Punishment by killing – a view from Afghanistan
October 30, 2011 by
Filed under Journey Updates
Are we nearer to freeing ourselves from systemic subjugation to the 1%, and living beyond pleasing others and pursuing THINGS?
Is love revolutionizing?
15 year old Afghan student Abdulai was watching the Iranian movie ‘The Stoning of Suraya’.
When the deceived villagers were praising God’s greatness and demanding Suraya’s death for an adultery she didn’t commit, Abdulai remarked,
‘My heart is tearing apart.
People are like sheep.’
One by one, Suraya’s father, then her husband, then her two sons, then the village mayor and the religious leader, they stoned her.
Suraya had said she was frightened, ‘not of death, but the dying, the stones…’
As her aunt combed Suraya’s funereal hair while singing to her, Suraya cried.
She cried to let go of her children and the belief that justice would always be stronger.
With dignity, she walked to the execution pit. She did not avoid the gaze of the people, especially the haughty shame of the pompous and powerful.
You could hardly tell that she was shaking beneath her suffering shawl, though she wasn’t shaking out of fear or sorrow.
Her bones were shivering out of disappointment.
She spied through her bloodied eyes a dying vision : everyone in the establishment insisted they were right.
And the sheep followed.
The slaughter.
Just as it has been with the deaths of untold individuals.
While 139 countries have already banned capital punishment, in 2010, the countries with the highest public executions rates in the world were China, Iran, North Korea, Yemen and the USA.
Will we finally see war as en-masse capital punishment, mostly of people not directly involved in the dispute?
It is estimated that 2 million Afghans have been killed over the past 40 years, from schemes imposed by locals and foreigners alike.
Not enough?
Killing is effective?
Suraya’s aunt had recounted the madness to a journalist. The story was not meant as news, or a distant distraction, which would change nothing. She said, ‘I want you to take my voice with you.’
What do we do with another voice not our own, especially a dead voice?
I glanced at Abdulai and didn’t know if I could tell him that in terrible incongruence, the world is comfortable with trends, not truths.
The world is comfortable with classifying humans, not understanding them.
We’re comfortable with exterminating those of us deemed ‘incorrigible’, not reforming ourselves.
Though the stoners sensed the hypocrisy, they chose personal safety and social dictates, and blended with the herd use of stones.
That’s why, like Suraya rejecting every throw, Abdulai’s heart was tearing apart.
One killing, or 2 million, robs love of public meaning.
Occupy the Afghan Airwaves!
October 12, 2011 by
Filed under Journey Updates
Occupy the Afghan Airwaves!
On the 21st of October 2011, use your Skype or phone to converse with the Afghan Youth Peace Volunteers :
To arrange a date and time, go to http://globaldaysoflistening.org
and write to globaldaysoflistening@gmail.com
We thank Prof Noam Chomsky for speaking to the Afghan Youth Peace Volunteers
during last month’s Global Days of Listening on the International day of Peace.
and like the Afghan elderly laborer resting by his wheelbarrow with a small loaf of bread,
we are waking up, and taking to the airwaves!
For too long, the Afghan airwaves have been saturated by the money and military intrigues of the 1%.
Yes, with their Wealth and Power, this 1 % has been dominating the narrative,
but they cannot stop YOU from Skype-calling us, from anywhere, for a few minutes.
They cannot stop the 99 % from being friends.
This is our hope of a Human Spring !
Y Not?
Y Not Occupy Everything?
Listening on the Afghan hills
Occupy the Afghan Airwaves!
Every month,
we’ll fill the Afghan Airwaves with our ‘main street’ voices,
so that despite the noise of dollars and guns from the 1%,
we are the 99%,
and we choose to be free!
The Afghan Youth Peace Volunteers, with Douglas, Jody and Larry
Global Days of Listening on 21st October 2011,
21st November 2011, 21st December 2011, 21st January 2012…
…. and the 21st of every month!
To arrange a date and time for a conversation,
go to http://globaldaysoflistening.org
and write to globaldaysoflistening@gmail.com
Afghans for Peace,
on 24th October, Afghanistan Peace Day in Fremont California
Y Not?
The Blue Scarf
under the same Blue Sky
‘Occupy’ and hope for a Human Spring in Afghanistan
http://warisacrime.org/content/%E2%80%98occupy%E2%80%99-and-hope-human-spring-afghanistan
http://vcnv.org/occupy-and-hope-for-a-human-spring-in-afghanistan
The people aren’t free, yet
For a long time, the ordinary people of Afghanistan have felt fatefully robbed by its geography.
We aren’t a free people.
34 year old Afghan human rights activist Rangina Hamidi, who is returning to Virginia USA after 8 years of working in Kandahar, grieves the murder of her father, the late City Mayor of Kandahar, and while recognizing the humanity in President Karzai, blames Karzai and the international community for the Afghan ‘entropy’ swirling in ‘360 degrees of chaos’. “I will only come back when I know that I can help make my people a free people again,” she said. “Right now, I don’t think we’re free.” Rangina leaves having lost all hope.
For a long time, the ordinary people of Mexico have felt fatefully robbed by the ‘war on drugs’.
We aren’t a free people.
The militarized method was declared a failure by the Global Commission on Drug Policy, comprising the former presidents Cardoso of Brazil, Gaviria of Colombia and Zedillo of Mexico, former UN Secretary General Kofi Annan and others. The Commission’s first line of recommendation: “Break the taboo. Pursue an open debate…” This recommendation was simple yet apparently un-doable, even after ex-US President Jimmy Carter requested a ‘Call off the Global Drug War’. Meanwhile, the Caravan of Solace led by Javier Sicilia, Julian Lebaron and more than 300,000 Mexicans took to the streets, wearing white and walking in silence, holding up placards that read “Not a single more death,” “Enough already” and “No more bloodshed”.
The Afghan Youth Peace Volunteers were touched by their grieving, by their ‘Nonviolent Occupation of Ciudad Juárez’ and wanted to share the Mexicans’ pain of losing 40,000 loved ones over 5 years. They earnestly connected with Julian Lebaron, saying, “We need you to know that walking together is not a weakness. It is our everything.”
For a long time, the ordinary people of the world have felt fatefully robbed by its elite 1%.
We aren’t a free people.
When the Spanish Indignados began their massive street protests in May this year, part of their manifesto read : “We need an ethical revolution. Instead of placing money above human beings, we shall put it back to our service. We are people, not products.” Sociologist Miguel Martínez, who teaches at Madrid’s Complutense University, said, “If you lose your dignity, then you are simply a wage slave.”
We had also hoped to reach out to the Spanish Indignados, but couldn’t reach them.
‘1%’s wealth and force.’
The reason why the Occupy movement grips our hearts is because the Afghan strategy of the past 40 years, implemented by Afghanistan’s lords and the other lords of the world, has essentially been based on the ‘1%’s wealth and force.’
Hard wealth and force.
First, try to ‘buy’ the people at some kind of a minimum wage level. If that doesn’t work, fight them. Today, this is done as a ‘pacification’ technique, in the sacred names of stability, security and peace.
This international norm of ‘being richer and stronger than the next richest and strongest tribesman’ has not been publicly questioned ; we hope the time has come to break the taboo and pursue an open debate! This international norm is what Rangina Hamidi calls the ‘guns-and-graft ethos’ in Afghanistan, in which the 1% use bombs-and-bribes to compete for Kingship. Globally and historically, this norm is boringly replicated with transient Empires, the Greek, Roman, Ottoman, Byzantine, Austrian-Hungarian, Russian, British, French, Spanish, Portuguese, Russian, Mughal and American Empires just to name a few, and the Chinese next?
It is a haughty, authoritarian mindset supported by the political, educational, moral, journalistic and military bodies of the world, and naturally strengthened by Man’s craving for money and power. Former Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan had said that another global financial crisis is inevitable because human nature always reverts to “speculative excesses” during a period of sustained prosperity, ‘unless somebody can find a way to change human nature.’ We can’t change human nature, but we can surely find a way.
And that’s what humanity has felt stuck with for so long, a seemingly inherent inability to guide and govern ourselves towards less greed and violence. We have established human systems which have increasingly concentrated wealth and power in the hands of a very few, to the delight of the very few. Human beings do have a deep sense for fairness, and search for justice in various ways including through religion, but incongruently, systems of escalating inequality have been institutionalized across all aspects of life, and quietly accepted.
Prof Noam Chomsky laments Thucydides’ maxim that ‘the strong do what they can and the weak suffer what they must.’ But he also tirelessly challenges ‘power structures’ with his heart and mind, saying to young people : ‘This world is full of suffering, distress, violence and catastrophes. Students must decide: does something concern you or not? I say: look around, analyze the problems, ask yourself what you can do and set out on the work!’
