September 11 Remembrance
Event at Moorpark College, CA
by Leah Wells*, September 11, 2002
Introduction
Thank you very much for inviting me to share some
thoughts with you today, the one-year anniversary of the terrorist
attacks of one year ago.
Last September 11 I was scheduled to facilitate
a nonviolence training for activists in Orange County. It was
a strange day, preparing for teaching peace to a group of people
trying to make sense of what happened earlier in the day. I taught
my morning nonviolence class in Ventura to high school students,
and then continued as planned with the nonviolence workshop. It
was healing and purposeful that a group of thirty people could
gather together to focus on peaceful dialogue in the midst of
such an extraordinarily disturbing day.
Today my thoughts are with my two very good friends,
Ryan and Amber Amundson as they grieve over the loss of someone
very special to them. Amber and Ryan are in their mid-twenties;
Amber's husband Craig, Ryan's brother, was killed in the attack
on the Pentagon last year. Last fall Amber told me of the creativity
her two children inspired in her and of the support from her family
to grieve in the most healthy way she could. She told me that
it would be unconscionable for her to disrespect the memory of
her husband by teaching her children that revenge and retribution
suffice as acceptable responses for the terrorist attacks. Instead,
she has chosen a peaceful path.
I received an email from Ryan yesterday replying
to one I'd sent of prayers and thoughts during this difficult
time. He and Amber participated in a Walk for Peace from Washington,
DC to New York last November. They were pioneers of the phrase
"Our Grief Is Not a Cry for War" just like other family
members who lost loved ones on September 11, they did not want
the memory of Craig to be used as justification for more war making.
In fact, they have been at the helm of a new organization,
September Eleventh Families for Peaceful Tomorrows, a group whose
main message is one of peacemaking and reconciliation. In late
September, Kelly Campbell, another relative of Craig Amundson
will be speaking here in Ventura County.
My thoughts are also with the families of the undocumented
workers who lost their lives a year ago today and whose families
are ineligible for reparations because their employers did not
report them as employees.
Aftermath of September 11
In the year after the terrorist attacks, our country
and indeed the world have seen many important changes some for
the better, some for the worse. I think that there are some important
questions to answer in looking at like who we are, how we see
others, and how others see us.
The following points outline a bit about who we
are post-September 11:
According to the American Psychological Association,
reported post-traumatic stress disorder cases among young children
have increased greatly, signifying that the attacks have left
significant impressions.
Hate crimes against people of color, especially
those appearing to be of Arab or Middle Eastern descent, have
increased greatly as reported by the Council on American Islamic
Relations.
The American Civil Liberties Union reports the
attempts at eroding some of the freedoms and rights upheld in
the US Constitution which have been met with resistance by courageous
Judges throughout the country.
The United States unilaterally backed out of the
Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty in June to the dismay of the international
community, including the other partner to the treaty, Russia.
Our government did not ratify in July the International
Criminal Court which would help to bring to justice human rights
abusers under an International tribunal including those who perpetrated
the crimes against humanity on September 11.
Attorney General John Ashcraft unilaterally restricted
access to information under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA)
last October.
Nuclear reactors continue to be left as sitting
ducks to future terrorist attacks despite agencies within our
own government who have repeatedly warned about their vulnerability.
In recent attempts at verifying their security, the nuclear power
plants have contracted individuals contracted to attempt to infiltrate
them. They have been successful on most occasions and even have
been able to toss uranium components over security fences using
lacrosse sticks.
Finally, TIPS, a combined "America's Most
Wanted" and FBI scheme, has been birthed a plan to recruit
1 in 24 Americans as citizen spies giving leads to authorities
on susptected terrorist activities inside the United States.
So, in addressing the first question, "Who
are we?" it seems like we are a wounded, fearful nation still
recovering from a significant blow to our confidence and to our
hearts one year ago. American people are good people I see evidence
for that in my classroom every day. I see it in the random acts
of kindness that people have become more prone to doing in the
last year.
