Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2001/09/12
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]bdcolen2001@yahoo.ca (B. D. Colen)9/12/0112:24 PM > Yes, some times it can be difficult to define > terrorism...however... I promise that this will be my last post re: this thread. As the original poster of what you'll find below was, so was I moved by this - and I respect all on this list so much - and believe that any group that could imagine FOM 2 - may wish to consider the following: ___________ Dear TAP, I belong to another listserve in Canada on the subject of NATO. A group in Ottawa has organized a "Festival of Non-Violence" to take place in a park across from the USA embassy on Oct. 6 when NATO is scheduled to meet in Ottawa. Since yesterday's tragic events there has been an on-line discussion of the fate of these plans. I am scheduled to speak and read poetry at it - I am wondering about my participation. (I also refer you to the statement by the War Resisters League in New York at www.warresisters.org/attack9-11-01.htm) I am forwarding to TAP one of the responses because I was so moved by it. " It seems at this time inappropriate to have a celebratory or festive event so close to such a huge tragedy, which itself will surely spark other tragedies. The US military will be very anxious to retaliate. By October 6, the US may very well be launching bombs at a variety of global targets. In this context, is a Festival atmosphere appropriate?" Should our response be seen as a festive, fun, happy, celebration? I believe the tone of our event must change to suit the context in which we find ourselves. " statement by festival organizer. This is the response. This is the biggest illusion of North Americans that somehow we find ourselves in a new context. Yes maybe for North America this is novel, but the reason many people initially objected to a "festive, fun, happy, celebration" is that there is nothing "festive, fun, happy" about the daily situation that Third World people's live, a situation of oppression, torture, military aggression, genocide, mass starvation, and incredible misery. Whether it be the monuments destroyed by NATO, the fear in my grandmothers voice, the thousands of poor Ecuadorians I met, the faces of children on the verge of death in maternity clinics across Ecuador, the cries of Palestinian mothers whose children had their heads blown off by Israeli security personel, the brother, son, and father who lost his entire familly in the ethnic carnage spawned by Rwandan and Ugandan occupation forces in Congo that has left over 2-million resting in unmarked graves across the Great Lakes region, the Colombian villagers massacred by right-wing paramilitaries who used chain-saws to dismember their victims, the 4-million infants of less than a month in age that die each year, the black inmate executed like so many others, or the countless other victims and examples of how globalization crushes life and the human spirit, I personally never thought, and many others concured with me, that a "festival" atmosphere was the "best" idea or even "appropriate" within this context. I think that for those interested, an examination of the "carnivalesque" as analysed by cultural studies theorists, and the debates this form of social disruption has engendered, is worth a study to contextualize in a more sober fashion my admitedly emotive reactions to the current discussions. Now more than before an event to plea for nonviolence is surely needed. Why now more than ever? Is it b/c this time the victims are North Americans? This is the only difference between today's sad event and the countless other examples just like it. Please Richard, avoid falling into the trap of American exceptionalist discourse where everything that happens to the United States is somehow seen as distinct and novel in the anals of history and worthy of special attention and human compassion. Like Fanon argued "the unity of humanity, which in the colonial experience had not been positively manifested has to be striven for. This unity can only be achieved by the negation of social conditions that deny the common human essence". By accepting American victimization on September 11th, 2001 as somehow outside of history and a unique event that from hereon-in should mediate all our actions as human-beings, we in effect contribute to the very same social conditions that give rise to the monstrous denial of the humanity of those "alien others" that are so carefully and meticulously constructed by the corporate media. I think such a stance should be avoided at ALL costs. Nonviolence should be what we most strongly emphasize. Opposition to the repeated cycle of violence is very important. I believe it is appropriate now to emphasize that we oppose violence whether by a rogue superpower (US), a military alliance of its friends (NATO) or by terrorist groups. In this context, is it appropriate to hold a festival with an antiNATO message in a park facing the US embassy? Of course, why not? NATO and the US are terrorist groups in my mind, they terrorized my familly, neighbors, friends, and acquaintances. If we oppose terrorism these acts should crystalize how the victims of not just NATO, but Western foreign policy feel on a daily basis. I think it is very appropriate to hold a PROTEST in front of the US Embassy, b/c it is the most symbolic structure in all of Ottawa. Can you picture the security that will be assembled there? can you imagine how sensitive they will be and how easily provoked by the slightest thing? Personally I think this would be a major turn off to many folk who might otherwise attend. Getting as many people as possible to attend is surely one of our goals. I think even less people will attend if this thing is turned into some amorphous and vague teach-in on such broad and harmless categories as "Love and Peace". Richard, I think you understimate the extent to which NATO and imperialism animates imigrant comunities in this country, there are real passions behind people's opposition to Western militarism, the very same passions you felt today towards the perpatrators of the tragic acts that have transpired across the USA. Think about how you felt today...please, reflect on it solemenly and seriously. Did you feel like your whole world was turned upside down? Did you feel like things, including yourself, could never be the same again? Did you feel like you wanted to call everyone you knew, even if they were far from the disaster, just to verify that they are okay? Did you feel like nothing was safe anymore? That all security was abandoned in that plume of smoke? Did you feel that pain in the pit of your stomach, the one that almost made you feel like you would vomit? Did you feel this violence rock your daily life, prevent you from concentrating on anything else? Did it pervade your thoughts, emotions and feelings? Did you cry at the sound of another human voice cracking in desperation as it tried to relate the horror it had witnessed? If so then I think you can be sure that the countless friends, relatives and co-nationals of the victims of US aggressions across the world will come out to Ottawa regardless of the security measures taken, b/c they have felt what you felt today for maybe their entire lives. For half my life I've endured the pain and suffering of watching my country being torn to shreds. I know kids who've only known suffering and pain of this nature for their whole lives. These are acts that hurt, that maim, and injure, kill and crush, not only those they claim physically, but also those that they end-up affecting the heart or the mind. By a Canadian from the former Yugoslavia <>Peace<> <>Harmony<> <>Stewardship<> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ G e o r g e L o t t e r m o s e r, imagist _____________________________________________ eMail imagist@concentric.net voice 262 241 9375 fax 262 241 9398 Lotter Moser & Associates 10050 N Port Washington Rd - Mequon, WI 53092 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~