The Mother We All Long For
by
Shepherd Bliss
by Shepherd Bliss
I
don’t know all the reasons why tears rise to my eyes when I read
about Cindy Sheehan. They flowed when I saw the photograph on the
bright cover of her new book Not
One More Mother’s Child. I noticed a young man (as I once
was) admiringly looking toward Cindy from the back row. Others held
a banner for Iraq Veterans Against the War.
“Cindy Sheehan
is the mother we all long for,” CODEPINK co-founder Jodie Evans
starts her Personal Introduction to the book. Suddenly I understood
something. The tears connect me, in gratitude, to Cindy who continues
to mourn the April 4, 2004, killing in Iraq of her soldier son Casey
Sheehan and to organize against war.
Vietnam was
the war of my generation. When I resigned my U.S. Army officer’s
commission to protest that war, my wonderful, loving mother could
not find it in herself to support me. In fact, I was considered
a traitor to my country within the military family that gave its
name to Ft. Bliss, Texas.
Though I may
be more than a decade older than Cindy, I consider myself one of
her many grateful “sons.” She works for those children currently
at war, those who may someday be called to war, and even for those
of us who were once at war all of us. Throughout her book she remembers
the children of other Gold Star Families for Peace, which she helped
found.
Cindy Sheehan
may be the single most important person to turn the tide of the
American people against the Iraq War. She set up Camp Casey outside
Pres. Bush’s home in Crawford, Texas, in August and has continued
to dog him since with a single question: “For what Noble Cause did
my son die?” She has yet to receive an answer from the president.
She has concluded, sadly, “My son died for nothing.”
On September
24, slightly less than a month after leaving Crawford, Cindy spoke
to 300,000 protestors in Washington, D.C. “We need a people’s movement
to end this war,” she declared. Two months later, on Thanksgiving
night, she returned to Crawford, where a permanent sandstone monument
to her slain son was unveiled with the words “Sheehan’s Stand.”
She spent the holiday with “my family of the heart.” Once again,
she was a couple of miles from Bush. Camp Casey has become a place
where people celebrate birthdays and holidays and even choose to
get married, because it is what Cindy describes as a loving place.
Not One More
Mother’s Child opens with Cindy’s straight-talking November 4, 2004,
Open Letter to George W. Bush, “Your reckless and wanton foreign
policies killed my son, my big boy, my hero, my best friend.” She
poses the essential questions, “What has happened to America? What
has happened to our freedoms? Where did sanity go?”
When she initially
arrived in Crawford inAugust, Cindy was a grieving mother known
to few. Now she is well-known internationally and the author of
a new book likely to become a best-seller. One gets the impression
that she is not going to finish dogging Bush until he withdraws
American troops from Iraq. This book will help that mission by giving
it more exposure and providing a fuller picture of who she really
is than the media offers.
Not One
More Mother’s Child assembles over 200 pages of Cindy’s own
words, ripe with intimate details, and 21 color photographs of her
with family members and supporters. It chronicles Cindy’s Aug. 3
idea to go to Crawford, her Aug. 5 speech in Dallas to Veterans
for Peace, her first dispatch from Crawford on Aug. 6 and material
into late September.
This book is
about healing one woman’s story, our nation’s story. It documents
Cindy’s movement through grief, helplessness, and rage to effective
direct action. It concludes with her essay “From Despair to Hope.”
By telling her own story so clearly, Cindy helps me, and others
of us, to understand our own personal stories. Cindy emerges in
this book as a patriotic American committed to the Christian tradition
of peace-making.
A Mother’s
love as simple (and complicated) as that is what it took to catalyze
a peace movement. Cindy makes her motivation quite clear “love of
Casey.” The book is full of compelling details about his 24 years.
Her goal is also clear “to hold George Bush accountable and to raise
awareness about his lies and misuse and abuse of power.”
Cindy Sheehan
is one spunky American. She does not sugar-coat word, speaking a
common language. Her writing is direct, passionate, and inspiring.
She speaks with integrity, authority, determination, generosity,
and clarity. Cindy has become the conscience of America and helps
us deal with the shame that so many people feel for our difficulty
at standing up to Bush.
I’ve seen Cindy
only once, at a CODEPINK booth at the Bioneers Conference this October.
I like the way Jodie Evans describes her: “nurturing, a she-wolf,
a mother bear, unafraid. She has empathy.” She radiates strength,
calmness, and humility, which we need at this historic moment when
an increasing number of Americans finally feel that the troops should
leave Iraq.
The book is
divided into six sections: her writings, letters, speeches, blogs
from the August 631 “Peaceful Occupation of Crawford, Texas,”
the September 126 “Bring Them Home Now Bus Tour,” and a final
section entitled “The Camp Casey Movement Will Not Die.”
In the three
months since Cindy finished her August stay in a ditch in Crawford,
Texas, it looks increasingly likely that Americans will not let
Bush “stay the course.” Even members of Congress are finally breaking
their silence to come out against the Iraq War. Cindy’s words ring
loud and clear as Bush’s popularity plummets, “The Camp Casey movement
will not die until we have a genuine account of the truth and until
our troops are brought home. Get used to it, George. We are not
going away.”
November
29, 2005
Shepherd
Bliss [send him mail] writes for
the Hawai’i Island Journal.
Copyright
© 2005 LewRockwell.com
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