However, I am afraid that our country is on a dangerous
path of punitive, rather than restorative, justice in holding
the architects of terror accountable. How can we deal with our
enemies without emulating their tactics?
What Would King Do?
In the classes I teach on nonviolence and peacemaking,
we study the lives and words of peacemakers throughout history
to gain a new perspective on how we can deal with the various
conflicts we encounter personally, locally and globally. In addressing
the second question of how we view others, Martin Luther King,
Jr. provides some timeless wisdom.
Dr. King wrote a Declaration of Independence from
the War in Vietnam which still rings true today.
When he was writing, communism was the enemy. Today
it is terrorism. I have replaced his word 'communism' with 'terrorism'
in the following text to demonstrate the relevance of his words
for us today:
"This kind of positive revolution of values
is our best defense against terrorism. War is not the answer.
Terrorism will never be defeated by the use of nuclear weapons.
We must not engage in negative anti-terrorism, but rather in a
positive trust for democracy, realizing that our greatest defense
against terrorism is to take offensive action on behalf of justice.
We must with positive action seek to remove those conditions of
poverty, insecurity, and injustice which are the fertile soil
in which the seeds of terrorism grow and develop."
Powerful words. We see the seeds of hate sown in
poverty, insecurity, injustice and disparity of wealth. Generations
of children in third world countries growing up in severe deprivation
are potential terrorists if we take these words to heart. We must
re-evaluate our priorities, our attitude toward corporate responsibility
and our reliance on foreign oil if we are to prevent future terrorist
attacks.
Dr. King continues on to say in the essay against
participation in the Vietnam War in perhaps his harshest criticism
of US foreign policy: "A nation that continues year after
year to spend more money on military defense than on programs
of social uplift is approaching spiritual death." This admonition
means that when we decrease funding for education, for social
services, welfare and children, we are sowing seeds of hate in
our own country as well. One-fourth of children in the United
States live in poverty while our military budget soars out of
control topping out at nearly $437 billion dollars.
Dr. King has some gentler advice as well, though.
In the essay entitled Loving Your Enemies, Dr. King outlines the
reasons why we should pursue peacemaking rather than war making.
He wrote," Hate multiplies hate, adding deeper darkness to
a night already devoid of stars. Hate scars the soul and distorts
the personality. Love is the only force capable of transforming
an enemy into a friend. We never get rid of an enemy by meeting
hate with hate; we get rid of an enemy by getting rid of enmity."
So where has our war on terror led us? We have
not caught Osama bin Laden, we have pursued an unrelenting military
campaign against the people of Afghanistan, stranding millions
of people throughout last winter in desperate conditions, and
even having the audacity in July to mistakenly bomb a wedding
party, killing dozens. We euphemize our lingo about the tools
of war making to desensitize ourselves from the true effects of
weapons.
These are not endearing actions that the US has
undertaken.
We have called our war on terror perhaps the worst
misnomer: a pursuit of justice. We are not talking about true
justice, though. We are talking about a vengeful, hateful justice
seeking retribution rather than reconciliation. Lanzo del Vasto,
peacemaker extraordinaire, writes about how true justice lapses
into false when we believe we have the right to render evil for
evil and call the evil rendered good and just.
Again, powerful words. We must carefully examine
what our actions purvey about our values.
In our war on terror, we have failed to recognize
that the United States sponsors a terrorist training camp on our
soil. November is a hallowed month for something called the School
of the Americas, a military training school located at Ft. Benning,
GA. In the wake of September 11, British journalist George Monbiot
wrote a scalding report about the incongruence of our policies,
stating candidly that terrorist training takes place here in the
United States.
The School of the Americas moved from Central America
to Georgia in the early 1980's. At this school, Latin American
soldiers are trained in paramilitary combat, in counterinsurgency
in being the military arm of the multinational corporations who
enforce poverty and the structural adjustment programs laid down
by the World Bank and the IMF. One November, some Jesuit priests
in Central America, their housekeeper and her daughter were slaughtered
by soldiers trained at the SOA. Two of the assassins who killed
Archbishop Oscar Romero of El Salvador were trained at the school
as well.
