Bereaved Parents Lead Holiday Humanitarian Mission
to Iraq
by
Jim Lobe
Parents
of three U.S. soldiers killed in the war in Iraq are on their way
to that country as part of a humanitarian mission aimed at showing
a different face of the United States to Iraqis displaced by fierce
fighting in Fallujah.
Along with representatives of several antiwar groups, including
San Francisco-based Global Exchange, CodePink, and Physicians for
Social Responsibility (PSR), the parents will be distributing some
$600,000 worth of aid for the estimated 250,000 people who fled
the city in advance of U.S. offensive last month in which some 2,000
Iraqis and at least 71 U.S. soldiers were killed.
The parents include Fernando and Rosa Suarez of Escondido, Calif.,
whose son Jesus was killed in Iraq during the early days of the
invasion March 27, 2003; Amalia Avila, whose son, Lance Cpl. Victor
Gonzalez of Watsonville, Calif., died in Fallujah's al-Anbar province
on Oct. 13 this year; and Nadia McCaffrey, whose son, Patrick of
Petaluma, Calif., was killed last June 22.
"This
delegation is a way for me to express my sympathy and support for
the Iraqi people," said Rosa Suarez. "The Iraq war took
away my son's life, and it's taken away the lives of so many innocent
Iraqis. It's time to stop the killing and to help the children of
Iraq," she added.
Also traveling with the group is Adele Welty, whose son, New York
City firefighter Tim Welty, died in the World Trade Center on Sept.
11, 2001.
"I
am trying to leave a legacy in my son's name," she said to
Long Island's Newsday this weekend. Welty is one of the founders
of the antiwar Sept. 11th Families for Peaceful Tomorrows; she was
arrested and jailed briefly last March during a protest rally in
Washington, D.C.
"It
wasn't a hard decision to make," she said about traveling to
Iraq. "I am appalled at the growing list of casualties of both
American soldiers and Iraqi civilians."
The main sponsors of the delegation, which also include Women for
Peace, United for Peace and Justice, Voices in the Wilderness, and
Project Guerrero Azteca for Peace, launched an Internet appeal for
funds at the beginning of December after U.S. Marines announced
that they had taken control of Fallujah, a stronghold for the Iraqi
insurgency.
One organizer, Global Exchange's Medea Benjamin, said they had hoped
to raise about $20,000 but quickly received some $100,000 in contributions
through the Internet. Another $500,000 in medical and humanitarian
supplies was donated by the Middle East Children's Alliance and
Operation USA.
They expect to arrive in Amman, Jordan, on Monday, where they will
meet with humanitarian and healthcare workers to hand over the supplies.
They plan to travel to the Iraq-Jordan border for a peaceful vigil
on New Year's Day and visit camps of Fallujah residents who left
the city in anticipation of the U.S. offensive.
To date, around 1,000 residents have been permitted to return to
the city which had a population of 250,000. According to the most
recent media reports, about one-third of the buildings in the city
were leveled in the fighting. On Thursday, three Marines reportedly
were killed in clashes there that indicated to observers that the
city was still not entirely secure.
In addition, most services, including water and electricity, have
been cut off as a result of the destruction, suggesting that the
city will not be able to support its original population until major
repairs can be completed on basic infrastructure. The only humanitarian
agency that is active there at the moment is the Red Crescent Society.
"The
goal really is to locate one of the refugee camps where children
and mainly women are kept," McCaffrey told KCBS in San Francisco
Sunday. "I know that they have nothing, no supply, nothing
right now."
McCaffrey's son Patrick, a member of the 579th Engineer Battalion
based in Petaluma, was killed when his patrol squad was ambushed.
She came to national attention earlier this year when she protested
the Pentagon 's policy banning the photographing or filming of the
flag-draped coffins of soldiers killed in Iraq and Afghanistan by
inviting the press to view her son's coffin when it arrived in Sacramento
via commercial aircraft.
Fernando Suarez, who visited Baghdad last December, has also gained
national attention by publicly challenging the Bush administration
to explain why it was necessary to go to war in Iraq shortly after
his son's death. He told the North County Times, a suburban
San Diego newspaper that that the trip's intent "is to provide
humanitarian aid to the children of Iraq that the U.S. government
has not been able to provide."
"I
have contact with an Iraqi doctor in Jordan, and he told me that
five to 10 children die every single day only from diarrhea and
respiratory problems because the doctors don't have any medicines,"
added Suarez, who founded Project Guerrero Azteca last year. "This
war is killing children and women who are not our enemies. By bringing
medicine to children in Iraq, we are not helping terrorism, we are
combating it."
Avila, a travel agent and mother of three, said the decision to
travel to Iraq to meet with the refugees was easy despite the risks.
"It's a peace mission," she told the Register-Pajaronian,
a newspaper of the Pajaro Valley north of San Francisco.
"We
have the same pain, we lose our sons, and they are losing their
husbands and children not in the military services. We don't want
them to think we are going there to kill people," she said.
Benjamin,
who also co-founded CodePink and is best known for interrupting
Congressional testimony by Pentagon chief Donald Rumsfeld earlier
this year, said she felt the timing of the trip was particularly
compelling.
"The
holiday season is a time when many people want to express the values
of compassion, love, and sharing for our fellow human beings,"
she said. "This humanitarian aid delegation is our show of
compassion for the Iraqi people."
"At
the same time," she added, "we will be showing our support
for U.S. troops by calling on the U.S. government to bring them
home now."
December
28, 2004
Jim
Lobe is Inter Press Service's correspondent in Washington, DC.
Copyright
© 2004 One World
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