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I received an e-mail today from a dear friend in Minnesota who is grieving
the death of her uncle in Iraq. Her heartrending personal account of his murder
deeply saddened me and I include it for all those who wish to read it. Afterwards,
please read a passionate appeal to the American people by Cindy Sheehan, a
tireless crusader to bring an end to the war in Iraq. God Bless.
I wanted to share some really sad family news that we were just stricken with
yesterday. My uncle Abdulrazaq (my father's younger brother who is 50 years
old) was in Iraq (in our local city of Samarra Iraq) on Thursday January 5th,
2006 and at 8pm went to go meet with his business partners to finish financial
exchanges and on his way back he was killed by American troops.
Upon stealing the $10,000 that were in his coat pocket the troops that the
Americans are so proud of and support, found that he did not have any weapons
or explosives and then they dumped his body at the local hospital and walked
away with his money.
My cousin is a resident physician at the local hospital. The Americans had
notified them that they were bringing in a dead body and to come and receive
it. Upon going to receive the body from the Americans outside of the hospital
he was shocked to find that this is his uncle. At home his wife was very worried
as he was extraordinarily late for dinner. She called other family members who
called the hospital (which is something people typically due since so many people
are dying since the U.S. invation) to see if he had an accident at which point
my cousin answered informing them that his body was just dumped at the hospital.
Our family was contacted and they came to receive his body. He was shot in
the head, abdomen, and in one of his kidneys and it is believed that he died
immediately, though the details of whether they robbed him before or after they
killed him and when decided to dump his body are unknown. He left behind a wife
and two daughters age 4 and 5. They are still not sure how to break the news
to his daughters.
My uncle had spent 16 years as a prisoner of war in Iran. He was freed on April
9th, 1998 (even though the Iran/Iraq war ended in the late 80's). Upon starting
his life again in 1998 he married and had two beautiful daughters. Although
it was always hard for him to talk about the torture in the Iranian prisons,
his daughters Shayma (5 yrs old) and Yamama (4 years old) always had a way of
transcending words such they seeped into his heart in the most natural and miraculous
way and when he played with them he was free from his tortured thoughts and
pains.
My uncle Abdulrazak is not the only one, there are thousands that have died
in this way. This is the face of American terrorism. Our family is so numb.
Our hearts are swollen with grief, resentment, and sorrow.
American soldiers sign up to risk life and death and when one of them dies
it is though the earth stops its rotation, but when an Iraqi civilian who is
working hard to support his family and is forced to live his life in the midst
of an American occupation is murdered and robbed by sweet American boys, he
is dumped like road kill.
What makes their lives more worth living?? Is it the blue eyes and blond hair?
or is it the cross that hangs on their necks?? I wonder what defense they have
for this one. Did he part his hair on the wrong side? Did he wear the wrong
color? Was he driving "suspiciously"? What would they say he did to
deserve being murdered? How about robbing him? It must not have been a robbery.
Maybe they were afraid that a doctor would steal his money so they kept if for
safe keeping.
Maybe they wanted to take the money and buy a gift for his daughters. Whatever
it is it must be good because they are Americans! In fact as they provide this
hypothetical justification (assuming they would be prompted to do so- which
wouldn't happen because Americans answer to no one) I can just hear the national
anthem playing in the background.
My uncle's murderers will come home to their families one day to tell of the
heroic stories but humbly refuse to be called heroes and instead insist that
they were merely doing their duty, but in their soiled hearts they will carry
the ugliness of what they have done and who they became and it will eat at them
until it destroys their lives and the lives around them.
This email will not have an end-just as these killings do not.......
The Opposite of Good Is Apathy
By Cindy Sheehan – 06 January 2006
The apathy of the people is enough to make every statue
leap from its pedestal and hasten the resurrection of the dead.
– William Lloyd Garrison
The apathy of most of America is stunning and appalling to me. When I found
this quote I was filled with wide-eyed wonder that there is one statue left
in America complete with statue, or one grave or tomb still occupied.
