LETTER
FROM THE ROAD, IRAQ #8
ELIAS AMIDON AND ELIZABETH ROBERTS
30 JANUARY 2003
BACK TO BAGHDAD
Today we write from a small hotel in Amman, Jordan, waiting for our
visas which will enable us to return to Iraq. The newspapers we have
just finished reading announce “America Targets Iraq!” and
recount the number of soldiers and tonnage of munitions destined for
the country across the border.
So why then are we going back to Iraq now, when an attack seems inevitable?
What possible use is there in this action?
Since our return from Iraq one month ago we have helped take the anti-war
message to the American public. We have given speeches, interviews on
TV and radio, been the subject of numerous articles in newspapers, and
been quoted in USA Today, the Nation, and the BBC. Our “Letters
from Iraq” have reached around the globe. By now probably several
million people have heard about our earlier journey to Iraq. A week
ago we decided it was time to return – to stand in solidarity
with Iraqi citizens in their vulnerability. Not everyone can do this,
or is called to such a gesture, but we are and have chosen to follow
this call not only for ourselves but for all who travel with us in our
prayers.
Two days ago we were in Pasadena, California, giving a talk to a large
group at an Episcopal church. After our talk we attended the Sunday
service – the church was full, maybe 1500 people, the sermon by
Father Ed Bacon a powerful exhortation to become disciples not simply
believers, to put Christ’s message of peace into action. Following
the Mass, Father Ed called the two of us to the center aisle of the
church, asking everyone to get up out of their pews and come gather
around us. He asked those closest to us to put their hands on our shoulders,
and then for each person in the church to touch another until we were
all connected. The choir came down from behind the altar, the organist,
the altar boys, the elderly ladies in their hats, the young couples,
the wealthy businessmen, the Hispanic families, we all bowed our heads
together in this web of people. The church grew silent. We waited. Then
the priest invoked a blessing that encompassed and moved through everyone
toward the two of us at the center of the web, and then beyond us. We
were asked to be their emissaries, to carry their love and compassion
as we journey back to Iraq. The charge was electric – many of
us were in tears.
This was the most dramatic, but not the only time this happened prior
to our return. We were blessed and asked to carry blessing by friends,
by our children, by Buddhist roshis, Jewish rabbis, Sufi sheikhs, Methodist
and Unitarian ministers, and by countless people in church halls and
community centers and through our daily email. We understand this outpouring
is not about us – we are simply its occasion. People throughout
our country, from Washington D.C. to Los Angeles, California, are standing
up, raising their voices, coming out of their homes and offices and
demanding that our government not go forth in violence, not consider
itself the sole arbiter of justice throughout the world, and not continue
to undermine the work of a half century of multilateral agreements and
treaties establishing cooperation among the community of nations.
So what is the use of returning to Baghdad with a war so immanent?
While we do not intend to stay if the war starts, there are several
good reasons to be there until then: we will help the Iraq Peace Team
train the short-term delegations still coming through Baghdad (there
are at least five groups coming in the next two weeks); as long as the
electricity is up we will send out stories about the Iraqi people through
these letters and through phone interviews; and we will help create
public actions in Baghdad to attract the attention of the international
press to humanitarian issues.
We
believe in the usefulness of the Peace Team’s presence in Iraq.
It serves to inspire and link the worldwide peace movement to this beleaguered
land, standing for the power of nonviolence as the circle of war tightens
around this country and its 23 million people.
But beyond these reasons there is a deeper one – which is not
about reasoning but about spirit. It has to do with the prayers of the
people given to us in that Episcopal church and in all the other churches,
homes, universities, and street demonstrations we have experienced in
the past month. These prayers are inside us. They represent the intention
of people everywhere to break through the logic of fear and war with
gestures of hope and friendship. We take the spirit of these prayers
back with us, to the mosques and churches of Baghdad to offer them in
the presence of Iraqis. Prayer – which we understand not as supplication
to a distant deity but as an expression of the heart’s deepest
intention – may not be able to stop the U.S. attack on Iraq, but
we know it has implications beyond what we can imagine. We return in
this faith.