We bear hope that the Arab Spring, the Spanish Indignados, the Mexican Caravan of Solace and Occupy Wall Street are all tides of a global awakening, a healthy non-acceptance of Thucydides’ status quo and a non-violent civil disobeying of the ‘1% wealth and force’. Our Human Spring!
‘1%’s wealth’
About 35 percent of the Afghan population is unemployed. Afghans who are employed with embassies, international NGOs or foreign contractors can earn $US1500 a month while public-sector worker wages remain between $US50 and $US250 a month.
Probably a third of the country’s GDP comes from the opium and hashish trade , and the Afghan government’s budget is unsustainably dependent on foreign aid money.
The 1% Afghan rich are naturally well travelled, have luxury ‘palaces’ in Kabul and enjoy the ‘high life’ in foreign countries like Dubai. The corrupt business conglomerates, including some construction, gas and oil companies, are run by this 1%, often the ex-warlord-current-political elite and their allies.
This foreign-dependent and nepotistic form of capitalism, mixed with the tenacity of corrupt tribalism, marks the logistics and private security firms, the lucrative mines and mineral industry and the banking sector.
Even in aid work, a young, educated Afghan friend had joked with me years ago that ‘Al Qaeda’ in Afghanistan had transformed into ‘Al Faida/ Al Profit’, with hundreds of NGOs seeking profit from the millions of dollars available through aid. Linda Polman, in her book ‘The Crisis Caravan: What’s Wrong with Humanitarian Aid? , devotes a chapter to ‘Afghaniscam’, in which she describes her belief that international aid is ‘only helping gangsters and fighters, while innocent victims suffer on’.
A March 2010 UN Human Rights Report described entrenched corruption worsening Afghan poverty, stating that ‘ despite $35 billion injected into the economy since 2002, one in three Afghans, or 9 million people, live in absolute poverty while another third survive just above the poverty line…. A key driver of poverty in Afghanistan is the abuse of power. Many Afghan power-holders use their influence to drive the public agenda for their own personal or vested interests.’
The stark gulf between the wealthy few and the poor in Kabul have grown so desperate that the number of beggars have increased, including women and child beggars. Begging has become such a ‘problem’ that the Karzai government formed an anti-begging commission and passed a law in November 2008 which made begging a crime, after which hundreds of beggars were arrested.
The very poor get harassed and arrested!
Just last evening, I saw policemen chasing away street vendors in Kabul with their batons, in particular, a young teenage boy who was selling me tomatoes from his wooden cart, reminding me of how Bouazizi sparked the Tunisian Revolution and the Arab Spring when he set himself on fire, unable to tolerate such ironies anymore.
We do not want any more such tragedies to be heaped on the 99% by the 1%, but considering the oppressive local and international quagmire Afghanistan is in, we think that for change to begin in Afghanistan, change needs to happen in Wall Street, Washington D.C., and the global centers of financial power who are calling the fatal Afghan shots from far-away.
Even if such change doesn’t come in our lifetimes, we want it!
‘1%’s force.’
In calling for ‘a farewell to nuclear arms’, Gorbachev correctly named our global problem, stating that ‘our world remains over militarized’. Who remembers his opinions on the Afghan War, here and here, except perhaps the NATO Chief ‘slamming Gorbachev’s negative view’?
Has anyone heard of any other local or international strategy for Afghanistan except the military strategy?
The ex-UN Envoy to Afghanistan, Norwegian Kai Eide, had written that he increasingly disagreed with Washington’s strategy in Afghanistan, saying it put too much emphasis on military operations over civilian reconstruction efforts. “In my opinion it was a strategy being doomed to fail…. But none of us gained support for our views.”
Did anyone notice that the previous Kabul Governor, Dr Zebihullah Mojaddidy, had quit because ‘the government was ignoring his reconstruction programs for the province’? Reconstruction programs are ignored even in the capital! What’s the US 2 billion dollars a week being spent on?
For a long time, Afghans have unwillingly accepted the least bad of bad options for a conflict we are so tired of. The bad options are the Taliban, the Afghan war and druglords of whom many are in government, Pakistani or Iranian interference, and the US/NATO coalition. Because many Afghans are so emotionally traumatized by the Taliban and warlords, the US/NATO coalition may be the least bad of the bad options. We say,” What options do we have?” All are violent, military options, so let’s choose the least bad one.
The US/NATO’s proclaimed aim is to militarily ensure that there are no safe havens for the ‘Taliban/Al Qaeda/insurgents’, as if an ideology of hate could be geographically removed naively by hate which is better-armed. But what can we say to such illogic? “What options do we have?”
Every power-monger, including the ‘Taliban’ or Afghan war and drug-lords and the myriad of business-suited internationals , is buying us, dividing us, demeaning us, insulting us, humoring us, and killing us.
Much as it is difficult to hear this, we are the game, exotic wild animals whose carcasses none wish to count too accurately.
We thought we had seen some light when Wikileaks released 91,731 Afghan War Logs exposing our bloody mayhem, but the world has been made to wonder if Julian Assange is a rapist-terrorist.
In 2009, Radio Free Europe named the Afghan Member of Parliament and ‘Afghan Gandhi’ , Dr Ramazon Bashardost, their Person of the Year, and while Afghans popularly voted him into 3rd place in the Presidential Elections and many appreciate his honest approach, the world has ignored him. Therefore, Afghans sigh that good people don’t get very far, and guess that Dr Bashardost may be ‘mad’. With such excessive violence, his ideas of non-violent solutions for Afghanistan are ‘mad’.
The military way over-rides all, including the United Nations, whose original charter is to ‘remove the scourge of war from future generations’.
When the United Nations recently reported that ‘security incidents’ had increased by 39% in 2011, ISAF retorted that the United Nations was comparing ‘apples and oranges’ and that violence had, in Godly-factual style, decreased by 27 %.
To denigrate the UN further, when the UN reported ‘systematic torture ‘ in detention facilities across Afghanistan, the Afghan Interior Ministry said that the UN’s compelling evidence of torture were ‘false’. Someone is lying, but after 10 years, the international community is too distant to care about who the liar is.
Then, ISAF refuted even a ‘Knock on the Door’ of their kill-capture program by Dari/Pushto speaking journalists who suggested the lack of sufficient information in the public domain to analyze claims like night operations being ‘one of the most effective methods for target key leaders and insurgents ’. Never mind that night operations are universally abhorred by all Afghans.
Our international military strategy is ‘too big to fail’. Their proponents imply, ‘Don’t question us or debate about what we choose to reveal or what we choose to do. Just accept that what goes on behind our doors is always right. All military options are all always right. And for your best interests.’
These civil disagreements over numbers in different war scenarios make a good, small chink in the military armour, but still leave out any debate of whether ‘hard force’ is at all effective in resolving human conflict. Military force in the hands of a few has become the modus-operandi-option to resolving human conflict, and worse, such militarism can now be called ‘humanitarian wars’.
And while the 1% defend the brute method of war, the killers are promoted.
Like how the US Embassy reported in 2006 that Abdul Raziq, now the Acting Police Commander of Kandahar, had been ‘removed from his post for allegedly attacking ( summarily executing ) 16 rivals under the pretext that they were Taliban militants’ and then how, with perfect impunity, the State ( Afghans joke that this country is ‘Amerikistan’ ) crowned him as Brigadier General Abdul Raziq this year.
What human beings are doing to human beings in Afghanistan, and in other unfortunate countries is this ; systematically educating one another that force and money are pragmatic necessities for security, and control is gained when you are better at ‘targeting and killing others before they kill you.’
Any luck from the civilian leadership? We read with disbelief that the US Ambassador Ryan Crocker approved of what amounts to a civilian-supported torture method in saying to the Wall Street Journal, “The Taliban needs to feel more pain before you get to a real readiness to reconcile.”
Afghans know by harsh experience that all foreign countries are in Afghanistan not for the interests of the people but for selfish state-interests, that ‘the cat doesn’t kill mice for the sake of God’, but in the face of militarism from all directions, we diffuse our anger, we get on, and we say, ‘What options do we have?’
‘99%’s strength’
Yes, you may think that Afghans are unreasonably angry because they are uneducated and don’t understand the big picture, and that they are rough, tribal people.
That somehow, the only way to manage Afghans is to allow the ‘good’ 1% to control the ‘bad’ 99% of Afghans with their Wealth and Force.
But come live and laugh with the 99% of ordinary Afghans. We are just like you.
Come watch ‘Shabkhand’ / ‘The Night of Laughter’ with us, a popular Afghan television show featuring a stand-up comedian interviewing well-known personalities. Come enjoy music with us. Come see our thirst for a good education. Come see our need for decent livelihoods. Come see how we silently persevere to retain human dignity.