George Monbiot said poignantly that in the United
States, the war on terror must start at home by closing the School
of the Americas. Ventura County has a special role to play in
this effort. Congressman Elton Gallegly has never voted to close
the SOA. Every year as the vote is taken in Congress, the margin
by which the bill fails gets smaller and smaller we are nearing
the goal. We must work with Gallegly to convince him to vote on
HR 1810 to close the SOA.
How do others see us?
I believe that we can answer the third question
of "How do others see us" by examining our lust for
war against Iraq.
There are a few policy points on Iraq which I would
like to address with here because the rhetoric has evolved so
speedily in the war on terror.
Let me begin by saying that Saddam Hussein is a
brute and a bully and has ruled Iraq for more than 20 years, holding
hostage a population of 23 million Iraqis who did not elect him.
He has used chemical warfare against his own people. And he has
demonstrated aggression in the Middle East in recent years.
These facts, however, should not obscure other
relevant components of why we should not unilaterally depose the
infamous leader of the Ba'ath Party in a US-led war on Iraq.
First and foremost, there is no link between Iraq
and al Qaeda or any of the people associated with the egregious
crimes of September 11.
There is unquestionable hesitation and outright
disapproval from the international community with respect to any
new war with Iraq.
And on that point, I'd like to say that the first
Gulf War never ended. Just this past Thursday, the largest air
assault in four years took place over southern Iraq, with US and
British forces using more than 100 aircraft to mount an attack.
Iraq has been getting bombed nearly every week since the 42-day
Gulf War was declared over.
And the economic sanctions are a form of warfare
as well, killing more than 5,000 children under the age of 5 every
month. One in eight children in Iraq never reach their first birthday.
Prior to the Gulf War, the UN deemed Iraq an emerging first-world
nation. It had eradicated all childhood diseases, provided free
healthcare to the entire population and education up through university
studies was completely free.
So back to lack of international support. Europe
does not support war on Iraq. Every Arab nation has made statements
condemning an escalation of war against Iraq, including Jordan,
Saudi Arabia and Turkey. Few Middle Eastern countries want us
to use their land, water or air space to fight this proposed war.
And every Middle Eastern country sees an eminent intensification
of the Palestinian/Israeli conflict should the United States decide
to preemptively attack Iraq.
Tomorrow, President Bush will make his case before
the United Nations General Assembly. He has yet to offer credible
evidence that Iraq is developing weapons of mass destruction capable
of harming the US. The International Atomic Energy Agency has
reported that Iraq has not accessed any nuclear material to use
in making weapons of mass destruction.
Many people wonder about the weapons inspections.
The most credible source on this issue is Scott Ritter, former
UNSCOM weapons inspector for eight years. He was in charge of
making certain that Iraq was in compliance with the UN disarmament
resolution. He has stated time and time again that UNSCOM was
extraordinarily effective in destroying all of Iraq's weapons
capabilities.
Unfortunately, in 1998, the United Nations withdrew
their weapons inspection team in anticipation of the December
bombing which the US and UK led. They were not kicked out by Iraq,
as is often reported.
So what do we do about Iraq?
The first thing that we do is acknowledge the face
of human suffering in Iraq. Iraq is a country. Iraq is not Saddam
Hussein. More than 23 million people live there, each with a story
about how they have been affected by the sanctions and the Gulf
War.
We cannot ignore the real pain that has been virtually
unreported for the past twelve years in Iraq. The sanctions, administered
by the United Nations, essentially mean that Iraq has no tangible
revenue. All of their oil sales go through the Sanctions Committee
661 they sell their oil through the UN and must petition for items
to import. Many items are routinely denied: blood bags, x-ray
film, and even a shipment of 1 million pencils were denied because
they contain graphite which could be used in making weapons of
mass destruction.
People in America are suffering as well especially
today as we remember the tragedy which happened a year ago. But
we will not lessen our pain by inflicting pain on others we will
only create more hurt, more loss, more sadness.
