This Present Moment
Living
in Baghdad on the Eve of War
by Ramzi Kysia*, March 18, 2003
"The present moment is the only moment available
to us, and it is the door to all moments." - Thich Nhat Hanh
I am in Baghdad with the Iraq Peace Team, and we will stay here
throughout any war. We will share the risks of the millions who
live here, and do our best to be a voice for them to the world.
Our risks are uncertain.
Thousands here will surely die. But most Iraqis
will survive, and so too, I hope, will I.
A banner the government put up a few blocks from
where we stay reads simply, "Baghdad: Where the World Comes
for Peace." It's meant as propaganda, I'm sure, flattering
Saddam Hussein. But without knowing it, it states a simple truth:
that the world must be present for peace. We must be present in
Baghdad as in America - in Kashmir or Chechnya, the Great Lakes,
Palestine and Colombia - where there is war, and rumors of war,
we must be present to build peace. We are present.
My country may arrest me as a traitor, or kill
me during saturation bombing, or shoot me during an invasion.
The Iraqis may arrest me as a spy, or cause or use my death for
propaganda. Civil unrest and mob violence may claim me. I may
be maimed. I may be killed. I am nervous. I am scared. I am hopeful.
I am joyous, and I joyously delight in the wonder that is my life.
I love being alive. I love the splendor of our
world, the beauty of our bodies, and the miracle of our minds.
I bless the world for making me, and I bless the world for taking
me. I feed myself on the fellowship we inspirit, in standing one
with another in this, this present moment, each moment unfolding
to its own best time.
Different things move different members of our
team, but all of us are here out of deep concern for the suffering
of our brothers and sisters in Iraq. 20 years of almost constant
war, and 12 years of brutal sanctions, have killed hundreds of
thousands of innocents in Iraq. We are here, today, because most
of the world refused to be present, then. What more right do I
as an American have to leave then all the people I've come to
love in Iraq?
An accident of birth that gives me a free pass
throughout the world? All of us are here out of a deep commitment
to nonviolence. Peace is not an abstract value that we should
just quietly express a hope for. It takes work. It takes courage.
It takes joy. Peace takes risks. War is catastrophe. It is terrorism
on a truly, massive scale. It is the physical, political and spiritual
devastation of entire peoples.
War is the imposition of such massive, deadly violence
so as to force the political solutions of one nation upon another.
War is the antithesis of democracy and freedom. War is the most
bloody, undemocratic, and violently repressive of all human institutions.
War is catastrophe. Why choose catastrophe? Even the threat of
war is devastating.
On March 11th, when we visited a maternity hospital
run by the Dominican sisters here in Baghdad, we found that eight,
new mothers that day had demanded to have their babies by Caesarean
section - they didn't want to give birth during the war. Six others
spontaneously aborted the same day. Is this spirit of liberation?
Don't ask me where I find the courage to be present
in Iraq on the eve of war. 5 million people call Baghdad home.
24 million human beings live in Iraq. Instead, ask the politicians
- on every side - where they find the nerve to put so many human
beings at such terrible risk. We're here for these people, as
we're here for the American people. The violence George Bush starts
in Iraq will not stop in Iraq. The senseless brutality of this
war signals future crimes of still greater inhumanity. If we risk
nothing to prevent this, it will happen. If we would have peace,
we must work as hard, and risk as much, as the warmakers do for
destruction.
Pacifism isn't passive. It's a radical challenge
to all aspects of worldly power. Nonviolence can prevent catastrophe.
Nonviolence multiplies opportunities a thousand-fold, until seemingly
insignificant events converge to tumble the tyranny of fears that
violence plants within our hearts.
Where violence denies freedom, destroys community,
restricts choices - we must be present: cultivating our love,
our active love, for our entire family of humanity. We are daily
visiting with families here in Iraq. We are daily visiting hospitals
here in Iraq, and doing arts and crafts with the children. We
are visiting elementary schools, and high schools. We are fostering
community. We are furthering connections. We are creating space
for peace. We are not "human shields." We are not here
simply in opposition to war.
We are a dynamic, living presence - our own, small
affirmation of the joy of being alive. Slowly stumbling, joyous
and triumphant, full of all the doubts and failings all people
hold in common - our presence here is a thundering, gentle call,
to Americans as to Iraqis, of the affirmation of life. We must
not concede war to the killers. War is not liberation. It is not
peace. War is devastation and death.
Thuraya, a brilliant, young girl whom I've come
to love, recently wrote in her diary: "We don't know what
is going to happen. We might die, and maybe we are living our
last days in life. I hope that everyone who reads my diary remember
me and know that there was an Iraqi girl who had many dreams in
her life..."
Dream with us of a world where we do not let violence
rule our lives. Work with us for a world where violence does not
rule our lives. Peace is not an abstract concept. We are a concrete,
tangible reality. We the peoples of our common world, through
the relationships we build with each other, and the risks we take
for one another - we are peace.
Our team here doesn't know what is going to happen
any more than does Thuraya. We too may die. But in her name, in
this moment, at the intersection of all our lives, we send you
this simple message: We are peace, and we are present.
* Ramzi Kysia is a Arab American peace activist and writer. He
is currently in Iraq with the Voices in the Wilderness' (www.vitw.org)
Iraq Peace Team (www.iraqpeaceteam.org), a project to keep international
peaceworkers to Iraq prior to, during, and after any future U.S.
attack, in order to be a voice for the Iraqi people. The Iraq
Peace Team can be reached through info@vitw.org
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