Please.
Please, can the people of the world put thinking and caring people around a table over cups of tea, to propose a sensible and non-violent way out of this Great Game played by the 1%, or is human civilization now incapable of genuine conversations?
Suddenly.
Suddenly, we began noticing people awakening as if from an enforced sleep, in Tunisia, Egypt, Spain, Greece, Mexico and now Occupy Wall Street, proving that even our enforced sleep cannot cheat reality. Suddenly, we caught a flicker of hope, of human solidarity, of a Human Spring breaking out of the integrated civil-military darkness.
We thank you. We wish to thank every human soul who has walked the main protest streets at any one time, alone or together.
Most people may not yet understand how freeing and humanizing it is to witness that perhaps, love and truth exist, and that there is more than one human option to our problems, and that not all options have to be bad.
We’re sorry that presently, we cannot take to the Afghan streets in such large numbers yet, because neither the Taliban nor the US/Afghan coalition will be very happy, because we are too divided to have a critical mass, because we haven’t been getting ready, and because we aren’t quite brave enough to lose our everything. But, we’ll do what we can.
The freeing sense is that perhaps, we no longer need to be slaves wandering on our own in an unequal wilderness.
We sense that the love of the people which has saved us from hopeless nights can possibly breakthrough into a wider public practice. “Y Not?”
We sense that one day, we will be free, and Rangina can return.
Shaking, we realize that all along, but also suddenly, we ARE the 99%.
Hakim
On behalf of the Afghan Youth Peace Volunteers
17/10/2011
Afghanistan
God has failed these 10 Afghan years
October 5, 2011 by
Filed under Journey Updates
Dear friends who sense that the ‘elite’ are too greedy,
God has failed these 10 Afghan years
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=csZyoSdhsaE
Written in the voice of a 10 year old Afghan child from Kandahar
My mother tells me I’m God-sent,
cos’ we survived the bombings.
10 years have passed,
Mother still has a creased faith,
though now she says…
‘your birth was perhaps untimely’.
We sometimes cry together,
and sometimes on our own.
Discouraged with world leaders
united in suits of war,
as if
to solve our problems.
They say this land is the worst
for a child,
AND for a mother.
Ignoring our elders,
many foreign soldiers became
the killers among our killers.
Who says this must be so?
Who cares that this is so?
I shudder that the raids and bombs
have made us less than human.
I wish to go to our deserted schools
to understand why we are like this.
I used to dream of spaces,
blue skies and gentler people.
I heard mother through her burqa
pleading please ‘Stop!’
‘Stop the money. Stop the killing.
Stop.’
Another local explosion,
more international lies.
Our global problem is that
guns impose greater force
than common sense
or vision, which tells me
that my mother’s world is crashing.
Harder still for the eager young,
is the human disconnect
amidst the game
of ordered weapons.
Our births are too different,
our lives too separate.
A few lords play
while the people sit hidden
even from ‘salams’.
Such that if I told you
that God / the USA / the UN has failed these 10 years,
you wouldn’t believe me.
You’ve hardly heard any 1 of 30 million voices
Y not listen?
http://globaldaysoflistening.org
Love,
Hakim and the Afghan Youth Peace Volunteers
http://globaldaysoflistening.org
The people of Afghanistan, Kandahar, Afghanistan 2003
‘What was 9/11?’
September 9, 2011 by
Filed under Journey Updates
‘What was 9/11?’
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9u49n2LMT3w
Paul Arpaia of September 11th Families for Peaceful Tomorrows ( from New York USA ), whose cousin was killed on September 11, and Mohammad Jan of the Afghan Youth Peace Volunteers ( from Bamiyan Afghanistan ) met in Kabul Afghanistan recently.
Though their sharing was brief, it was a sharing of grief and strength, evidence that love always overcomes hate.
Transcript of Video
Paul Arpaia of September 11th Families for Peaceful Tomorrows
I think that peace is a state of being,
that we choose to live in peace, and we choose to live in hate
So if you choose to live in peace, it’s contagious
If you choose to live in hate, it’s contagious
So, if you live in hate, other people who are in contact with you will live in hate.
Mohammad Jan of the Afghan Youth Peace Volunteers
All of us can feel your pain, because you lost a family member on September 11
All of us can feel your pain because here, it’s like September 11 every day.
Every day, Afghans are losing their family members.
We ( Afghans ) don’t have any problems with you ( the people of America ).
We only have a problem with governments being cruel to the people
We can work side by side to end this war, & work for a non-violent solution in Afghanistan.
The people have always been friends.
The people have always been friends, Paul and Mohammad Jan
‘What was 9/11?’
‘What was 9/11?’ asked 92 percent of southern Afghans.
In Washington D.C.,
Afghans, with their pleading mothers,
became inconsequential under fire,
cast as ‘evil’ objects for retaliation.
Everyone is exacting ‘justice’,
by hitting back at the other,
hoping not to be killed.
No wonder it is tiring,
for every soul.
What do we do with our anger,
and fear?
What are the options?
There appears to be only one, adults say.
“Force.”
Unable to face ourselves
as other people are dying,
floundering in our calculations,
our usual education & lonely disconnect,
we embrace ‘force’.
“Love isn’t pragmatic in negotiations.
With sufficient force, we’ll be stronger strongmen
than those who wish to harm us.”
So we watch mothers cry,
and neither grieve nor cope at all.
Y Not make music?
August 20, 2011 by
Filed under Journey Updates
Y Not make music?
Y Not have a conversation with the ‘demonized’?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gwUWKeXTm6o
Below are events coming up for you to make a connection with or find out more about the ‘demonized’ people of Afghanistan and other conflict areas.
Global Days of Listening – 21st of August 2011 Sunday
Location : From your Skype account anywhere or from your cell phone anywhere in the world
Date : 21st of August 2011 Sunday, from 6.30 p.m. Afghanistan time ( please check your local times )
Connection : Go to http://globaldaysoflistening.org and send your Skype address or cell number to globaldaysoflistening@gmail.com
Talk by Dr Hakim on ‘Taliban or us’ – an unequal humanity has come here
Location : Middle East Institute, National University of Singapore, Singapore
Date : 25th of August 2011 Thursday, 3 p.m. to 5 p.m.
Free Admission. To register, please visit http://www.mei.nus.edu.sg/upcoming-events.
International Day of Peace 21st of September 2011 Global Days of Listening ( 24 hour event )
Location : From your Skype account anywhere or from your cell phone anywhere in the world
Date : International Day of Peace, 21st of September 2011 Wednesday
Connection : Speak with an Afghan/Palestinian/Iraqi/Egyptian and other youth for just one minute by going to http://globaldaysoflistening.org and sending your Skype address or cell number to globaldaysoflistening@gmail.com
American and Afghan Slavery Will Soon Be Signed
August 10, 2011 by
Filed under Journey Updates
American and Afghan slavery will soon be signed
a statement issued by the Afghan Youth Peace Volunteers
August 9, 2011
‘The world doesn’t have to choose between the Taliban and the US government.
All the beauty of the world—literature, music, art—lies between these two fundamentalist poles.’
War Is Peace, by Arundhati Roy, October 18, 2001
We need clarity
The Afghan Youth Peace Volunteers reject the US-Afghanistan Strategic Partnership Declaration.
We reject such declarations made by politicians who do not know us, nor care for us.
We want the freedom to solve our own problems.
In case you haven’t heard of the US-Afghanistan Strategic Partnership Declaration, here is how it is being described in the international press.
We need to listen
“The United States should maintain a long-term military presence in Afghanistan as a ‘tenant’ on bases jointly occupied with Afghan forces, rather than on permanent U.S. bases, after its combat mission ends, according to Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates……the administration is negotiating a strategic partnership agreement with the Kabul government for the longer term.” –U.S. wants ‘joint bases’ in Afghanistan, Gates says, Karen DeYoung, Washington Post, 8th June 2011
‘The Iranian interior minister made a rushed visit to Kabul, followed shortly by the national security advisers of India and Russia. The Russians, though generally supportive of NATO’s role in Afghanistan, were alarmed at the prospect of a long-term Western presence. “The Russian side supports the development of Afghanistan by its own forces in all areas — security, economic, political — only by its own forces, especially after 2014,” said Stepan Anikeev, a political adviser at the Russian Embassy here. “How is transition possible with these bases?”’ Talks on U.S. Presence in Afghanistan after Pullout Unnerve Region, Rod Nordland, New York Times, 18th April 2011.
