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CommonDreams.org
November 29, 2003
The
Soldiers At My Front Door
by John Dear
I live in a tiny, remote, impoverished, three block long town in the desert
of northeastern New Mexico. Everyone in town -- and the whole state -- knows
that I am against the occupation of Iraq, that I have called for the closing
of Los Alamos, and that as a priest, I have been preaching, like the Pope, against
the bombing of Baghdad.
Last week, it was announced that the local National Guard unit for northeastern
New Mexico, based in the nearby Armory, was being deployed to Iraq early next
year. I was not surprised when yellow ribbons immediately sprang up after the
press conference.
But I was surprised the following morning to hear 75 soldiers singing, shouting
and screaming as they jogged down Main Street, passed our St. Joseph's church,
back and forth around town for an hour. It was 6 a.m., and they woke me up with
their war slogans, chants like "Kill! Kill! Kill!" and "Swing
your guns from left to right; we can kill those guys all night."
Their chants were disturbing, but this is war. They have to psyche themselves
up for the kill. They have to believe that flying off to some tiny, remote desert
town in Iraq where they will march in front of someone's house and kill poor
young Iraqis has some greater meaning besides cold-blooded murder. Most of these
young reservists have never left our town, and they need our support for the
"unpleasant" task before them. I have been to Iraq, and led a delegation
of Nobel Peace Prize winners to Baghdad in 1999, and I know that the people
there are no different than the people here.
The screaming and chanting went on for one hour. They would march passed the
church, down Main Street, back around the post office, and down Main Street
again. It was clear they wanted to be seen and heard. In fact, it was quite
scary because the desert is normally a place of perfect peace and silence.
Suddenly, at 7 a.m., the shouting got dramatically louder. I looked out the
front window of the house where I live, next door to the church, and there they
were -- all 75 of them, standing yards away from my front door, in the street
right in front of my house and our church, shouting and screaming to the top
of their lungs, "Kill! Kill! Kill!" Their commanders had planted them
there and were egging them on. I was astonished and appalled. I suddenly realized
that I do not need to go to Iraq; the war had come to my front door. Later,
I heard that they had deliberately decided to do their exercises in front of
my house and our church because of my outspoken opposition to the war. They
wanted to put me in my place.
This, I think, is a new tactic. Over the years, I have been arrested some 75
times in demonstrations, been imprisoned for a "Plowshares" disarmament
action, been bugged, tapped, and harassed, searched at airports, and monitored
by police. But this time, the soldiers who will soon march through Baghdad and
attack desert homes in Iraq, practiced on me. They confronted me personally,
just as the death squad militaries did in Guatemala and El Salvador in the 1980s,
which I witnessed there on several occasions.
I decided I had to do something. I put on my winter coat and walked out the
front door right into the middle of the street. They stopped shouting and looked
at me, so I said loudly, publicly for all to hear, "In the name of God,
I order all of you to stop this nonsense, and not to go to Iraq. I want all
of you to quit the military, disobey your orders to kill, and not to kill anyone.
I do not want you to get killed. I want you to practice the love and nonviolence
of Jesus. God does not bless war. God does not want you to kill so Bush and
Cheney can get more oil. God does not support war. Stop all this and go home.
God bless you." Their jaws dropped, their eyeballs popped and they stood
in shock and silence, looking steadily at me. Then they burst out laughing.
Finally, the commander dismissed them and they left.
Later, military officials spread lies around town that I had disrupted their
military exercises at the Armory, so they decided to come to my house and to
the church in retaliation. Others appealed to the archbishop to have me kicked
out of New Mexico for denouncing their warmaking. Then, a general called the
mayor and asked him to mediate "negotiations" with me, saying he did
not want the military "in confrontation" with the church. Really,
the mayor told me, they fear that I will disrupt the gala send-off next month,
just before Christmas, when the soldiers go to Iraq.
This dramatic episode is only the latest in a series of confrontations since
I came to the desert of New Mexico in the summer of 2002 to serve as pastor
of several poor, desert churches. I have spoken out extensively against the
U.S. war on Iraq, and been denounced by people, including church people, across
the state. I have organized small Christian peace groups throughout the state.
We planned a prayer vigil for nuclear disarmament at Los Alamos on the anniversary
of Hiroshima this past August, but when the devout people of Los Alamos, most
of them Catholic, heard about it, they appealed to the archbishop to have me
expelled if I appeared publicly in their town. In the end, I did not attend
the vigil, but the publicity gave me further opportunities to call for the closing
of Los Alamos. I receive hate mail, negative phone calls and at least one death
threat for daring to criticize our country. But New Mexico is the poorest state
in the U.S. It is also number one in military spending and number one in nuclear
weapons. It is the most militarized, the most in need of disarmament, the most
in need of nonviolence. It is the first place the Pentagon goes to recruit poor
youth into the empire's army. If we are to change the direction of our country,
and turn people against Bush's occupation of Iraq, we are going to have to face
the ire and persecution of our local communities. If peace people in every local
community insisted that our troops be brought home immediately, that the U.N.
be sent in to restore Iraq, that all U.S. military aid to the Middle East be
cut, and that our arsenal of weapons of mass destruction be dismantled, then
we might all find soldiers marching at our front doors, trying to intimidate
us.
If we can face our soldiers, call them to quit the military and urge them to
disobey orders to kill, then perhaps some of them will refuse to fight, become
conscientious objectors and take up the wisdom of nonviolence. If we can look
them in the eye and engage them in personal Satyagraha as Gandhi demonstrated,
then we know that the transformation has begun.
In the end, the episode for me was an experience of hope. We must be making
a difference if the soldiers have to march at our front doors. That they failed
to convert me or intimidate me, that they had to listen to my side of the story,
may haunt their consciences as they travel to Iraq. No matter what happens,
they have heard loud and clear the good news that God does not want them to
kill anyone. I hope we can all learn the lesson.
-----
John Dear is a Catholic priest, peace activist, lecturer,
and former
executive director of the Fellowship of Reconciliation. His latest books
include "Mohandas Gandhi" (Orbis) and "Mary of Nazareth, Prophet
of
Peace" (Ave Maria Press). For info, see:
www.johndear.org
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