BENCHWARMER
Ramon Dacawi
CNN kept us awake Wednesday night to
the wee hours of Thursday for that unprecedented and emotionally charged
motorcade of 40 black hearses bearing the remains of some of the
passengers of the ill-fated Malaysian Airlines Flight MH17 that was shot down
over eastern Ukraine last July 17.
It brings to mind a line from a poem
read by a lady classmate of mine at a course on indigenous people’s wisdom at
Schumacher College, Devon, England early spring of 2007. We were on a sharing
period and the lady, a Lebanese who was raised a Christian, read out: “Over
here is over there, over there is over here”.
She was referring to the tragedy
in her country, to the suffering, the pain, dislocation and death, the
unbearable loss that war brings on to so many people, regardless of their belief,
creed, race, nationality and age.
Over there was and is over here, as the
whole world watched and felt the anguish that the thousands of
Dutch citizens felt as they lined up the streets to clap, cry, mutter
prayers and lay flowers as tribute to the innocent plane passengers in caskets
who were accorded deep respect and dignity. It was so moving
from their plane transport in Ukraine to their arrival at Eindhoven
Airport and the motorcade to the Kaporaal van Oudheusden military barracks in
Hilversum, some 65 kilometers away.
Dutch royalty led by King Willem
Alexander and Queen Maxima, together with Prime Minister Mark Rutte came in
black for the airport arrival ceremony, not because Netherlands had the most
number of casualties at 189. Malaysia had 44, including 15 crew and two
infants; Australia -27; Indonesia 12 (including one infant); United
Kingdom – 9; Germany – 4; Belgium – 4; Philippines – 3; Canada – 1; New
Zealand – 1; United States – 1; Unconfirmed nationalities – 3.
Their respective nationalities, which
matters most to their compatriots, can be of no moment. For the millions who
were there and watched CNN’s live broadcast, and as noted by the TV
anchormen, the citizenship label didn’t matter, as each life lost
was as precious as the other. Over there is over here.
So is the raging war over there in Gaza
over here. The lives being lost weighs heavily, whether they are
Palestinians or Israelis, Hamas or Israeli soldiers and combatants, but most
painfully when they are children and women of any nationality.
Over there is over here. That gnawing
feeling triggered the following piece from my son Johann who, together with his
wife Lovelyn, is trying to raise my two grandsons in Italy. In January, 2009,
at the height of another war in Gaza, he wrote:
“The financial crisis has left my
beloved hotel, where I work, with just a handful of guests for nearly a month
now. All the rooms in four floors of the eight storey building are empty. For
the past several days, work was light and tips were low. My colleague, before
he finished his shift, left me a list of rooms to work on. He told me to dust
off the “baldachino” (those curtain-like things that hang on the beds and head
boards) using a vacuum cleaner. I went to work, finished a room and moved on to
the next.
“The work bored me to death and my boredom
made me feel tired, sleepy and lazy. I was about to go to the next room when I
decided to take a break. So I grabbed the remote control, sat on the edge of
the bed and clicked on the TV. Nothing caught my interest until I got to CNN.
The Cable News Network ran the war on the Gaza Strip as it dragged on for the
21st day now.
“A UN facility was in flames, the Israeli
army hit the compound because they were being fired upon from the building. CNN
also showed footage of a large crater somewhere in Gaza and the Palestinians
standing around the rim of the hole, looking on. BBC was running the same news
and I changed the channel again. I continued to surf the channel and was about
to switch it off when the studio of the Aljazeera caught my eye.
“The news anchor was standing and behind him
was a video wall, wide and black with the names of all the Palestinian children
killed written in white letters. They highlighted a name, and said he was four
years old, his sisters died, too, killed by an Israeli bomb. They picked
another name and this time the boy was two and he died in his mother’s arms.
“Then Aljazeera showed the images of the dead
children. Some of them were lined up and covered with cloth, others were
covered by debris, one was mangled and many were being carried by Palestinian
men. The lifeless faces of these children were scarred and bloodied. Some were
“lucky” (I don’t know if this is the right word) enough to be recognized;
others were not. As I sat there and looked on, shivers ran down my spine and I
wasn’t bored any more.
“Aljazeera continued on with the children but
now they showed the survivors recovering in hospitals. A pretty little girl
told a reporter of a bullet hitting her hand and another one finding its way on
her back. I saw a boy lying down, his head bandaged, his face covered with
scars and his eyes covered with tears as he tried to talk about what happened.
“Something in me gave way when I saw this
boy’s tears. I started to cry and at the same time tried to control the tears
but I could not. My mind told me, “goddammit, it’s okay to cry!” So I turned
off the TV and cried.
“Except for the breathing and sniffing sounds I made, the room became silent. I got up, paced around and dried my tears. Then I left the room, dragging the vacuum cleaner along and headed for the service elevator. I decided to put away the machine and do something else. Tears began to fall again when the lift started to move down.
“Except for the breathing and sniffing sounds I made, the room became silent. I got up, paced around and dried my tears. Then I left the room, dragging the vacuum cleaner along and headed for the service elevator. I decided to put away the machine and do something else. Tears began to fall again when the lift started to move down.
“I cried a lot of times this day. I cried
after I called my wife telling her what I saw. I cried again when I was on the
boat on my way home. I’m crying now as I write this piece.
“I don’t understand this war; I couldn’t even
tell who is winning. One thing is clear - the Palestinian children and
civilians are paying the price. I’m a father of two boys and I felt that the
dead Palestinian children were my own. I wonder about the Israeli fathers and
Hamas fathers who are fighting each other in this senseless war. Do they cry,
too, like me? I hope and pray that this monster of a war would stop killing. .
. . . stop killing our children.” (e-mail: mondaxbench@yahoo.com for comments.)
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