‘Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani…bluntly told Afghan President Hamid Karzai that the Americans had failed them both…Mr. Karzai should “forget about allowing a long-term U.S. military presence in his country…,” Mr. Gilani said. Pakistan is lobbying Afghanistan’s president against building a long-term strategic partnership with the U.S., urging him instead to look to Pakistan—and its Chinese ally.’ Karzai Told to Dump U.S., Matthew Rosenberg, Wall Street Journal, 27th April 2011.
‘The US has been bankrolling the effort with up to $100bn (£61bn) a year and is negotiating a new strategic partnership with President Hamid Karzai. “December [2014] is not a campaign end date but a waypoint – a point at which the coalition security posture changes from one that is in the lead to one that is mentoring and advising, but is still here.” General James Bucknall, 2nd in command of International Security and Assistance Force (ISAF).’ Nick Hopkins, The Guardian, 10th May 2011.
‘Because of deep concerns over militant groups in the region, (U.S. officials) want some kind of launching area … to go after individuals and training camps. They see few other basing options in the region. So, the U.S. government will push hard for this.’ Caroline Wadhams, a security expert at the Center for American Progress, 3rd June 2011.
‘The Shanghai Cooperation Organization summit ( SCO, a mutual-security organisation which was founded in 2001 in Shanghai by the leaders of China, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan ) adopted a statement calling for an “independent, neutral” Afghanistan (read: free of foreign occupation). Nurusultan Nazarbayev, president of Kazakhstan, who hosted Karzai, put it on record, “It is possible that the SCO will assume responsibility for many issues in Afghanistan after the withdrawal of coalition forces in 2014.”’ Ambassador M K Bhadrakumar, a career diplomat in the Indian Foreign Service, Asia Times Online, 21st June 2011.
‘In a statement, Gulbuddin Hekmatyar’s Party of Hezb-e-Islami described establishment of permanent US military bases in Afghanistan as an eternal occupation of the country. The statement said establishment of permanent US bases in Afghanistan would mean the war never ends.’ Tolo News Afghanistan, 19th July 2011.
What is described is the framework for Great Game 3.0, demonstrating the world’s militarized inability to resolve distrust and human conflict in a sensible manner, and the ineffectual silence of the international community and the United Nations.
We need to ask questions
Our leaders, the Afghan and American elite, don’t want us to be concerned about the US-Afghanistan Strategic Partnership Declaration. They want us to be appropriately upset by news of suicide bombings and I.E.D.s, and sufficiently curious about the Taliban, the 2014 drawdown, and peace.
What’s more, the ‘debt crisis doom’ will not allow us to look at the big picture, which is the consistent abuse of the people’s interests by global governments determined to maintain the status quo of Power-and-Wealth-dictated inequalities.
Yet, the Afghan Youth Peace Volunteers are committed to recovering their values. This is difficult because such values have been de-humanized, as we ourselves have become disconnected from other human beings and distracted by material OBJECTS. This happens to us and it happens more so to ordinary Americans who face even greater distractions and may not want to bother with this ‘agreement.’ After all, Americans have enough troubles of their own.
Or can we expect her citizens to break out of their cold, lonely bubbles?
We need an urgent global debate about this.
The US-Afghanistan Strategic Partnership Declaration will perpetuate ‘terrorism’ and bring it to everyone’s doorsteps.
The ‘partnership’ will allow permanent joint US-Afghanistan military bases to launch and project hard power. The ‘extreme’ Taliban would conveniently ‘use’ these bases as a stand-alone reason for their ‘holy jihad.’ We cannot forget that one of Osama Bin Laden’s reasons for attacking the US on September 11th was the presence of US military bases in Saudi Arabia.
This Strategic Partnership Declaration would kill any chance for our madness to slow down and our violence to calm down.
It will doom ordinary Americans and Afghans to permanent terrorism.
Why can’t we quiet our nerves, look deep inside humanity, and begin healing?
The reality is that Afghans are not only very angry but also tired, while US/NATO citizens are essentially unaware, so are neither concerned, nor angry.
We need options
As Arundhati Roy said, Afghans don’t have to choose between the Taliban and the US-Afghan Government…these two fundamentalist poles.
Just like Americans don’t have to choose between ‘feeding’ the rich or ‘feeding’ the rich.
We can choose normal, decent lives, based on respect for life, on valuing life.
We can connect our aspirations with those of human beings elsewhere:
‘When people decide to live, destiny shall obey, and one day … the slavery chains must be broken.’ Tunisian poet Abu Al-Qasem Al-Shabi (Schebbi)
‘Hurriya! Hurriya! Hurriya! - Freedom! Freedom! Freedom!’ Egyptian Tahrir Square protesters
‘We are not merchandise in the hands of politicians and bankers! We are not slaves!’ Spanish Indignados, Real Democracy Now
‘The world is no longer dignified enough for words… This is my last poem, I cannot write more poetry. Poetry no longer exists inside me. No more blood!’ Mexican poet Javier Sicilia and the Caravan of Solace
‘The people demand social justice. This is Egypt.’ About 300,000 Israelis marching through the streets in central Tel Aviv
‘Tell the world not to send their money,’ says Abdulai, a 15 year old Afghan boy. ‘I don’t need their money. I need to live without wars.’
At a Press Briefing in Kabul on the 5th of June 2011, President Karzai addressed Robert Gates as ‘His Excellency’ and gave him a medal, which Gates self-proclaimed as ‘an award’ presented to him ‘on behalf of the Afghan people.’
If the Afghan public knew that Karzai had given Gates an award on their behalf, they may have fumed. But then, most rural Afghans don’t even know who Gates is.
This proud and exceptional self-praise by the rich and powerful is ugly; the People of the world should expose and disempower this imposition of values.
There ARE other options, especially since there ARE other deeper values.
We need an equal conversation
No Power today represents the people. Today, ordinary Afghans are denied the basic human dignities, living in a country that Save the Children said was the most dangerous place on earth for mothers, and that UNICEF said was the worst place on earth to be born in, and to be a child.
Moreover, the country that is pushing to sign this Strategic Partnership Declaration with Afghanistan, namely the US, has neither ratified the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women nor the Convention on the Rights of the Child.
These indicate the ‘human regress’ which the Afghan government/Taliban/US/NATO have been responsible for.
We mustn’t ‘just watch and do nothing’ about our glaring socio-economic inequalities; 20% of the earth’s population is hoarding more than 70% of the total income.
It is an unsustainable inhumanity.
Why not listen, as human beings are capable of doing?
Why not grieve?
Why not have decent and equal conversations?
Have we all become incapable of perceiving the ‘beauty of the world – literature, music, art…?’
For the sake of Abdulai and billions of ordinary people like him, why not join the rising masses across the Middle East & Africa, Europe, South & Central America and more, under the same blue sky, to end our slavery to the status quo values?
We need to at least have conversations about the US-Afghanistan Strategic Partnership Declaration, before it is signed in betrayal of ordinary Americans, Afghans and global citizens.
Y Not? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OPySr8sHA0k
We have little left to lose anyway.
The Powers have been laughing at us, right from the very beginning.
The US coalition was dropping 26,000 bombs on an already destroyed Afghanistan from October 2001 to March 2002, when these words were recorded: ‘By the second day of the air strikes, US pilots were returning to their bases without dropping their assigned payload of bombs. As one pilot put it, Afghanistan is “not a target-rich environment.” At a press briefing at the Pentagon, Donald Rumsfeld, US defense secretary, was asked if America had run out of targets. “First we’re going to re-hit targets,” he said, “and second, we’re not running out of targets, Afghanistan is…” This was greeted with gales of laughter in the Briefing Room.’
Gandhi had said, ‘Our slavery is complete when we begin to hug it.’
When the Strategic Partnership is signed, peace groups will still be working hard to demand complete withdrawal. Unawares, the rest of the world will be repulsed by but still admiring how ‘intelligent’ politicians are ‘Mafia-ing’ the economic crisis. But, there will then be at least 5 permanent US military bases in Afghanistan, and ‘gales of laughter in the Briefing Room.’ Brutality Smeared in Peanut Butter, Arundhati Roy, The Guardian, October 23, 2001
Next the statesman will invent cheap lies, putting the blame on the nation that is attacked, and every man will be glad of those conscience-soothing falsities, and will diligently study them, and refuse to examine any refutations of them; and thus he will by and by convince himself that the war is just, and will thank God for the better sleep he enjoys after this process of grotesque self-deception…
Mark Twain.
Y Not?
Updates :
1. More Lost by the Second in Afghanistan by Kathy Kelly
http://truth-out.org/more-lost-second/1313095976
http://www.commondreams.org/view/2011/08/12
2. The Signing will be soon, before the December 2011 Bonn Conference
Excerpt :
Andrey Avetisyan, Russian ambassador to Kabul, said: “Afghanistan needs many other things apart from the permanent military presence of some countries. It needs economic help and it needs peace. Military bases are not a tool for peace.
