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Her
by Bo Flack.©
For the rest of my life, whenever I think about
the U.S. invasion of Iraq, I am going to see Her. Do you know how
your mind takes little snapshots of your day-to-day existence and
stores them in the part of your memory I like to call the "mind's
eye"? You have a whole photo album in there. I have clear and
distinct images (memories) from since I was four years old. Frozen
moments in time, snapshots not on film but embedded in my mind.
There are many, some clearer than others, some more enjoyable than
others, some that wrench my heart, and some that make me smile and
laugh inside. But the one snapshot in my mind's eye that to me exemplifies
and personifies the war in Iraq was not the large statue of Saddam
being toppled or of bombs going off at night in Baghdad. My first
memory of it will always be of Her.
I watch Spanish television to help me learn
Spanish, and while I was watching Univision's "Las Noticias,"
I saw Her. Univision was airing reports from a Spanish news reporter
and Spanish news crew that were in Baghdad before, during, and after
the hostilities. They were showing things that the American media
was not, namely civilian casualties and Baghdad neighborhoods that
had been affected by the inordinate amount of U.S. bombing. One
report showed the result of a stray "smart bomb" that
landed in a neighborhood-the crumbled buildings and dead civilians,
and it showed Her.
She was an Iraqi girl of four or five years
of age, and she had the misfortune of being near the bomb blast.
The TV report showed her being carried on some kind of gerry-rigged
stretcher. She had lost both arms and one of her legs, the bloody
stumps covered in dirty rags and her eyes open, glazed over, deep
in shock. When I saw that image of her, I knew at that very moment
that I would never forget it. Never. I became so angry and sad and
ashamed
and silent. I felt partly responsible for her. It was
my country and my government that did that to her. This innocent,
beautiful little human being had become what Rumsfield and generals
call "collateral damage." I cried for her and prayed for
her. I've seen her in my minds' eye about a million times. I feel
a connection to her despite the fact that she is on the other side
of the world.
At first I wondered if she lived or died. Was
she capable of surviving with those terrible injuries? I was so
angry. I thought, "I wonder what a weapon of mass destruction
is to her four or five-year-old logic? What does she think a WMD
is?" I considered the implications that this not-so-smart "smart
bomb" was having in her life. This bomb put together by "good
Christian, God-fearing people" that ultimately killed innocent
women and children. I felt a lot of emotion and did much introspection
for several days after that. That's when I became less vocal and
more pensive with respect to Iraq and the Iraqis and this unjustified
invasion.
A couple of weeks later, after the Americans
had taken Baghdad, I watched "Las Noticias" again, and
the same Spaniard with his camera crew was reporting from Baghdad,
Part of that report showed a hospital that was being re-supplied
by the U.S. Marines
and there she was! She was laying back
in a clean hospital bed, with clean bandages on her wounds. Three
stumps that will hopefully be fit with the latest in prosthetic
limbs. There she was, with her little girl face, neither smiling
nor crying, but looking with curiosity at the camera.
Chodron, what can I say?...I cried. Here's this
6'4" big tough guy sitting in the Spanish TV room with tears
running down his cheeks. Crazy, huh? I've been in prison over thirteen
years, seen men stabbed, killed, and beaten. I possess many snapshots
in my mind's eye, some good and some unbelievably horrible, and
just seeing that this little girl had survived and would grow up
made me feel all soft and emotional.
I will always feel a certain responsibility
for that little girl, because I am a part of the country that forever
changed her life with that damn bomb. I'm sure many of my countrymen
will forget about the suffering that we imposed in order to remove
Saddam from power-and make no mistake, he was an evil, despotic,
tyrannical dictator that needed to go-but I will never forget Her.
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