LETTER FROM THE ROAD, 11
ELIZABETH ROBERTS (RABIA)
11 FEBRUARY 2003
DARK NIGHT OF THE SOUL
But we, like sentries, are obliged to stand
In starless nights, and wait the ‘pointed hours.
John Dryden
Elias has been busy for the past days making banners, getting tents
and setting up sites for a series of actions the Iraq Peace Team will
initiate during the coming week. In contrast to his energy,
I
am paralysed by a deep dread. I feel the war’s shadow over my
shoulder. And at the moment its darkness has me in its grip. I don’t
want to meet new people or have new experiences. What’s the point,
I think? This place is over! When I do talk with some old friends from
my previous visit to Baghdad in November-December, we cry together.
The future approaches and millions must stand silently through the coming
night.
Those Iraqis who can afford it have already left Baghdad. United Nations
officials are taking their vacations and humanitarian groups are being
sent home. Businessmen have relocated their families. Foreigners are
returning to their homelands. Journalists are surveying hotels for their
structural soundness. People are selling their cars, their possessions,
anything they have to help them get out of the city.
But the vast majority have nowhere to go. Five million men, women and
children must stay here and endure the rain of bombs, the lack of electricity,
clean water, food supplies and medicines. Schools and hospitals will
close; so will shops and businesses. No one knows when and where the
shells made with depleted uranium or other chemical, biological or nuclear
weapons will be used. Rumors are that marshal law will be enforced.
Hassan is an out of work electrician. He tells me that he and his wife
have put extra food by, but they worry that if the war lasts too long,
looters will come for their supplies. He is a mild man. He tries not
to discuss the war in front of his four children “but they hear
it in school and from their friends. Yesterday Alla (his 9 year old
son) asked if we are going to die. This is their great fear, not their
own death, but the loss of their mother and father.”
Why? Why? Why? This is the one question every person I talk with asks.
“Will you destroy so much just for the oil? Do Americans know
what a catastrophe this will be? Nothing will be good between the Arabs
and the Americans again—not for 100 years.” I can only bear
witness to this pain. I have no answers.
Every day in the hotel, in small groups, the Peace Team people discuss
the countdown to war. How many more days before the invasion? When should
we leave? Will those who choose to stay through the war be safe? What
can we do to prevent the coming disaster? Will anything stop it? The
U.N. Security Council? France and Germany? The American public? Saudi
Arabia? Most of us have given up hope for a last minute reprieve. Bush
will have his war. And we will stand in solidarity with the Iraqi people
as long as each of us can.
Khaled, our Yemeni graduate student friend looks at me and says I have
“the fear sickness”. He says he is seeing it a lot. He says
I should leave Iraq. It’s true I have a little fever, no appetite
and sleep a lot. I do feel despair. Today a memo was slipped under my
door. It had 14 questions. The first one: “In the event of your
death, do you agree to your body not being returned to your own country
but being disposed of in the most convenient way?” With decisions
like this how does one not have the “fear sickness?”
Elias and I do have an exit date that we believe is safe, but of course
it is not fool-proof. And the very fact that we can exit only heightens
my despair for those we leave behind. Perhaps staying through the war
with the Iraqi people would be easier on the soul. But not on the body
– some people here say the survival odds given to the American
peaceworkers staying through the invasion is about 30%. I am simply
not ready (yet) to face the end of my life or to answer the second question:
“Have you written a letter that can be sent to your loved ones
in the event of your death?”
While
I puzzle about how to avoid death, life goes on all around me. The shoeshine
boys still play in front of our hotel, hoping for spare change. Amal,
my friend with the art studio, opens her shop every morning, offers
tea, weeps quietly and then shows me the new fabrics from Kurdistan.
Kamel, the Imam’s assistant from a nearby mosque still comes to
work every day, tall and dignified, serving coffee to us and teaching
us a few words of Arabic. Last night seven wedding parades, complete
with ribbons and music, drove down our street – seven! Across
the street the Palestine Hotel has begun to tape it large glass windows
to try and prevent them from shattering or imploding when the bombing
starts. And on the grounds right below these windows there are two Iraqi
men still tending to the few green plants and small garden that are
in front of the hotel. Preparing for death, tending life. The truth
of this lesson breaks my heart. A small green shoot pushes through the
ruins. Surely the very least I owe these beautiful people is the energy
of my smile and good cheer. What right do I have to despair when everywhere
life continues. I pray that with the help of grace this “fear
sickness” will pass. Insh’allah!
