Who
will weep for the cemetery of innocents?
By Joan Chittister, OSB
06/02/06 "NCR" -- -- I read one Memorial Day speech after
another this weekend, from one end of this country to the next.
Every one of them was incomplete. One question went unanswered,
in fact, unasked, in all of them: What are we supposed to do
when the numbers of war dead continues to climb? How does a
person handle so much “death by cable television?”
The macabre list is growing beyond belief. It touches every part
of the population, and in slithery, menacing ways touching even
those seemingly unaffected by it as well. Day after day the
stories come in.
More than 20 civilians killed in a brutal massacre in Haditha.
Not by them but by us as U.S. Marines turned on civilians --
women and children among them -- to avenge the death of one of
their own, to compensate for their accumulating frustrations and
losses.
Two more journalists join the more than 120 reporters and
commentators already killed in Iraq, another headline reads. And
this, in a country where, we were told, the war had ended, the
mission -- whatever it really was -- was “achieved,” and the
people were “liberated.”
Almost 18,000 U.S. soldiers wounded, the government finally
tells us, more than 10,000 of them “seriously” -- meaning
“disabled for life.”
Almost 2,500 U.S. soldiers have died while their children wait
at home for fathers to return, while their wives are pregnant
with the children the fathers will never see, while their
parents find themselves bereft of sons and daughters they never
dreamed they would outlive. And all of them with nothing but a
triangulated flag to cling to for comfort, for the future.
Thousands and thousands of anonymous Iraqis -- whom no one
counts and no one names -- shot, bombed, missing, gone. Some of
them under the rubble. Many of them in the graves. Unending
files of them fled from the cities they loved while just as many
more are left in their villages or city centers helpless,
unemployed, simply waiting for the next act of insurgency, the
next massacre. By somebody. Anybody.
Indeed, the traumatized stare into space on both sides. They
have had too much stress, too much horror, too much loss, too
much unending, relentless, agonizing fear to go blithely on in
the face of such horror, pretending that it does not exist.
Those symptoms have a name, of course, to denote the scarred and
shattered and dead of soul. Posttraumatic stress disorder they
call it, meaning, of course, the agony that comes from having
seen the inhuman, having done the inhuman, having been part of
the inhuman.
Like the young soldier assigned to carry the little girl with
the bobbing head to a body bag while, he reports, his comrades
cleaned up the evidence of the massacre in which she had been
killed and her brains dripped down his fatigues and spattered
his boots.*
Then the emotional crippling comes. In the dark this time. Where
they will suffer alone all the rest of their lives.
And what about the rest of us?
We have three choices, it seems.
First, we can become totally desensitized to the mayhem around
us and the devastation it has left in its wake.
Dinned day and night by TV replays of real life war strikes,
life becomes one large unending Nintendo game for us. Reality
becomes just like the software we buy so our children can shoot
at digital figures who never bleed, never cry, never look us in
the eye before we shoot them.
The second choice, of course, is simply to turn away from it,
simply unwilling to engage with it anymore. After all, in the
end, when all the talks are finished, all the petitions are
signed, all the political campaigns over and the votes tallied,
it is out of our hands. Better to watch a soap opera, better to
drown our conscience in situation comedies. Be positive. Be
hopeful. Trust.
But there is a third choice, more true to the spiritual
tradition that bred us, more cleansing of our psyches, and, in
the long run, more effective. We can, with the second century
monastics of the desert, rediscover the power of “the gift of
tears,” the sense to recognize and unmask the tragedy of evil in
the society around us and the sense of powerlessness within us
that enables us to ignore it, to take it for granted, to accept
it.
We can, as Christians, begin to regret, to repent, to decry, to
grieve the evil.
“The beginning of compunction is the beginning of new life,”
George Eliot wrote. Remorse is not nothing. Grief is not
useless. It changes the heart of a people. It cautions them to
think better, to think in new ways, before they are once again
tempted to bomb and beat a people into submission, into
“freedom.” It makes them new -- and eventually the society with
them. One person at a time finally learns to feel. It’s called
“soul.”
It’s possible that we are now approaching the margins of the
human condition. We are drowning in insensitivity. We are
escaping into escape.
We have lost the capacity to weep ourselves into the fullness of
our humanity.
From where I stand, it seems to me that until we are willing to
face what is happening in our name in this society, to regret
it, to own the agony of it, it will go on. We will go numbly on,
totally unaware of the diminishing effects of this culture of
violence on both them and us.
We will go on in our time heaping up a cemetery of innocents
and, on Memorial Days to come, call ourselves good for having
done it.
* From a
CNN interview with
Susie Briones, mother of Marine Lance Cpl. Ryan Briones. Ryan
Briones told the
Los Angeles Times
that he took photographs of the of Iraqi civilian victims in
Haditha and helped carry their bodies out of their homes as part
of the cleanup crew sent in after the Nov. 19 killings.
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