“I don’t understand why such bases are needed. If the job is done, if terrorism is defeated and peace and stability is brought back, then why would you need bases?
“If the job is not done, then several thousand troops, even special forces, will not be able to do the job that 150,000 troops couldn’t do. It is not possible.”
3. Common Sense in a Coma by Robert C. Koehler
http://www.commondreams.org/view/2011/08/25
4. Taliban ridicule Us’s peace talks by Mk Bhadrakumar
http://blogs.rediff.com/mkbhadrakumar/2011/08/23/taliban-ridicule-uss-peace-talks/
Excerpt :
ZM reiterated that Taliban will oppose the US’ so-called ’strategic agreement’ with President Hamid Karzai on permanent American military bases in Afghanistan. Clearly, the US peace track – and Karzai’s peace track – has floundered. Pakistan has driven home the point, namely, that there can be no peace track that is not meeting with its concurrence and not accommodating its leadership. Worse still, the ‘Afghan hands’ in Washington, DC who fancied they knew all the needed to be known about the Pashtuns have been reduced to despair. Put simply, they don’t know anymore who is a Taliban — and who is not. What a predicament!
5. Troops stuck in Afghanistan until 2024 by Tom Engelhardt
http://www.alternet.org/world/152146/the_new_date_for_victory_in_afghanistan:_2024?page
6. War, Too Big to Fail by William Rivers Pit Truth Out
http://www.truth-out.org/war-too-big-fail/1314198655
7. Afghanistan returning to the brink by Khalid Iqbal
Excerpt
The window of opportunity that propped up after the NATO and ISAF started handing over district wise control to the Afghan security forces appears to be shutting off fast by the reports about a dubious Status of Forces Agreement (SOFA), which the US is trying to impose on Afghanistan. It is aimed at allowing the US military presence in Afghanistan until 2024. An effort to secure six to eight military bases is also on, but in a hush hush manner. As a result, Afghanistan is back to the brink of disaster.
8. Talks on new US-Afghan pact strains relations by AP
9. From ‘War on Terror’ to ‘New Silk Road’ By Parag Khanna Special to CNN
Our comment : The title should be BOTH ‘War on Terror’ AND ‘New Silk Road’ ( BOTH Power AND Money )
10. Afghan Traditional Council Lays out 76 point resolution for the US By Afghanistan Times
http://www.afghanistantimes.af/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=1591&Itemid=54
Our comment : Resolution Article 32 is the only clearly pro-people resolution, and is similar to the condition which Iraqis recently used to deny a ‘full-blown’ permanent American presence in Iraq. All the other resolutions support the Americans or provide sufficient loopholes.
11. Bargaining US Hails Afghan View on Presence By YAROSLAV TROFIMOV of Wall Street Journal
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970203710704577050000162177144.html
12. An economic reprieve? By Anne Jolis of Wall Street Journal
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970204531404577054213615305178.html
13. Iran demands NATO pull-out from Afghanistan after 2014 By Farsi News
http://english.farsnews.com/newstext.php?nn=9007276335
14. New Silk Route Euphemism for the New Great Game By Fahad Rehman of Fault Lines
http://www.thefaultlines.com/new-silk-route-euphemism-for-the-new-great-game/
15. Bargaining over US bases : Will they stay or will they go? By Kate Clark of Afghanistan Analyst Network
http://aan-afghanistan.com/index.asp?id=2341
16. Strategic Agreements with India, Italy, France and UK
4/10/2011 : Strategic Agreement with India here and here , which may have increased tensions with Pakistan
26/1/2012 : Strategic Agreement with Italy here and here.
27/1/2012 : Strategic Agreement with France here and here . Called a Friendship Treaty , it was signed after the killing of 4 French soldiers by an Afghan soldier, and does not include participation in military operations.
28/1/2012 : Strategic Agreement with UK here and here.
17. Rushing and conniving to sign the agreement before the G8/NATO summit in Chicago
23/1/2012 Karzai vacillates to sign strategic pact With U.S
19/2/2012 U.S. senators, Afghan leaders discuss parameters for long-term partnership
20/2/2012 U.S. troops will remain in Afghanistan beyond 2014
22/2/2012 Afghanistan, US looking at removing detention, night raids from partnership talks
6/3/2012 Afghan govt says likely to reach U.S. prison deal in 3 days
6/3/2012 Obama : US won’t stay longer than is necessary
Sometimes, we may hurt like the Afghan dove
July 5, 2011 by
Filed under Journey Updates
Dear friends in an antagonistic world,
In the face of a broken Afghan dove, what can the people ask for?
Sometimes, we may hurt like the Afghan dove http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5y8bRK5-dM0
In the face of possible ‘doom’, what can we ask for?
Y Not listen? Y Not Converse?
Have conversations between the People and world leaders become so impossible in these ‘democratic’ days?
Love,
Hakim and the Afghan Youth Peace Volunteers
http://ourjourneytosmile.com/blog
http://globaldaysoflistening.org
PS We are working towards human solidarity especially among the ‘Y generation’ seeking change across the Middle East, Mexico, Spain and others, to request for a global conversation between the People of the world and world leaders, through an upcoming, blue-scarf effort to organize ‘Y Not Converse?’.
Faiz beside our hurt Afghan dove
Sometimes, we may hurt like the Afghan dove
Dear XXX ( current high-ranking staff with the UN in Afghanistan ),
Forgive this email.
We felt we could share with you our burdens without incurring your anger or pity.
Much has happened to the Afghan Youth Peace Volunteers since we met with you for a wonderful hour in Kabul.
Like it is with 30 million other Afghans, our mounting challenges are ‘intolerable and untenable’, and in some instances, rather severe on our souls.
It is improbable that we will see any fruit in our lifetimes.
Peace has become a broken ideal. It is a joke derided over tea.
We’re not being negative ; our endeavor to love means that we remain realistically positive, even if love seems to have broken.
But the world is being untrue in ignoring the perpetual breaking of Afghan mothers as peace is torn apart like a goat in the Powers’ ‘buzkashi’ game ; the humanitarian statistics and our visual witness prove that this shattering is borne on the backs of the people.
The chiseled Herati-stone sculptured dove which we enthusiastically raised funds to purchase from an Afghan artist, sits silently at Bamiyan Peace Park, inviting visitors to dignity.
One its wings was recently broken off and taken away, as if to break us.
We are no longer shocked.
The energies of local and international communities have been twisted to destruction in Afghanistan for at least 3 decades.
Why?
Why is the media, and the political climate, so antagonistically and obstinately breaking peace?
How much time do we have left to change ourselves, in hope of changing a global predicament?
XXX, the people know that the strategy in Afghanistan is failing. They are paying for it with their lives.
We wish there would be a study like the Global Commission on Drug Policy, in which ex-Presidents and the ex-UN Secretary General Kofi Annan declared clearly a failed ‘war against drugs’.
Like in Mexico where 40,000 Mexicans have died violently since 2007, Afghans need a Caravan of Solace to grieve together. So, in the past few days, we had telephone conversations with Julian LeBaron and Emilio Alvarez from Javier Sicilia’s people’s movement, to think together about how ‘poems die’, and how beautiful things are ignored, laughed at and then criminalized.
We are sorry that in the Commission’s report, Afghanistan, the top producer of heroin and marijuana, is not mentioned. It is as if in thinking about water, we ignore the oceans. It is as if Afghans do not exist.
But in it lies a practical way to live again. It’s found on Page 10 of the report, as its very first recommendation: “Break the taboo. Pursue an open debate……… Political leaders and public figures should have the courage to articulate publicly what many of them acknowledge privately.”
After Kai Eide had resigned ( and we wish he had declared this BEFORE he left his post as Afghanistan’s UN Envoy ), he declared in a preface of a book he wrote, that he had increasingly disagreed with Washington’s strategy in Afghanistan, saying it put too much emphasis on military operations over civilian reconstruction efforts. ‘In my opinion it was a strategy being doomed to fail.’ He said U.S. Ambassador to Afghanistan Karl Eikenberry had also warned against an imbalance between military and civilian efforts. ‘But none of us gained support for our views,’ Eide wrote.
Afghans and internationals like myself have a shared responsibility to stop being subjects and slaves.
So, we will ask for a conversation.
Y Not converse? The Y Generation across the Middle East, Africa and Europe are already rising up in dignity, to listen and to be heard.
More important than it is for leaders to benefit from listening to and conversing with the people, people who are unconscionably dying by the day need to be affirmed as equal human beings. They need to see democracy being practiced.
The youth volunteers have experienced harassment for their peace activism, but we realize we should not be defeated by this culture of impunity where the victims are cast as culprits, by the Afghan system of ‘justice’ funded and trained by a complicit world.
