A military mom's view of the recent past
Under a Better Flag
By Jill Kuraitis, 11-13-06
Yesterday, my beloved firstborn left for the Middle East.
He will not see combat and will be relatively safe, but still – the Middle East – for a year.
First there is the whole year thing – it seems unimaginable right now – and then there is the location thing, and then there is the whole year thing. A year without rubbing his head and catching that clean scent that hasn’t changed since the day he was born. Twelve months without his company for dogwalks by the river. Four seasons without his familiar calls to chat about the latest political outrage, his lectures about my car-maintenance habits, and the way he cracks up. He doesn’t crack up often, but when he does – mercy but it’s a beautiful thing.
Ten days ago I was more upset than I am now, even though Andrew is gone. Bush was still proclaiming his support for Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, it was uncertain whether the Democrats could take the House, and the Senate was but a crazy dream.
Though tempered by Idaho’s disturbing election, my relief at the national results of November 7 has given me hope for relief for our military.
As of yesterday, official reports say 2,847 of them have been killed; 21,077 have been wounded.
Our sons and daughters.
Sources from the BBC to NBC and from The Washington Post to The Manchester Guardian put the number of Iraq civilian deaths at between 30,000 and 50,000.
They are also someone’s sons and daughters.
Mothers don’t like this war business. We have an inborn, profound interest in a peaceful world where our children can thrive. The great 19th-century American peace activist Julia Ward Howe, founder of Mother’s Day, had a different idea for the holiday than what it has become. She wanted to rally mothers and move them into the public-policy arena with one goal: to protect children from war. She said Mother’s Day was “to promote the alliance of the different nationalities, the amicable settlement of international questions, the great and general interests of peace.” It was to be an annual promotion of the Second Commandment: to love thy neighbor as thyself.
I’d like to have a talk with Barbara Bush about that.
Howe was also the author of the beautiful “Battle Hymn of the Republic,” which is not the call to arms that many may assume. It’s a plea to stamp out violence through the grace of God:
He has sounded forth the trumpet that shall never call retreat;
He is sifting out the hearts of men before His judgment-seat:
Oh, be swift, my soul, to answer Him! be jubilant, my feet!
Our God is marching on.
My late father, to whom my son was very close, was a veteran of four wars. As a teenager, he went to Spain to fight Franco. In the U.S. Army, he was with General Stilwell in WWII. He helped train the Israeli infantry in 1948 and then fought alongside them, and he ran transportation battalions in Korea. Throughout, he remained a liberal Democrat and never wavered. On his deathbed he made me promise to give a small portion of my inheritance to Betty Richardson, who was running for the 1st Congressional District at the time and whom he admired. He also urged me to consider military service for Andrew, whom he adored with his whole heart.
Partly in honor of his grandfather, our son entered the military for unique reasons having to do with special talents. He is a soldier in the war on terror, but not the way you may think. But if we had known that Bush lied about the existence of WMDs and would falsely link Saddam with Al-Queda; that the war would be as disastrously mismanaged as it has been; that kids in the military would be treated as badly by their own government as they have been - we probably would not have allowed our son to answer his call. But we liberals are just as interested in wiping out terror as are conservatives, and that’s how we proceeded.
I am not a pure pacifist. I believe in a super-competent military as an unfortunate necessity. But I grieve that foreign policy is so partisan, when what we all want is peace. I’m horrified at the overwhelming evidence that Bush and Cheney and Rumsfeld made decisions based on faulty intelligence; that they ignored direct intelligence of the September 11 attacks; that they used the Republican Big Lie Machine to convince Americans of an illogical untruth: that finding Saddam would lead us to Al-Queda and eventually to the wipeout of terrorism.
I’m also aghast at the conservative big lie that only pro-war Christian Republicans, only churchgoing straight married people have “family values” or are patriotic. What do they have to say to our 25-year marriage and two children who were never even sent to the principal’s office or got into any trouble; who received awards and honors and recognition for their grades, leadership and talents? Who were raised by hand with me at home; who write thank-you notes and hold doors open and help the elderly ladies on our block with their garden chores; who dress modestly and behave modestly and are now at university and in the military? Children who flew home on election day to cast their votes in person in their much-loved Idaho?
My Andrew, the offspring of supposedly immoral-godless-evil Democrats, is a man in your military. His sense of honor, his intellect, his competence as a responsible and productive man is in service to us all.
But now, he is in a service which will operate under a Secretary of Defense who will be scrutinized and held accountable in a way Donald Rumsfeld never was, and a Congress which will insist on a stronger role in foreign policy. A Congress, it is hoped, that will pay more attention to the broader and more basic principles on which humans should surely agree.
“Don’t run with a stick in your hand!” shriek mothers everywhere. “Don’t cross your eyes; they’ll stick that way!” “Give me those matches; we don’t play with fire!” we say.
My hope is that the American war machine will consider a lure instead of a stick; that they’ll uncross their eyes and see things in a different way, and that they’ll put the matches away in a safe place for now.
And may they remember my Andrew, and all our Andrews, while sifting out the hearts of man.
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Comments
Yep, me too.
I belong to women's theology e-group (Catholic). Most, if not all, are fairly progressive politically and thus are not fans of this administration and especially this 'war'. However one woman has a son who is a Marine pilot. We somehow managed to finally address that compassionately. I'll add your son to my 'list'.
As way of explanation: I lived in Cleveland (and Bedford/Solon) for 7 years. While there I was quite active in my parish. Parish council, social justice committee, eucharistic minister, etc. Then the pedophilia/child abuse issue hit the Boston diocese, and later Cleveland. Having fought that - hard - I was so burned out and exhausted I retreated from EVERYTHING. (I haven't been to church since. I even tried Julie's church, but I am still Catholic.) Periodically something would come up that would jolt me up. One something was a frantic call from my sister; my nephew wanted to join the Idaho National Guard after talking to recruiters; this was in mid-2003. I talked to my nephew; then, I talked to the young recruiter who had talked to him. Then I called and somehow managed to get an E8 at Gowen Field. I explained why I was calling, how I had been in the military, how the involvement of Iraq was bullsh*t, how 'The Guard' was not meant for overseas duty, and what did he think? I didn't think he'd do it, but he did. I relayed my 'findings' to my nephew; he did not enlist. He thinks he will at a later time when he can join the Judge Advocate Gen. Corp after getting thru BSU & law school. So in the meantime I have to put up with his Republican crap until then.
{And may they remember my Andrew, and all our Andrews, while sifting out the hearts of man.}
I'll put Andrew in that sacred place where I hold Judith's son, Matthew, along with all those in harm's way in this contemptible 'war.'
Last week's election was the first step to reasserting
the legitimate claim liberals and progressives have on patriotic values. The work continues, each day. Eternal vigilance is called for.
I saw a great church reader board yesterday, in Nampa, of all places. I'm sorry to say I didn't notice which church it was on Midland Blvd. It said:
There are no exceptions to "Love Your Neighbor"
What strikes me the most is this: what kind of father can bear to send other people's sons and daughters off to the killing fields?