Home of the Brave
Jay Walljasper Special to Utne Online
I have no clear idea what shape the world will be in by the time
you read this. The cold-blooded terrorist attacks left all of us
here at
Utne Reader staring into the future with a numbing
mixture of grief and anger and fear.
As a nation we have faced many steep challenges, but we've been
mercifully free of worry about the world's woes crossing our
borders to claim innocent lives. The horror of war, for Americans
not in uniform, has always been an abstract concept. I think this
safe distance from the front lines has shaped our sometimes
oversimplified view of international events and the aggressive
course of U.S. foreign policy. But now, even as the American public
backs extensive military action, we are no longer shielded from the
full realization of what war means for men, women, and
children.
Everywhere you looked were pictures of missing people,
thousands and thousands of them, placed by desperate friends and
relatives, in hopes that a miracle might occur.... These sheets of
paper are absolutely heartbreaking. The pictures of the missing
show people of every nationality and race, every age and religion,
describing their physical characteristics and identifying features
and telling when they were last heard from.... The pictures show
them hugging their wife or husband, holding their child or a pet,
embracing friends in a bar. They are so young. So vibrant. So
innocent.
This is not an account from Berlin 1945 or Beirut 1982 or Sarajevo
1994. This is an e-mail from my friend Ron Williams, describing
scenes outside his front door in New York City. Even now, many days
after the attack, it chokes me up to read it. So does another
passage from the letter in which Ron (co-founder of Detroit's
Metro Times alternative weekly) describes the spontaneous
crowd that gathered along Manhattan's West Side highway waving
flags and homemade banners to cheer firefighters, police, and other
rescue workers heading home after 18- and 24-hour shifts searching
for wounded in the rubble of the World Trade Center.
American flags have appeared all over Minneapolis, too, and for the
first time since I grew aware of the Vietnam War as a grade
schooler, I can gaze upon the red, white, and blue in a completely
unambiguous light. The brave firefighters; the bereaved families;
flag-waving New Yorkers; nervous Islamic-Americans; clergy and
other leaders appealing for tolerance; my neighbors and I anxiously
sharing news on the sidewalk each evening-we're all united as
Americans in our sadness at this tragedy and in our resolve that
such an atrocity will not break our spirit. For me, these feelings
are heightened by the memory of first hearing about the attack from
election volunteers while voting in a primary at a neighborhood
church, and how my wife Julie and I got further details from an
older black man we met walking home from the polls. 'Those are our
people,' he said, shaking his head. 'Those are our
people.'
At the same time, my feelings of sadness and patriotism don't
translate into automatic support for an all-out military assault on
anyone and everyone the White House doesn't like. I want the
perpetrators of these vicious murders brought to justice. I want
measures in place to protect America from further terrorism. But I
don't want husbands and daughters and parents on the other side of
world to be thrown into agony simply because their innocent loved
ones, like workers at the World Trade Center, were in the wrong
place at the wrong time. We won't see these families sobbing on
CNN, my friends will not be describing those scenes in e-mail, but
it willbring more sadness into my world just the same.
War is probably inevitable, given our political leaders and the
psychological dynamics of the global power structure. Still, it
seems important for us to remember that responding to terrorism
with bloodshed on an even larger scale will only make us less safe.
Every new escalation of violence provokes more of the same. It is
not unpatriotic to talk of peace. There are good ways to show our
strength, to honor those killed, and to ensure national security
other than waging war and siphoning massive amounts of money to the
military. This view may be wildly out of tune with the American
public at this moment in history, but later, as the flames of
revenge cool down in people's hearts, many more will understand
that a lasting and honest peace is the best protection against new
waves of terrorism.
Satish Kumar, a follower of Mahatma Gandhi who walked around much
of the world in the 1960s on a pilgrimage for nuclear disarmament,
was staying with my friend Ron in Greenwich Village at the time of
the attack. They rushed outside after hearing the news and from a
sidewalk on Seventh Avenue saw the second jetliner smash into the
World Trade Center. Satish, who is editor of the English magazine
Resurgence, offered his thoughts in an article for the Mother Earth
News Service: 'Governments must provide for the security and
defense of their citizenry. But parallel with that protection, we
must create a new international culture of peace. Peace is the
ultimate security, greater than that provided by any government or
any armed entity. We spend so much money on our armed forces and
weapons. If half of those resources could be devoted to resolving
conflicts peacefully, then we might see some good out of the
horrific act we recently have experienced.'
That's the glimmer of hope I hold through this dark time. As the
mightiest military power the world has ever seen, we might
gradually come to see that there is more to be ultimately gained
from learning the arts of peace than from perfecting the technology
of war. Offering this lesson to the world would be the truest mark
of America's greatness.