The Afghan authorities are stealing from the people while abusing them.
The US/NATO coalition wants a ‘victory’ that would match their strategic national and client-state interests.
The ‘insurgents’ will naturally resist. For those who live here, it is their land and freedom. Other ‘simple folk’ are ‘ideologically or emotionally attracted to’ the fight like bees to nectar.
ALL these groups feel comfortable and justified in using violent means. Everybody distrusts everybody. A thousand fatal schemes are being hatched and changed daily. Hate reigns.
Unfortunately, the world is either unaware, mis-informed, too busy or just passively spectating.
It needs to stop.
Otherwise, a negotiated political settlement ( which the youngest among us knows is NOT a settlement to benefit the people but to please the Powers ) will be reached, perhaps somewhat like the Treaty of Versailles, setting the stage for future mass conflicts, not inconceivably a regional World War III.
Otherwise, a US/Afghan strategic partnership agreement would be ‘successfully’ signed, nurturing the grounds for continued ‘terrorism’ throughout the average 43-year life span of the Afghan human being.
Faiz said in one of our ‘global days of listening’ telephone conversations that he believed that a ‘peace movement’ has already begun in the heart of every Afghan citizen, because the people are so fatigued by loss, and desire a reasonable life.
I wanted to tell Faiz that I was burdened by the poverty of human empathy, that the peace movement he envisions may be buried before its birth because the world will stare as long as it itself is not acutely hurting, and because it’s hard to find human commitment.
We can’t even find a conversation.
I wanted to tell Faiz that we may have to hurt like the dove.
But I didn’t tell him.
He understands already.
We sincerely hope to visit with you again.
Love,
Hakim and the Afghan Youth Peace Volunteers
http://ourjourneytosmile.com/blog
http://globaldaysoflistening.org
Why not love?
From Afghans to Gazans, ‘Why can’t we touch your face?’
June 26, 2011 by
Filed under Journey Updates
Dear friends,
The approximately 1000 ordinary people sailing with the Gaza Freedom Flotilla II ought to stop us in our ordinary tracks at least for a moment.
Why are ordinary people doing this for others not related to them?
Why are ordinary people supporting these freedom sailors?
Why are a few governments against this non-violent human solidarity?
Why?
If we don’t even ask, we miss out on those things which make us human.
Dedicated to the people of Gaza and those reaching out to them through Freedom Flotilla II :
From Afghans to Gazans, ‘Why can’t we touch your face?’
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dkiMOPoU1qA
Love,
Hakim and the AYPVs
http://globaldaysoflistening.org
http://friendswithoutborders.org , http://friendswithoutborders.net ( newly launched )
PS In the New Year of 2010, we had also expressed solidarity with Gaza Freedom March, a small clip of which was included in our latest video above
Love is how kites in Gaza, Afghanistan and the world will fly http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JWRqqoNESCc
Why can’t we touch your face?
From Afghans to Gazans, ‘Why can’t we touch your face?’
‘We have slogan here. ‘From river to the sea, everyone should be free.’’
Nabeel Raee, teacher of Jenin Freedom Theatre
traveling on the West Bank hills
We in Afghanistan sense your loneliness.
It is hard to be born human, and not be regarded as one.
It is hard to be a mother who can’t cook enough for meals and laugh enough with her children.
It is hard to be a youth, and not feel young at all.
It’s hard to lose the human capacity for happiness.
We share your anger too.
But let’s not be angry for too long. Hasn’t war taught us that love is needed to guide anger, the same way we’ve seen mothers shaking with grief but standing with grace?
Don’t be angry with your family and loved ones because they had snapped at you after the usual hard day. We should forgive, and try to stay as human as life allows.
Please stay together, and not submit to human laws which pull humans apart.
We can’t expect people in the rest of the world to worry about us in Gaza or Afghanistan. It hurts more than we’re willing to utter, but we’ll find sufficient strength to accept that people are normally too busy to wonder if we’re really such ‘terrible’ human beings.
It’s irritating that politicians are universally well-dressed while making our world so socially distant and emotionally intolerable. We know that peace, equality and freedom will come when the politicians step aside and let the people converse. But they aren’t going to step aside unless we persuade them with our dignity, like many people across the world are doing now.
In adversity, we share with you the occasional burden of being ‘no-bodies’, But surely, we must cling on to some meaning, cling on to the hope that God doesn’t intend for us to be discarded ( like trash ), that there are such qualities as compassion, that human company exists.
To the people of Gaza and Israel, we are reaching out to you, as President Obama and world leaders keep extending their violence on their own people, and on us whom they don’t see.
They believe in force. ‘What we can do, and will do, is build a partnership with the Afghan people that endures – one that ensures that we will be able to continue targeting terrorists….( ‘permanent base ‘)…..When threatened, we must respond with force.’ Obama in his Afghanistan ‘withdrawal war speech’.
We the people believe in love.
We send you our love through our friends on the US Boat to Gaza sailing with the Freedom Flotilla 2.
A fortnight ago, there appeared a remote possibility that two of us would be considered for travel on the Mavi Marmara. It gripped us that we may have been able to share each other’s pain at a closer distance, for a little while.
The people of Mavi Marmara and the other flotilla boats have opened up the seas of our hearts.
Afghanistan needs a flotilla too, but you would know that Afghanistan has no sea.
We imagine the blue seas.
Imagination helps friends not to worry about whether they’re available for each other ALL the time, or whether they will ever see each other face-to-face.
20-year-old Skye Miller was our friend for a brief moment, introduced to us by Kathy Kelly, one of our dear activist friends on the US Boat to Gaza. Skye was dying from cancer in a hospice and Kathy had passed her a blue scarf from our silent, peace walk in Kabul this spring.
We sent a message to Skye, ‘Mohammad Jan, Abdulai and I are typing this email feeling a sadness, and feeling that life must be more than just what we see. It is meaningful for us to give you our small ‘salams’ through Kathy and through the visions of peace colored in blue. Thank you Skye! ’
She passed away with her family by her side, a few days after her reply, ‘Dearest Kathy, I cannot tell you the happiness that I felt after receiving the e-mail from Mohammad Jan, Abdulai and Hakim and to know that I am in their thoughts. I am enjoying the weather and hope that you are too. Enjoy your weekend. Be well, Skye.’
Here, sometimes, the sky is so peacefully and enjoyably blue we can almost touch it.
What antagonism has poisoned Man, and who on earth and in heaven has determined, that we can’t touch your face?
Love is how the kites will fly in Gaza, Afghanistan and the world
From Afghanistan, we need you to know
June 14, 2011 by
Filed under Journey Updates
Dear friends,
Peace from Afghanistan, specially to those with the Caravan of Solace far-away in Mexico, who strengthen us with their poetic struggle.
From Afghanistan, we need you to know : Walking together is not a weakness. It is our everything. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UxmbNFNQJ4E
We thank you for walking differently.
Julian LeBaron, a Caravan of Solace leader whose brother was kidnapped, tortured and killed last year, reminded the crowd that fear isn’t the only thing keeping people home — it’s apathy: ‘There should be 100 million people here, holding hands to mourn the death of 40,000 of us.”
If you have a few minutes this Sunday 19th of June, let’s connect on the Global Days of Listening ( email to the cc-ed address globaldaysoflistening@gmail.com )
Love,
Hakim and the Afghan Youth Peace Volunteers
http://globaldaysoflistening.org/
walking together is not a weakness
From Afghanistan, we need you to know
Javier Sicilia, Julian Lebaron and all with the Caravan of Solace, like you and the families of 40,000 Mexican victims, we need you to know that we’ve also been crying.
There are no expectations in our crying.
There’s only grief, and ignored anger, the ignored anger of the mundane masses.
To all fellow humans alive today, we need you to know that many people are hurting badly because we will not do more than what is normally required to preserve our conventional ways of life.
We need you to know that the many who are hurting are real people.
Sadly, every day that we defend our lives as usual, we demean other lives as usual, and therefore we all become less dignified, less human.
We in Afghanistan have been learning that being alive is not just about busily earning our keep, or more ridiculous, about getting good grades in ‘empty’ schools.
We have also been learning what it means to be alive.
Here, the other Friday, we felt alive when we walked together to the river, listening to everything.
We felt alive caring for one another despite our utter despair.
Unfortunately.
Our systems have been structured to rule us out, to corner our humanity. Our systems despise our hope.
The doorways of our governments are tunnels for theft.
To conform with Power, we’re ‘told’ that we must remain helpless, friendless.
Our poverty is ‘graced’ by bullets, bombs and blood.
Our struggle is ‘condemned’ by religious and political dogma.
We detest these from way deep down. We detest these so much. Every soul does.
