Why I threw the shoe

I am no hero. I just acted as an Iraqi who witnessed the pain and bloodshed
of too many innocents

- Muntazer al-Zaidi

guardian.co.uk <http://www.guardian.co.uk/>,

Thursday 17 September 2009 19.30 BST

I am free. But my country is still a prisoner of war. There has been a lot
of talk about the action and about the person who took it, and about the
hero and the heroic act, and the symbol and the symbolic act. But, simply, I
answer: what compelled me to act <http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/7782422.stm> is
the injustice that befell my people, and how the occupation wanted to
humiliate my homeland by putting it under its boot.

Over recent years, more than a million martyrs have fallen by the bullets of
the occupation and Iraq is now filled with more than five million orphans, a
million widows and hundreds of thousands of maimed. Many millions are
homeless inside and outside the country.

We used to be a nation in which the Arab would share with the Turkman and
the Kurd and the Assyrian and the Sabean and the Yazid his daily bread. And
the Shia would pray with the Sunni in one line. And the Muslim would
celebrate with the Christian the birthday of Christ. This despite the fact
that we shared hunger under sanctions for more than a decade.

Our patience and our solidarity did not make us forget the oppression. But
the invasion divided brother from brother, neighbour from neighbour. It
turned our homes into funeral tents.

I am not a hero. But I have a point of view. I have a stance. It humiliated
me to see my country humiliated; and to see my Baghdad burned, my people
killed. Thousands of tragic pictures remained in my head, pushing me towards
the path of confrontation. The scandal of Abu Ghraib. The massacre of
Falluja, Najaf, Haditha, Sadr City, Basra, Diyala, Mosul, Tal Afar, and
every inch of our wounded land. I travelled through my burning land and saw
with my own eyes the pain of the victims, and heard with my own ears the
screams of the orphans and the bereaved. And a feeling of shame haunted me
like an ugly name because I was powerless.

As soon as I finished my professional duties in reporting the daily
tragedies, while I washed away the remains of the debris of the ruined Iraqi
houses, or the blood that stained my clothes, I would clench my teeth and
make a pledge to our victims, a pledge of vengeance.

The opportunity came, and I took it.

I took it out of loyalty to every drop of innocent blood that has been shed
through the occupation or because of it, every scream of a bereaved mother,
every moan of an orphan, the sorrow of a rape victim, the teardrop of an
orphan.

I say to those who reproach me: do you know how many broken homes that shoe
which I threw had entered? How many times it had trodden over the blood of
innocent victims? Maybe that shoe was the appropriate response when all
values were violated.

When I threw the shoe in the face of the criminal, George
Bush<http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/mar/12/iraqi-shoe-thrower-trial-resumes>,
I wanted to express my rejection of his lies, his occupation of my country,
my rejection of his killing my people. My rejection of his plundering the
wealth of my country, and destroying its infrastructure. And casting out its
sons into a diaspora.

If I have wronged journalism without intention, because of the professional
embarrassment I caused the establishment, I apologise. All that I meant to
do was express with a living conscience the feelings of a citizen who sees
his homeland desecrated every day. The professionalism mourned by some under
the auspices of the occupation should not have a voice louder than the voice
of patriotism. And if patriotism needs to speak out, then professionalism
should be allied with it.

I didn't do this so my name would enter history or for material gains. All I
wanted was to defend my country.

*Muntazer al-Zaidi is an Iraqi reporter who was freed this week after
serving nine months in prison for throwing his shoe at former US president
George Bush at a press conference. This edited statement was translated by
McClatchy Newspapers correspondent Sahar Issa www.mcclatchydc.com*

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