Casey Austin Sheehan May 29, 1979April 4, 2004
by
Cindy Sheehan
As far as we
can piece things together, March 31st, two years ago, is the day
that the First Cavalry arrived in Sadr City, a slum in Baghdad formerly
named "Saddam City," Iraq. I say "as far as we can
piece together" because we have heard many different stories,
but this date seems to be the one that we have heard most often.
Casey began
a letter to us, his family, on April 1, 2004, telling us that he
finally had an address where we could send letters and packages,
and most of all, calling cards. The one and only time he called
home from Kuwait, it had cost him 400 minutes just to connect the
call and he didn't have much time to talk. That was the last we
heard from him. He called about 12:30 one morning and said it was
"hot," he was on his way to mass, and they should be convoying
to Iraq at the end of that week. In his letter, he mentioned that
he had talked to me that morning, but I probably wouldn't remember
it, because he had awakened me. Little did he know, I will never
forget that call, and I pray fervently that I never forget the sound
of his voice.
In his letter,
he also expressed regret that he wouldn't be home for his baby sister
Janey's high school graduation that June. Little did he know that
he would be home. He also told us that the First Cav was expecting
a pretty "smooth year" because the unit that they were
replacing had only two casualties for the entire year before. Maybe
he knew, maybe he didn't know that the day he arrived in Baghdad,
four mercenary soldiers from Blackwater Security Company were hanging
off of a bridge in Fallujah and the proverbial doo-doo was about
to hit the fan in Iraq, and less than 5 days later he would draw
his last breath in an alley thousands of miles away from home, shot
dead by a rebel who didn't welcome him with "flowers and chocolates."
I wonder what his last thought was as he lay dying for George and
the other Chickenhawks.
I would beg
Casey not to go to Iraq before he left because we both knew it was
wrong. He would say: "I wish I didn't have to, Mom, but the
sooner I get there the sooner I will be home." Little did Casey
know that not even four weeks after the First Cavalry left Ft. Hood,
he would be coming home in a cardboard box in the freight area of
a United Airlines 747.
I am often
accused by the right-wing smear propaganda machine of making this
struggle about me, and not about Casey. How Casey's story has been
lost in the hulla-balloo that almost always is surrounding me. This
is so ironic, because I started working for peace shortly after
Casey was killed, to be sure that Casey would not be forgotten by
America, that he would not be just a number. I started this so Casey's
sacrifice would count for love and peace not hatred, killing,
and lies. I started on my journey for peace to make sure it didn't
happen to other Caseys and their families.
As the two-year
mark of Casey's death is careening helplessly towards me, I reflect
that even if I tried with all my might, I could never forget, nor
want to forget Casey or his story. I can never forget the joyous
day that he came into our lives, on JFK's birthday, which was also
Memorial Day that year. I will never forget the 21 Memorial Day
birthdays before Casey donned the uniform of the Military Industrial
Complex that we had where we invited family and friends over for
a bar-be-que to celebrate his life. The two Memorial Day birthdays
we have had so far without him are pain-filled beyond measure and
we will have to endure many, many more. What about the holidays:
the happy ones before Casey was killed, and the devastating ones
since he died? Looking at pictures of the Sheehan family before
Casey was killed is heart-rending to say the least. What about our
birthdays? The ones since 4/4/4 where we won't even get a call from
him, wishing us a happy day?
How many families
has BushCo sent on this spiral of never-ending grief and pain? Tens
of thousands of people here in America have been debilitated by
their policies and another country and its people lie in ruins for
lies and deceit. How many families around the world have black holes
in their lives that can't be filled by any light, but suck the light
and life from the marrow of the fabric of those families?
No, I won't
ever forget about Casey, or Mike Mitchell, KIA with Casey; or Evan
Ashcraft, KIA 7/24/2003; or John Torres, KIA 7/12/2004; or Chase
Comely, KIA on 8/6/2005; Daniel Torres, KIA 2/4/2005; nor will I
forget why I am trying to get our troops out of the predicament
of colossal proportions that George Bush has gotten us into. I won't
forget the thousands of other wonderful Americans who have been
needlessly killed here in the Gulf States and in Iraq for the crimes
of BushCo. Nor will I ever forget the images of dead Iraqis burned
by toxin of this war: white phosphorous; or the seven-month-old
baby with half of her head shot off by American troops; or the images
of the Iraqi babies born with horrendous birth defects from leftover
depleted uranium from the first Gulf War travesty. The images of
the Bush destruction in the desert are horrifying in their brutality
and we should all know that nothing good ever comes from killing
innocent people.
I am convinced
that the years of the Bush Regime will go down as the years that
America lost its collective mind. We allowed the Bush crime family
to scare us into two invasions of countries that had nothing to
do with 9/11, and despite all evidence to the contrary, let them
assure us that we are safer because of the uncalled-for wars. We
have no problem with the administration authorizing, encouraging,
and condoning torture, which only puts our troops and our children
and their children more at risk for terrorist attacks. We allow
our administration to use weapons of mass destruction on the innocent
people of Iraq and think the invasion of Iraq was warranted because
Saddam "used chemical weapons" on his own people. We allowed
George Bush to play golf and Condi to shop for shoes in NYC while
citizens of our country were hanging off of their roofs and drowning
in New Orleans. We allow BushCo to spread the rubbish that we are
spreading "freedom and democracy" in the Middle East,
while we allow our faux-leaders to take away our freedoms here in
America and destroy our democracy with a Republican coup that was
bloody but virtually unopposed by the faux-opposition party and
its followers.
My family has
had people fighting and needlessly dying in every mistake of a war
that the war machine has tricked our country into since the Civil
War. I will never forget the brave men and women who have been killed
for profit that have gone before us. I won't forget because I don't
ever want it to happen again.
If we didn't
learn the lessons of Vietnam until it was too late, let's learn
one while we still can: America will eventually pull out of Iraq,
let's pull our fighting troops out now, and I am convinced that
lives on both sides will be saved if we do. If we don't pull out
soon, who knows where else the sickly cancer of American empire
will spread and how many more innocent people like Casey will die.
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Cindy Sheehan © Copyright 2005 by Robert
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Also, one lesson
that we should have learned from Vietnam is that there is always
a war and an enemy in the offing. The neo-con war machine is planning
the new "ist" and "ism" for us to fear next,
when the "ism" du jour fails to sufficiently frighten
us. We must stay on our guards against this.
Buddhists say
that a person dies twice. Once when his/her physical body dies and
once when the last person to remember him/her dies. We should never
forget the lesson of Casey and his untimely death on the altar of
the war machine. We should never have forgotten the lessons of the
millions dead in Vietnam who were sacrificed on that same altar.
Casey and the
millions of others who have been tragically killed by our leaders
in worship of greed for money and power will never die as long as
there are people working for peace and justice.
This is their
gift to us. Let's never forget them. Their deaths can't be in vain.
April
3, 2006
Cindy
Sheehan is the mother of Spc.
Casey Austin Sheehan, KIA 04/04/04 She is co-founder of Gold
Star Families for Peace. She is the author of Not
One More Mother's Child and Dear
President Bush.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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