There are a few things that surprised me about
visiting Iraq nearly every person I met there believes in the
good of the American people. They know that if we only knew of
their pain, that we would do more to help them. But if we believe,
as is reported in the mass media, that "they all hate us"
then it makes it okay for us to hate them too, and even kill them
first. But the catch is that they don't all hate us.
Arabs are magnanimous, beautiful, generous people.
The hospitality I was granted there was beyond any I could have
ever imagined.
But still recognizing the human face of Iraqis
is not enough. We must realize that an entire people cannot be
deemed evil. Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn once wrote that "the
line between good and evil runs through every human heart."
If we seek to eradicate evil, we are in essence killing a bit
of ourselves. Sister Helen Prejean, author of Dead Man Walking,
says that the value of human dignity is that we are worth more
than the worst thing we've ever done. These are powerful statements
about humanity and forgiveness which are crucial to remember in
times of inexplicable grief.
They are powerful statements because they demonstrate
faith in nonviolence.
Many people wonder about what to do about Saddam
Hussein, though.
Iraq needs regime change, but that change must
not happen through war. In a movement of sustained democratization,
the Iraqi people should decide for themselves free from international
pressure, who they want governing them. And the weapons inspectors
must resume their important job and be allowed to thoroughly,
efficiently and respectfully carry out their tasks.
And this can be done nonviolently.
Embracing nonviolence does not mean that you are
a doormat. It does not mean that you are weak.
Authors Jack DuVall and Peter Ackerman, who wrote
"A Force More Powerful" which became a six-part documentary
on nonviolent change, believe that Saddam Hussein can be toppled
through nonviolent measures, as were Pinochet and Milosevic. They
write in this month's issue of Sojourner Magazine, "Strategic
nonviolent action is not about being nice to your oppressor, much
less having to rely on his niceness. It's about dissolving the
foundations of his power and forcing him out. It is possible in
Iraq."
Why do we not see nonviolent change as legitimate,
though? Why is it not considered a viable option? Perhaps because
history is presented and written by the winners, and because war
making is so profitable. Alfie Kohn wrote "while it is indisputable
that wars have been fought, the fact that they seem to dominate
our history may say more about how history is presented that about
what actually happened."
Teaching Peace
This leads me into my final point. The most proactive
thing we can do as a country to combat hatred and intolerance
is to teach peace. Every class should be a peace class. It should
be a blend of nonviolent processes and content information. I
teach a class in three high schools here called "Solutions
to Violence" and it attempts to give students tangible tools
for resolving conflicts as well as cluing them in to the fact
that community service is expected of them, and it is rewarding.
They must ask the difficult questions of how they can best use
their talents to serve the world, their neighbors, their brothers
and sisters in humanity.
It is not a difficult class to teach. We read the
literature of peace and discuss it. We examine our own hearts,
minds and actions. We see how our actions affect others and how
everything in life is interconnected; nothing exists in a void.
Peace education is essential in an age of terrorism.
We must learn to resolve our conflicts through nonviolent means.
The purpose of education is to produce critically thinking, empathetic
and other-serving individuals. We will keep encountering the same
problems time and time again until we re-examine how history is
presented, how education is carried out until we reinsert the
nonviolent figures in our textbooks who have been systematically
written out.
We must teach our students to act based on their
conscience. They must have the faith of children in all of humanity,
seeing that we are all brothers and sisters. They must see the
necessity of caring for nature as she supports all life on earth.
Peace education makes room for healing and for
compassion, so needed in our time.
The nonviolence class here at Moorpark College
must continue! It is crucial that we not let peace education be
a casualty of the war on terrorism.
I am reminded of the June Jordan quote: "We
are the people we've been waiting for." We must not delegate
individual moral responsibility to another; our conscience is
the most precious quality unique to human beings.
Not only today on September 11, but every day it
is up to us to be a voice for the voiceless, to show compassion
and to go the extra mile and stretch our hearts to love just a
little bit more.
*Leah C. Wells serves
as the Peace Education Coordinator for the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation
in Santa Barbara, CA.
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