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What Do You Know of
War?
By Monica Benderman
11/28/07 "ICH"
-- - -The doors have opened on another holiday season.
Utility workers have spent hours hoisting holiday decorations to
the tops of buildings and attaching lights to all the telephone
poles in town. It won’t be long before the entrance displays of
massive armored fighting vehicles that represent the muscle of
the Rock of the Marne at Fort Stewart, Georgia are covered with
lights.
A few hundred yards down the
road from the main gate of Fort Stewart, the newly built Chapel
Complex was recently christened. Red brick, with angled lines
and a pristine white steeple; looking more like a courthouse
than a place of worship, the building stands ready for the
soldiers who will be returning from their year long deployment
to Iraq next spring.
Across the street, on the
grounds of the PX shopping mall stands another display of shiny
pinwheels planted in the ground. The sign behind the display
reads, “These pinwheels represent the 138 cases of spousal abuse
confirmed at Fort Stewart in fiscal year 2007.” In 2006 the sign
read “131 cases of spousal abuse” and another read “191 cases of
child abuse.” What will 2008 bring?
My husband filed a conscientious
objector application in 2005. He did so because of his firsthand
experiences with this war, and with the abusive treatment the
soldiers and veterans faced as they struggled to fulfill the
oath they took to serve their country. He did so to call
attention to the threats and intimidation military personnel
faced, and the lack of respect they received for their service.
The military command refused to
accept the application, choosing to find a way to put my husband
in prison as punishment for his choice instead. As we worked to
see that due process was given to my husband’s choice, I had the
opportunity, one evening, to be in the same room with the
command sergeant major of my husband’s battalion. I took the
opportunity to ask this senior NCO if he would mind my asking
him some questions, civilian to civilian. He said “No” so I
asked.
“Have you ever had to kill
anyone?”
The man put his hands behind his
head, stared up at the ceiling and responded: “Yes I have had to
shoot to kill many times.”
“Didn’t it bother you at all to
know that you had killed another man?”
With his hands still behind his
head and one leg crossed over another, he leaned back in his
chair and said “You know I’ve got 22 years in the Army. You
learn that you don’t think about what you do, you just do it.
I’ve never seen the results of my shooting. That’s the problem
with the ‘boys’ they’re bringing in today. I tell them and tell
them in training, don’t look back – just shoot ‘rat-a-tat-a-tat’
(holding his hand out as a weapon) and don’t look back. When we
was first starting out, the soldiers I came in with and me, we
all learned in training, shoot and look away – walk away but
don’t look at what you’ve done. If I could get anything across
to these new ‘boys’ it’s that they can’t look. I see them; they
shoot and then look to see if they hit their target, if they did
good, if they followed orders. I see their eyes and there’s
fear, and I know right away if there’s going to be trouble with
that one or the other by their face after they see the result of
the explosion. We’ve got to teach these boys to shoot and look
away, and they wouldn’t be so bothered by what they did.”
“What do you think of the war?”
The man didn’t move much. He
hunched his shoulders a little, looked across the desk and said
“That’s political stuff and I don’t get involved in none of that
political stuff. I do my job. If I have to go back to Iraq I go,
and I take care of my soldiers. I care about my soldiers, but I
don’t have no business paying attention to whether the war is
good or bad, or if the president did right. I have 22 years in,
and I have to do what I’m ordered to do so I don’t ask no
questions.”
“What do you think about
conscientious objection?”
This time he leaned forward a
little, stretched and took a breath before he re-crossed his
legs and folded his hands back behind his head. “There ain’t no
true conscientious objectors. I’ve been in a long time, and I’ve
seen only one or two that might have been real religious. It’s
been my experience that when a soldier brings in an application,
I always sit and talk with them and ninety-nine percent of the
time he’s not a conscientious objector he’s just got major
problems with his command. Whenever anyone brings in one of
those applications it’s because there’s a bad command and we got
to do something about fixing that. If we do the soldier ain’t
got no more problems and he can go on doing his duty, but we got
to get him to talk and tell us what the command is doing wrong,
‘cause it’s not religion, it’s a bad command.”
Throughout the conversation my
husband was standing beside me at parade rest, having invoked
his right to not respond to any questions the sergeant major
wanted to ask him. At the time he was under investigation by the
command which claimed his conscientious objector application was
simply a protestation of the war, not worthy of their time. The
command sought to charge him with “making disloyal statements”
and “disrespecting a superior officer’ for having spoken out in
an effort to find help for the soldiers in his unit being
threatened and abused by his command.
My husband went to prison. The
sergeant major went back to Iraq.
Now, suicide rates are
increasing among military personnel. Spousal abuse is becoming
more of a problem and no doubt more children are afraid of the
empty look they see in their returning parents’ eyes.
We tell the soldiers to do what
they can to get out of the military – to avoid returning to
Iraq. It will not solve the problem.
Building a multi-million dollar
chapel complex on one military installation is not going to fix
what has been broken inside a man or a woman who has been to
war.
The anger and rage of those who
have been in combat will not go away simply because we tell them
to get out while they can, to “walk a different road” without
showing them where that road will lead.
Going to prison to speak out
about what is happening to our military personnel is not going
to make things right, not unless we, those of us who claim to
care about our “troops” find a way to work together to do our
part.
We can’t think that simply
taking someone out of the war also takes them out of combat. In
war, the rage makes sense and the killing of an enemy can be
easily justified. War doesn’t end when the soldier comes home,
and the nightmare of combat only grows darker when the battle
waged is waged inside; intended to protect a place and loved
ones that once meant peace from the anger of an experience that
cannot be left behind.
When these men and women return
home and face those they love, that anger can become a seed
inside which feeds and grows off of memories of the horrors, the
nightmares and the need for release – but at home there’s no
battlefield on which to let go, there are only children, a
spouse, or themselves when they come to fear the damage they
could do if left uncontrolled, and when "help" is only a word,
too many will lose the battle.
People say they understand –
trust me – you don’t; not if you haven’t felt it inside, or
stood helpless wondering what more can be done to simply bring
peace to the heart of the person you want so much to heal.
Holiday lights are far from
bright enough to light the path of those who need the peace this
holiday is meant to honor.
The pristine steeple on Fort
Stewart’s new chapel complex may see the day when every seat in
the building is occupied. Experience tells me that those in
attendance may find sanctuary but they will not find peace, even
if the room is full.
Men and women volunteered to put
their lives on the line to defend the peace our laws were meant
to give. Their service has been abused by everyone who has stood
and watched this travesty of war unfold; offering words of help
only to turn and look in another direction when more than words
were needed.
People will write and say, “They
volunteered. They got what they deserved.”
The war is coming home and if
Americans are not willing to stand together to fix what we are
all responsible for breaking, they will know firsthand what it
means to “get what is deserved.”
It's time to stare into the eyes
of what we have allowed to happen.
Peace is not simply a word, and
war does not go away when you look in a different direction.
What do you know of war?
Monica is the wife of Sgt.
Kevin Benderman, a ten-year Army veteran who served a combat
tour in Iraq and a year in prison for his public protest of war
and the destruction it causes to civilians and to American
military personnel. Please visit their website,
www.BendermanDefense.org to learn more.
Monica and Kevin may be reached
at mdawnb@coastalnow.net
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