-Caveat Lector-

Mike Schneider <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote on Fri, 28 Mar 2003 16:47:01 -
0600

http://www.upi.com/view.cfm?StoryID=20030327-040242-4131r

By Ken Joseph Jr.
 From the Life & Mind Desk

Published 3/27/2003

AMMAN, Jordan, March 27 (UPI) -- I was wrong. I had opposed the war on
Iraq in my radio program, on television and in my regular columns --
and I participated in demonstrations against it in Japan. But a visit
to relatives in Baghdad radically changed my mind.

I am an Assyrian Christian, born and raised in Japan, where my father
had moved after World War II to help rebuild the country. He was a
Protestant minister, and so am I.

As an Assyrian I was told the story of our people from a young age --
how my grandparents had escaped the great Assyrian Holocaust in 1917,
settling finally in Chicago.

There are some 6 million Assyrians now, about 2.5 million in Iraq and
the rest scattered across the world. Without a country and rights even
in our native land, it has been the prayer of generations that the
Assyrian Nation will one day be restored.

A few weeks ago, I traveled to Iraq with supplies for our Church and
family. This was my first visit ever to the land of my forefathers.
The first order of business was to attend Church. During a simple meal
for peace activists after the service, an older man sounded me out
carefully.

Finally he felt free to talk: "There is something you should know --
we didn't want to be here tonight. When the priest asked us to gather
for a Peace Service, we said we didn't want to come because we don't
want peace. We want the war to come."

"What in the world are you talking about?" I blurted.

Thus began a strange odyssey that shattered my convictions. At the
same time, it gave me hope for my people and, in fact, hope for the
world.

Because of my invitation as a "religious person" and family
connections, I was spared the government snoops who ordinarily tail
foreigners 24 hours a day.

This allowed me to see and hear amazing things as I stayed in the
homes of several relatives. The head of our tribe urged me not to
remain with my people during its time of trial but instead go out and
tell the world about the nightmare ordinary Iraqis are going through.

I was to tell the world about the terror on the faces of my family
when a stranger knocked at the door. "Look at our lives!" they said.
We live like animals -- no food, no car, no telephone, no job -- and,
most of all, no hope."

That's why they wanted this war.

"You can not imagine what it is to live like this for 20, 30 years. We
have to keep up our routine lest we would lose our minds."

But I realized in every household that someone had already lost his or
her mind; in other societies such a person would be in a mental
hospital. I also realized that there wasn't a household that did not
mourn at least one family member who had become a victim of this
police state.

I wept with relatives whose son just screamed all day long. I cried
with a relative who had lost his wife. Yet another left home every day
for a "job" where he had nothing to do. Still another had lost a son
to war and a husband to alcoholism.

As I observed the slow death of a people without hope, Saddam Hussein
seemed omnipresent. There were his statues; posters showed him with
his hand outstretched or firing his rifle, or wearing an Arab
headdress. These images seemed to be on every wall, in the middle of
the road, in homes.

"Everything will be all right when the war is over," people told me.
"No matter how bad it is, we will not all die. Twelve years ago, it
went almost all the way but failed. We cannot wait anymore. We want
the war, and we want it now."

When I told members of my family that some sort of compromise with
Iraq was being worked out at the United Nations, they reacted not with
joy but anger: "Only war will get out of our present condition."

This reminded me of the stories I heard from older Japanese who had
welcomed the sight of American B-29 bombers in the skies over their
country as a sign that the war was coming to an end. True, these
planes brought destruction -- but also hope.

I felt terrible about having demonstrated against the war without
bothering to ask what the Iraqis wanted. Tears streamed down my face
as I lay in my bed in a tiny Baghdad house crowded in with 10 other
people of my own flesh and blood, all exhausted, all without hope. I
thought, "How dare I claim to speak for people I had not even asked
what they wanted?"

Then I began a strange journey to let the world know of the true
situation in Iraq, just as my tribe had begged me to. With great risk
to myself and those who had told their stories and allowed my camera
into their homes, I videotaped their plight.

But would I get that tape out of the country?

To make sure I was not simply getting the feelings of the oppressed
Assyrian minority, I spoke to dozens of other people, all terrified.
Over and over, they told me: "We would be killed for speaking like
this."

Yet they did speak, though only in private homes or when other Iraqis
had assured them that no government minder was watching over me.

I spoke with a former army member, with someone working for the
police, with taxi drivers, store owners, mothers and government
officials. All had the same message: "Please bring on the war. We may
lose our lives, but for our children's sake, please, please end our
misery."

On my last day in Baghdad, I saw soldiers putting up sandbags. By
their body language, these men made it clear that they dared not speak
but hated their work; they were unmistakably on the side of the common
people.

I wondered how my relatives felt about the United States and Britain.
Their feelings were mixed. They have no love for the allies -- but
they trust them.

"We are not afraid of the American bombing. They will bomb carefully
and not purposely target the people," I was told. "What we are afraid
of is Saddam and the Baath Party will do when the war begins."

The final call for help came at the most unexpected place - the
border, where crying members of my family sent me off.

The taxi fares from Baghdad to Amman had risen within one day from
$100 to $300, to $500 and then to $1,000 by nightfall.

My driver looked on anxiously as a border guard patted me down. He
found my videotapes, and I thought: It's all over!

For once I experienced what my relatives were going through 365 days a
year -- sheer terror. Quietly, the officer laid the tapes on a desk,
one by one. Then he looked at me -- was it with sadness or with anger?
Who knows?

He clinically shook his head and without a word handed all the tapes
back to me. He didn't have to say anything. He spoke the only language
left to these imprisoned Iraqis -- the silent language of human
kindness.

"Please take these tapes and show them to the world," was his silent
message. "Please help us ... and hurry!"

-0-

The Rev. Ken Joseph Jr. lives in Tokyo and directs
Assyrianchristians.com

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