But today, self-protection at the expense of the distant ‘other’ justifies a strategy of ‘Man killing Man for Greed’s sake.’
How can that be?
How can it be that ‘the common good’ is no longer ‘good’, that it has become an impractical ideal divorced from human society?
How can it be that asking for economic fairness is considered being anti-government, that speaking against corruption gets us into trouble?
How can it be that when we tell our leaders to stop killing, we are the ones deemed naïve and dangerous?
We detest this violent antagonism infecting the world.
We detest the decay of our values.
We’re creating so few lifetime opportunities for genuine education, decent livelihoods, and grief.
Not enough space, except by the rivers.
We need to talk differently, walk differently, serve ( lead ) differently and relate differently, and if we so earnestly and painstakingly act in love, ‘Y’ not?
Who has dictated to the ‘Y’ generation that,’ You can never change this unequal, unkind global system of governance.’?
‘Y’ not , when the majority of humanity and the majority of 30 million Afghan citizens manage to get along without killing one another?
‘Y’ not step towards the rivers where human solidarity runs?
How can we live without crying? How can we suggest what could be done when we ourselves are hardly coping?
We need you to know that your journey is our journey too, and that yes, ‘No estas solo’.
We need you to know that crying is our friend, and not a weakness.
We need you to know that walking together is not a weakness. It is our everything.
Y Not?
Crying is not a weakness
Caravan of Solace
Javier Sicilia after his 24 year-old son’s death,
“The world is no longer dignified enough for words.
This is my last poem, I cannot write more poetry.
Poetry no longer exists inside me.”
‘Violence begins with shouted insults? Is that what you want? We are trying to change the hearts of the political class and you are feeding off hatred! That is not how we walk.’ Javier Sicilia
http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,2063696,00.html#ixzz1P8O1TcZ3
“The United States Imposed This War on Us, It Should Change the Strategy” Javier Sicilia
US Congressional Report says that ‘US guns fuel Mexico violence’
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-13758499
Javier Sicilia in silence
Caravan of Solace
Afghans want nonviolent options for the People, options to end the war
April 14, 2011 by
Filed under Journey Updates
Afghans want nonviolent options for the People, options to end the war
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SDI5wc56dHo
No other options for the People?
Is fighting and killing the best method humankind can come up with to control fighting and killing?
Who says so?
The People of Afghanistan are tired of war as a method for ‘peace’, and they want options.
They want nonviolent options, options to live without killing, options to end the war.
“We wish to live without wars.
We do not want the ‘Taliban’ or the ‘Al-Qaeda’ to rule us.
We do not want the current corrupt Afghan government or war-and-drug-lords to rule us.
We do not want neighboring and regional countries to rule us.
We do not want the US/NATO forces to rule us, far less to over-stay permanently or kill us!”
Abdulai, and the Afghan Youth Peace Volunteers
Afghans, with the ordinary People of the Middle East and Africa, want an end to their endless, tiring wars.
It is clear that war, the systematic en-masse killing of fellow human beings, is nonsensical as a method to control fighting motivated by hate, anger and inequity of basic human needs. War cannot control hate, anger or inequities.
It is clear that many political and religious leaders remain entrenched in war as a method of Wealth and Power, their self-comforting propaganda being that war is somehow a method approved by Governments or Gods to counter ‘evil’.
It is clear that the ordinary People of the world no longer believe the propaganda. Which conscientious soul, American or otherwise, still believes that the Iraq war was waged for ‘Iraqi freedom’? The barrier People face in turning their resilience into action is their fear of what the Powers can do to harm them.
That fear is dissipating across the Middle East.
To clearly demand the People’s human right to decent livelihoods of genuine peace, we observe ( and this is not our imagination ) that People everywhere are awakening and arising to end the unquestioned, violent Power of the Governments or the Gods.
Thomas Pickering and Lakhdar Brahimi, David Milliband and surely more ‘experts’ to follow in the days to come, have proposed a negotiated political settlement as an ‘endgame’ in Afghanistan.
The problem for the People is that today’s politics cannot be separated from militarism, and it has become one and the same to speak of civil-military solutions, an approach which the United States of America has amply emphasised and ‘normalized’ in Afghanistan.
The problem for the People is that prize-grabbing political negotiations are just as ruthless as military solutions, thrashed out by an elite huddle of unquestioned, violent Powers in expensive conferences, all wheeling and dealing for their strategic interests in nice-looking cloaks.
In such negotiations, as always, the People will remain the silenced, beheaded goats of a global ‘buzkashi’, the modern Great Game ( ‘buzkashi’ means ‘pulling at the goat’, an Afghan game in which horse-riders grab at and drag a killed goat to their victorious target bases ).
How would the People find decent livelihoods from such violent Power games, if the People mattered at all? Violent Powers have never represented the needs of the People of Afghanistan.
The Afghan Youth Peace Volunteers would like to invite Thomas Pickering, Lakhdar Brahimi, David Milliband or any other Afghan or world leader to live among the People, to experience the ‘untenable life’ that ICRC described on 12th of March 2011, to pant under the stress of having ‘ Nowhere to Turn ’ ( a November 2010 report in which Oxfam and 28 other NGOs described the current day-to-day, night-to-night failure to protect Afghan civilians).
And while Thomas Pickering, Lakhdar Brahimi, David Milliband and their likes live with the People in their Afghan mud-house villages, they can ‘helplessly’ watch their fate as the Violent Powers of the Karzai government, the Taliban and their Pakistani associates and the US/NATO Generals negotiate on how to divide the ‘goat-people’. If the villages that Thomas Pickering, Lakhdar Brahimi and David Milliband were living in got brokered into the delighted hands of an Afghan drug-warlord, Talibanic or otherwise, what would Thomas Pickering, Lakhdar Brahimi, David Milliband do? What would you do?
The past few centuries of human wars have pushed the masses who are being killed to extreme fatigue, not to mention pushing the masses to an unsustainable life of indecent inequality. This extreme fatigue took some hopeful resolution after World War II in the United Nations Charter and Declaration of Human Rights, but because the Powers propagated a system of economic ( unfettered capitalism etc ) and political ( unfettered militarism etc ) policies and international relations which is dominated by unquestioned Violent Power, the fatigue and inequality heaped on the masses found ‘resignation’ in the ‘what-to-lose terrorism’ or ‘what-to-do apathy’ of today.
Our world needs healing from this fatigue and inequality and it cannot come from existing military or political Powers. Healing doesn’t come from the Disease.
These military or political Violent Powers persuade our souls by selling us their ‘democracy or theocracy’, ‘left or right ideals’ and ‘conservative or progressive aims’, all claiming ‘peace and stability’ as the goals of their crowning self-interests.
The People of Afghanistan, the Middle East and Wisconsin have seen through the endless ‘endgames’ of the Powers, and will have none of it.
We need a different way, a fresh way in international relations.
The Age of the Powers in the haughty hands and voices of a few is collapsing.
The Age of the People in the meek hands and voices of the masses is growing.
The Powers can no longer demean the People by portraying the human masses as stupid, evil beasts incapable of better choices, because People everywhere want their freedom and sovereignty and are capable of living and loving.
Ordinary People everywhere want options, nonviolent options for the People, options to end the wars that are killing them.
Because the world hasn’t clearly heard what the ordinary People of Afghanistan want, please listen again!
The ordinary people of Afghanistan wish to live without wars.
The ordinary people of Afghanistan do not want the ‘Taliban’ or the ‘Al-Qaeda’ to rule them.
They do not want the current corrupt Afghan government or war-and-drug-lords to rule them.
They do not want neighboring and regional countries to rule them.
They do not want the US/NATO forces to rule them, far less to over-stay permanently or kill them!
So we say to all..
Stop sending our killers your glittery money.
Stop sending our killers your jittery weapons.
Stop sending our killers your wealthy politicians.
Stop forcing on us NO OTHER OPTIONS, making us ‘resign’ to the least bad of the equally Violent Powers, all of whom we do not want ; the Taliban, the corrupt Afghan government & drug-warlords, the regional powerbrokers and the US/NATO coalition forces.
If your local town has seen the death and destruction that soldiers and leaders from more than 50 countries separately or in coalition have brought over 30 years, which one person would you trust?
Trust.
Love.
To other young people in Afghanistan and the world, we wish to confess that we, the youth who make up the majority of the Afghan population, are finding it hard to trust anyone. Consistent, fatal betrayals make it hard. But should we give up on the love and truth that we believe exists in humanity? Does giving up make life any easier or any more meaningful? We’ve agonized over this, and feel that the least we can try to do is to steer away. When global convention appears ‘sold out’ to the violent acquisition of wealth and power, we can steer away. We can refuse.
