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#5320 03/04/07 03:21 AM
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"When all has been said that can be said, and all has been done that can be done, there will be poetry";-) -- Issodhos
#5321 03/04/07 09:46 AM
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- - - Bob

#5322 04/26/07 11:32 PM
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- - - Bob

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A bit more...

Quote
September 06, 2007
Leaving Home...
Two months ago, the suitcases were packed. My lone, large suitcase sat in my bedroom for nearly six weeks, so full of clothes and personal items, that it took me, E. and our six year old neighbor to zip it closed.

Packing that suitcase was one of the more difficult things I’ve had to do. It was Mission Impossible: Your mission, R., should you choose to accept it is to go through the items you’ve accumulated over nearly three decades and decide which ones you cannot do without. The difficulty of your mission, R., is that you must contain these items in a space totaling 1 m by 0.7 m by 0.4 m. This, of course, includes the clothes you will be wearing for the next months, as well as any personal memorabilia- photos, diaries, stuffed animals, CDs and the like.
... (much more to read, too much to cut & paste)

We were all refugees- rich or poor. And refugees all look the same- there’s a unique expression you’ll find on their faces- relief, mixed with sorrow, tinged with apprehension. The faces almost all look the same.

The first minutes after passing the border were overwhelming. Overwhelming relief and overwhelming sadness… How is it that only a stretch of several kilometers and maybe twenty minutes, so firmly segregates life from death?

How is it that a border no one can see or touch stands between car bombs, militias, death squads and… peace, safety? It’s difficult to believe- even now. I sit here and write this and wonder why I can’t hear the explosions.

I wonder at how the windows don’t rattle as the planes pass overhead. I’m trying to rid myself of the expectation that armed people in black will break through the door and into our lives. I’m trying to let my eyes grow accustomed to streets free of road blocks, hummers and pictures of Muqtada and the rest…

How is it that all of this lies a short car ride away?


- - - Bob

BC #37608 10/27/07 07:50 PM
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Monday, October 22, 2007

Quote
Bloggers Without Borders...

Syria is a beautiful country- at least I think it is. I say “I think” because while I perceive it to be beautiful, I sometimes wonder if I mistake safety, security and normalcy for ‘beauty’. In so many ways, Damascus is like Baghdad before the war- bustling streets, occasional traffic jams, markets seemingly always full of shoppers… And in so many ways it’s different.

...

The first weeks here were something of a cultural shock. It has taken me these last three months to work away certain habits I’d acquired in Iraq after the war. It’s funny how you learn to act a certain way and don’t even know you’re doing strange things- like avoiding people’s eyes in the street or crazily murmuring prayers to yourself when stuck in traffic. It took me at least three weeks to teach myself to walk properly again- with head lifted, not constantly looking behind me.

There's often talk & valid concern about post traumatic stress disorder with soldiers returning from Iraq/Afghanistan to the US. There's also often odd debate about "why Iraqis are hostile" - terrorists - to our soldiers & their own fellow citizens in Iraq.

I submit the citizens of Iraq deal with 'constant' traumatic stress disorder, and that we, safely at home, fail to recognize what we've done to the country beyond the destruction of their gov't, their infrastructure, their homes and any semblance of community the diverse citizenship once accepted & nutured. We have destroyed any peace of mind & trust of almost any other human in their midst. And we continue, have continued this destruction for years, in Iraq, in Afghanistan & in recent history, where ever we got ticked off.

If every nation we ticked off launched continuous invasions & attacks across our country, driving us into refugee situations when the insanity of our homes became unbearable, we too would be hateful. Too many of our citizens, with relatively small attacks, have been driven to hate. How would the same deal with the constancy of occupation & destruction?


- - - Bob

BC #37613 10/27/07 09:09 PM
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Originally Posted by BC
I submit the citizens of Iraq deal with 'constant' traumatic stress disorder, and that we, safely at home, fail to recognize what we've done to the country beyond the destruction of their gov't, their infrastructure, their homes and any semblance of community the diverse citizenship once accepted & nutured. We have destroyed any peace of mind & trust of almost any other human in their midst.
Lest we forget, Iraq was no Garden of Eden prior to the invasion. Although it was a lot better off, on the whole, than it is now, let's bear in mind that Iraq has been at war now for an entire generation. Half of Iraq's population never lived in peacetime.

Our invasion and occupation of Iraq has prolonged and exacerbated a misery that already existed, due to the sanctions, and the bombings, and the insurrection of 1992-3, and before that Operation Desert Storm, and before that the Iran-Iraq War. We have spent a huge amount of money, effort, and lives to accomplish this. Is it any wonder we have so little left over to actually mitigate suffering?


Steve
Give us the wisdom to teach our children to love,
to respect and be kind to one another,
so that we may grow with peace in mind.

(Native American prayer)

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