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It's New Year's Eve, and last night my colleague at Waging Nonviolence, Eric Stoner, returned safely from Afghanistan. He was there as a journalist and activist with an envoy of peacemakers, meeting networks of Afghans and internationals who are working to end the endless war, to which so many young people in that country have never known any alternative.
He brought back a sack full of Afghan scarves, and offered me my pick of them. The one I chose, the yellow one, is what I'm wearing now. What the picture doesn't show, but which was the first thing I noticed when I put it on, is the smell. One scarf smells strongly; the smell of Eric's sack of them is tremendous. He didn't notice it when he was in Kabul, because everything smells this way there. With my scarf on, I'm carrying that city with me today, into the new year. I'm breathing the city that my country has occupied for nearly a decade now.
I can try to describe it, but I'll never succeed. It's a bit like the smell of a wood fire, but there's much more, too. There's also the trace of burning trash, which people use to supplement their insufficient wood and coal, for heat and cooking. There's smog in it too, from a city where people can't afford anything but the lowest-grade gasoline in cars, and where the snow-capped mountains all around trap it in. There's also dust, because the cars are driving over mostly unpaved roads. And there's the hint of unnamable filth from the scattered sewers that run along the roads, open to the air. This would be just unsanitary in a city of thousands. But Kabul has swelled to 4 million, thanks to impoverished refugees pouring in from the war-ravaged countryside, their ancestral land lost and trading good, clean air for what I'm smelling now.
In late 2001, I met a woman who worked at the Pentagon. When she learned I had been protesting the invasion, she argued with me. She said, as we parted, that someday I'd understand that this was right. I'd get over it. Well, I still don't. I haven't.
The year to come will only really be new if we make it that way. Let our mere prayers for peace be made acceptable by our actions, by our willingness to shed the pride and importunity that keeps us trying to have our way with drone strikes and night raids. They will fail. There is no victory from making widows and orphans. In a new year made truly new, we will no longer accept the waste and horror of war as the policy of normalcy. We will stop trying to take what isn't ours. We will starve the bottomless hunger for revenge, and sit down with our enemies, and eat together.
Let God be the first to know, and Congress second: it's a new year. War, the demon-mother of poverty, is no good in our sight, and we are the ones who can stop it. This year, may the 4 million human beings in Kabul breathe clean air again. Amen; let this be done.
Previously published at Killing the Buddha.
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War in Afghanistan (2001–present) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Afghanistan : Pictures, Videos, Breaking News
Obama's isolation grows on the Afghanistan war - USATODAY.com
Frankly I think the war machine will keep grinding away - the military-industrial complex doesn't care, our politicians are bought and paid for, the media refuses to give any more than glancing recognition to opposition. We built a new embassy in Kabul last year for 700 million dollars, Washington isn't walking away from that any time soon.
But let us meet this kicking and screaming. Laying down and saying, 'oh, well, 'twas ever thus' isn't just laziness or cowardice, it is spiritual suicide.
We can still claim our dignity as citizens of the world. The wars will end, and end in failure, and America will be weakened and shamed by it - but Americans who protested will write the history of it, and may yet teach the truth for future generations to learn from.