Peacful Tomorrow:
Organization of Family Members of Sept. 11th Victims Speak Out
at NAPF Event
by Devon Chaffee, September 26, 2002
On September 24th, Kelly Campbell, who lost her
brother in-law to the September 11th attacks, spoke at an event
held at the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation on how she and other
family members of Sept. 11th victims came together in their grief
to promote peaceful options in search for justice. These individuals
formed an organization called September Eleventh Families for
Peaceful Tomorrows (www.peacefultomorrows.org) in an attempt to
prevent others from suffering the pains of loss they have in the
midst of US military retaliation. “Our grief,” they
said, “is not a cry for war.”
To make clear the connection between their own
suffering and the suffering of victims of the “War on Terror,”
Peaceful Tomorrows has sent delegates to Afghanistan to meet Afghan
civilians who have lost love ones in the US bombing campaigns.
These delegates returned with the Afghans’ message of “do
not forget us,” and they continue to be in contact with
their Afghan sister families.
According to Campbell, delegates who traveled to
Afghanistan were shocked by the stark contrast between the lack
of aid for Afghans devastated by US bombing and the outpouring
of support and compassion from around the world to their families
after the Sept. 11 attacks. To address this injustice, Peaceful
Tomorrows advocates for government funded aid to Afghan civilians
accidentally bombed by US forces, urging the administration to
take responsibility for detrimental effects of its military campaign.
Representatives from groups in the local community
working on Afghan issues, such as the revolutionary Association
of the Women of Afghanistan (RAWA), were also present at Tuesday’s
meeting, and joined Campbell in strategizing on effective means
to reach the media and policy makers with their important message.
In addition, the participants discussed the links
between the military campaign in Afghanistan and the Bush administration’s
push to wage war on Iraq, which would no doubt have a devastating
impact on the Iraqi civilian population. In a letter to President
Bush the Peaceful Tomorrow members stated:
“We know that war in Iraq would cause the
suffering of many thousands of innocent Iraqi families, people
who, like our family members on September 11th, will find themselves
in the wrong place at the wrong time. A war would also place our
military personnel in harm’s way, causing deaths and the
suffering of more American families. It is out of concern for
our own service people and for the Iraqi citizens that we implore
you to pursue a resolution of the situation in Iraq without war.”
After the NAPF event Campbell flew directly to
Washington D.C. to meet with Congressional representatives to
oppose war against Iraq.
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