Was Saddam's death dignified?
Stephen Moss
Tuesday January 2, 2007

On the surface, of course not. An ageing man with a grey beard stands, looking 
bemused, beneath a makeshift gibbet while his enemies taunt him. As he is 
saying a final prayer, the trapdoor is suddenly released and he plunges to his 
death, a brief expression of surprise registering on his face as the floor 
gives way. All this is filmed. Twice. Once as an official video that ends just 
before the door is opened. But also in a clandestine, unexpurgated videophone 
version now doing the rounds on the internet.

YouTube has it, of course, and in many respects it is desperately depressing. 
For a start, based on viewer/voyeur comments, the site has given the 2min 36sec 
video a four-star rating. How does that translate? "Worth a look", perhaps, but 
not necessarily "Don't miss". Then there is the talkboard, full of juvenile 
abuse: "HOLY SHIT!!", "He had it coming", "Couldn't they have tortured him 
too?". Deaths surely don't come any less dignified than this. 

And yet, if a dictator has to die, this would surely be the way he would 
choose. One last stage, a worldwide audience at his command. Saddam's final 
exchanges with his hooded, gangsterish executioners are already being 
mythologised. "Go to hell," one is reported to have said. "The hell that is 
Iraq?" Saddam supposedly snaps back. A brilliant riposte from a man about to 
die. 

Thus are famous last words born. This could be his epitaph, exemplifying his 
defiance and condemning his lynching party, only one of whom has the decency to 
call for silence. "Please stop, the man is being executed, please stop." The 
man. Not the monster, the butcher, the tyrant. Saddam's killers have achieved 
the impossible: they have made us feel sympathy for him, for his grace under 
pressure. There may not have been dignity in the dying, but there was courage. 
A five-star death.


 
- Arif
London, UK
- Read (or listen) Koran - The Last Testament.
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