death." 





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