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We Are the Children of IraqThis article is an edited version of a speech delivered by 12-year-old Charlotte Aldebron (aldebron@ainop.com) at a peace rally in Presque Isle, Maine in February 2003. When people think about bombing Iraq, they see a picture in their heads of Saddam Hussein in a military uniform, or maybe soldiers with big black mustaches carrying guns. But guess what? More than half of Iraq's 24 million people are children under the age of 15. That's 12 million kids. Kids like me. Well, I'm almost 13, so some are a little older, and some a lot younger, some boys instead of girls, some with brown hair, not red. But kids who are pretty much like me just the same. So take a look at me-a good long look. Because I am what you should see in your head when you think about bombing Iraq. I am what you are going to destroy. If I am lucky, I will be killed instantly, like the 300 children murdered by your "smart" bombs in a Baghdad bomb shelter on Feb. 16, 1991. The blast caused a fire so intense that it flash-burned outlines of those children and their mothers on the walls. You can still peel strips of blackened skin-souvenirs of your victory-from the stones. But maybe I won't be lucky and I'll die slowly, like 14-year-old Ali Faisal, who right now is on the "death ward" of the Baghdad children's hospital. He has malignant lymphoma-cancer-caused by the depleted uranium in your Gulf War missiles. Or maybe I will die painfully and needlessly like 18-month-old Mustafa, whose vital organs are being devoured by sand fly parasites. Mustafa could be totally cured with just $25 worth of medicine, but there is none of this medicine because of your sanctions. Or maybe I won't die at all but will live for years with the psychological damage that you can't see from the outside, like Salman Mohammed, who even now can't forget the terror he lived through with his little sisters when you bombed Iraq in 1991. He still has nightmares about the air raid sirens. Or maybe I will be orphaned like Ali, who was three when you killed his father in the Gulf War. Ali scraped at the dirt covering his father's grave every day for three years calling out to him, "It's all right Daddy, you can come out now, the men who put you here have gone away." Well, Ali, you're wrong. It looks like those men are coming back. Imagine that these are your children-or nieces or nephews or neighbors. Back in elementary school I was taught to solve problems with other kids not by hitting or name-calling, but by talking and using "I" messages. The idea of an "I" message was to make the other person understand how bad his or her actions made you feel, so that the person would sympathize with you and stop it. Now I am going to give you an "I" message. Only it's going to be a "We" message. "We" as in all the children in Iraq who are waiting helplessly for something bad to happen. "We" as in the children of the world who don't make any of the decisions but have to suffer all the consequences. "We" as in those whose voices are too small and too far away to be heard. We feel scared when we don't know if we'll live another day. We feel
angry when people want to kill us or injure us or steal our future. We
feel sad because all we want is a mom and a dad who we know will be there
the next day. And we feel confused because we don't even know what we
did wrong. |
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