On October 26th, as MoveOn.org was holding its candlelight vigils across the
country to mourn the death of the 2000th American soldier in Iraq, I and two
dozen others were being arrested in front of the White House protesting the
carnage done in our name by the illegitimate residents therein.
Now, counting the 11 American soldiers who were pointlessly killed in George's
unconscionable and brainless war of terror in the Middle East, the American
"official" death toll is up to 2193: 200 more families ruined in less
than three months!
My son Casey was in the first 1000 to be killed in Iraq. We reached that dismal
mark by September 2004. MoveOn.org conducted candlelight vigils for that occasion.
Then a little over a year later, MoveOn.org conducted candlelight vigils to
commemorate the 2000th soldier.
If we don't get off of our collective apathetic and complacent backsides to
stop the barbaric killing in Iraq, when will the next candlelight vigil be?
George Bush and the evil neocons are killing our precious soldiers at the rate
of 2.78 per day. By my calculations, we should be lighting our candles again
and singing "Kum bah ya" by October.
This article is not intended to be an indictment of MoveOn.org, which does
some amazing work and who were big supporters of Camp Casey. But my point is
this, America: the longer we allow the illegitimate pretender to the White House
and his conniving and callous gang of co-conspirators to continue, the more
our collective humanity is damaged.
Apparently, candlelight vigils do very little to stop, or even slow down a
little, the carnage committed by the war criminals in DC.
Then we have the unfortunate innocents of Iraq. I have heard reports of up
to as many as 200 of them killed yesterday. So if 200 were reported, one has
to really wonder what the true count was.
Bill O'Reilly and George Bush define a terrorist as someone who "kills
innocent men, women and children." Am I the only one who sees the irony
and stunning hypocrisy in this statement?" Who do Bill and George think
are being killed in Iraq? A well-trained and organized Army? Terrorists? We
all know that is false.
This is who is being killed in Iraq: living breathing human beings,
identical to Americans or any other human beings on earth, who are just trying
to go about their lives, trying to survive in a war-torn country that was no
threat to America or our way of life.
"I would say 30,000 more or less have died as a result of the initial
incursion and the ongoing violence against Iraqis," said George on December
12, 2005. Even if one accepts this very low guess-timate by George, his policies
have been responsible for ten times the 3000 deaths on September 11, 2001. By
his own admission, he is ten times the terrorist that Osama ever was. If George
says 30,000 ... who knows what the truthful total is. It fills me with sorrow
and hurts my heart to even contemplate the number.
America: this is what you are allowing your government to do in your name:
Detain and torture prisoners without due process. Use chemical weapons on other
members of humanity. Spy on Americans without a court order (I hope my conversations
put them in a coma of boredom). Carpet bomb cities filled with human beings
like yourselves.
Destroy the infrastructure of other countries. Destroy the infrastructure of
American cities. Cut taxes on the rich while pouring money and blood into the
thirsty sands of the Middle East. Decimate our treasury. Rape the environment.
Et cetera, et cetera, ad nauseum.
Hillary Clinton told me that the "wheels of government grind slowly."
This is a tired cliche and it is unacceptable blather while the war machine
is grinding the bones of our children. It is time for us wide-awake Americans
to make our elected officials speed up the timetable for withdrawal from Iraq.
If I hear one more rendition of "We Shall Overcome" and then watch
the vigilers or marchers go home and turn on their TVs and crack open a brewsky,
content in the fact that they have done something for peace that day, I am going
to scream! We can't overcome unless we take the proverbial bull by the horns
and overcome!
Hold your vigils and marches in relevant places: such as warmongering local
Congressional offices. So many Senators and Congresspeople come to mind. Or
in front of a recruiting station. Or federal buildings. Or military bases. Then
instead of going home and cracking open a beer, or uncorking a bottle of wine,
sit down and say "we aren't leaving until you call for an immediate end
to the occupation of Iraq." Put your butt on the line for humanity.
Change will not happen until we make it happen. We can't make change happen
by wishing or praying that it will happen.
We actually have to do something.