We refuse all who wage war on the People for their selfish Power and Wealth.
We refuse the method of war.
Afghans want options, nonviolent options for the People, options to live without killing, options to end the war.
And if you still do not understand or connect with our very human hopes and dreams, we want you to know that we have never acted to harm you in any way, and that to live and die decently, we want our personal, independent space.
Sincerely,
Hakim and the Afghan Youth Peace Volunteers
Further thoughts
In case you think that we are a bunch of young, naive ‘idealists’, we will persist in peaceful walks, in planting trees, in keeping vigils, in building relations across all ethnic groups and borders, in developing our peace parks and in working with our own hands.
In case you think that the People of Afghanistan and fellow People around the world do not have other options, here’s an outline of one of many possibilities.
We humbly suggest a NONVIOLENT APPROACH to resolve the human conflict and humanitarian crisis in Afghanistan.
This NONVIOLENT APPROACH is premised on a commitment to the well-being of the People and to non-killing.
We suggest the appointment of an INTERNATIONAL MEDIATION TEAM, an independent, neutral, non-partisan, volunteer, ( we cannot over-emphasize the importance of having individuals who are beholden to none except humanity, and please don’t tell us that such people do not exist ) ‘blue-scarf’ civilian team of mediators that would work with but not under the United Nations in :
- Reaching an accord for all armed local and foreign groups to cease their killings, an Accord to cease killings as a method to resolve the Afghan conflict.
- Mediating on behalf of the People of Afghanistan for the interests of the People. All of the people of Afghanistan have to right to live as independent communities within a sovereign nation. The international mediation team would mediate between ALL Afghan groups, regional-country groups including Pakistan and Iran, and US/NATO countries, and this would include mediating for Afghans to be given the rights of independent, sovereign communities.
- Establishing an international transitional peacekeeping force that will maintain the cessation of war, while determining definite timelines for the complete, responsible withdrawal of all foreign troops from Afghanistan. The presence of foreign military in Saudi Arabia was one reason Osama Bin Laden gave for the September 11th attacks, so this mistake must not be repeated in Afghanistan.
- Establishing a humanitarian and livelihood crises team to provide essential services and employment through independent, interdependent and indigenous systems, thus respecting and meeting the demands of the ordinary people of Afghanistan to have decent independent lives, an independence and dignity which excludes all foreign interference but includes equal relations with all nations.
- Enabling civil society groups to deliberately organize an Afghan national Consensus and Unity Campaign, across all Afghan ethnic communities in all provinces, including through peace education classes in all institutions of learning. This needs to have the intentionality and intensity of a national campaign. Such a campaign has never happened. The consensus will serve as a guide to establishing fresh socioeconomic relationships among Afghan communities and forging shared values and rules of law. It will be also used as a guide to formulating future policies of local governance committed to the expressed interests of the People, in structurally and socially overcoming the poverty, corruption, distrust, oppression and nepotism prevalent in the war-torn Afghan society of today.
- Establishing a locally-appropriate means of restorative justice, an element of which includes meeting the People’s minimum demand for all those involved in past killings to apologize and NOT seek further positions of leadership or power.
- Removing privileges and unquestioned power and wealth from the systems of governance, and implementing reforms for the equitable, transparent and sustainable use and accounting of community and national resources.
- Holding ‘clean’ local level elections to choose ‘clean’ representatives, representatives who have no involvement in any killings in the past and who are not known to be corrupt, as is expected in the Islamic or any faith. The representatives will be chosen for positions that do not confer any special privileges or wealth.
We have offered some far from comprehensive suggestions, confident that humanity is capable of many other creative, nonviolent ways, confident that we all wish for the days and nights when we can finally live without wars.
International Peace Delegation to Afghanistan Spring 2011
We are grateful to all the Afghan civil society groups, academic groups and Afghan leaders we had met over the past 3 weeks in Kabul, as well as the 26 international peacemakers from America, Australia and Germany who had visited us. The international peacemakers who visited us in Kabul were :
Mary Lou Anderson — Las Vegas, Nevada
Patricia Chaffee – Racine, Wisconsin
Stephen Clemens – Minneapolis, Minnesota
Mary Dean – Chicago, IL
Elizabeth Deligio – Chicago, Illinois
Christopher Doucot – Hartford, Connecticut
Detlef Enge-Bastien, M.D. – Germany
Christine Gaunt – Des Moines, Iowa
Peggy Gish – Athens, Ohio
James Haber – Las Vegas, Nevada
Martha Hennessey – Perkinsville, Vermont
Judith Kelly – Washington, D.C.
Kathleen Kelly – Chicago, Illinois
Patrick Kennelly – Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Ceylon Mooney – Memphis, Tennessee
Simon Moyle – Australia
Donna Mulhearn Springwood, New South Wales Australia
James P. Noonan – Washington, D.C.
Jake Olzen — Chicago, Illinois
Martin Reusch – Springwood, New South Wales, Australia
Scott Schaeffer-Duffy — Worcester, Massachussetts
David Swanson – Charlottesville, Virginia
John Volkening — Chicago, Illinois
Paki Wieland – Northampton, Massachussetts
Kathleen D. Kerwin – Florida
Please see some related articles to our actions and activities over the past month below :
Afghans Call for Peace: ‘One Blue Sky Above Us’ by Kathy Kelly
http://www.commondreams.org/view/2011/03/18-0
Peace is a Dirty Word by Patrick Kennelly
http://www.commondreams.org/view/2011/03/19-7
Killing Civilians in Afghanistan is Terrorism by Patrick Kennelly
http://www.commondreams.org/view/2011/03/24-1
Face to face with Afghanistan and a war we cannot win by Simon Moyle
http://www.abc.net.au/unleashed/45794.html
http://kabulpeacediaries.wordpress.com/
Pilgrim in Kabul by Donna Mulhearn
www.pilgriminkabul.wordpress.com
Jim Haber and Mary Lou’s Afghan updates
http://nevadadesertexperience.org/issues/2011/afghanistan.htm
An Afghan Peace Movement, Not a U.S. Peace Jirga By David Swanson
http://www.truth-out.org/afghan-peace-movement-not-us-peace-jirga/1302246000
US Congressman Keith Ellison assured Steve Clemens that he would deliver ‘Reconciliation of Civil Hearts’ peace message from the Afghan Youth Peace Volunteers to President Obama
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xL4Px5FodvE
Fatima of Afghans for Peace urges fellow Afghans to protest
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xYoo-b1qXx0
Jan Viklund’s Afghan Spring International Delegation Listens
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kmCTPYj6CXw
Our peace walk in Kabul on March the 17th 2011, accompanied by Afghan riot police
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uedQzWck7xc
Our tree planting on March 19th 2011 at a private school in Kabul
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xzcw9rA1mrc
Our candle vigil and reconciliation efforts
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SDI5wc56dHo
The AYPVs with the international delegation
Reconciliation of Civil Hearts 2011 ( downloadable on our website )
In October 2009, we kept a Peace Vigil under a tarpaulin tent for 7 days and nights, wanting our message ‘Reconciliation of Civil Hearts’ to be heard. The US Ambassador to Afghanistan Karl Eikenberry popped by for a chance visit! US Ambassador Eikenberry’s visit to the Afghan peace vigil youth http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FTHbY-obupI
The Ambassador exchanged promises with Zekerullah, one of the vigiling volunteers. Zekerullah promised to return to school, a promise he fulfilled in the spring of 2010. The Ambassador promised that he would deliver our message to President Obama, but we have not yet heard any news of its successful delivery.Zekerullah fulfills his promise to Ambassador Eikenberry & President Obama http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tEnUU4hCVoo
One of our Spring 2011 international peace delegates, Stephen Clemens, had kindly delivered our message to Representative Keith Ellison, who promised to deliver it the President Obama’s office. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xL4Px5FodvE
We hope that reconciliation will come to Afghanistan and the world, soon. Our candle vigil and reconciliation efforts
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SDI5wc56dHo
Afghan Youth Write Letter: “Please Stop Killing Us”
Reconciliation of Civil Hearts: The ordinary voice of peace from Afghanistan
http://warisacrime.org/node/57336
http://gandhitoday.org/pdf/afg-stopkill.pdf
Poems from two of our dear friends
Why not love?
By Larry Kerschner
An audacious suggestion in the midst of war.
Why not love?
With love there would be no
bleeding in the country.
There would be no harm to the children.
This is not some foreign voice
that we cannot understand.
Love is listening.
How has that place in us become so empty?
Why is death easier to talk about
than love?
The taste of love has never changed.
There must be a way home from here.
At what hour of the night
can ignorance melt into pools of light?
Why not now?
Why not love?
I Cannot Hear the River Singing
By David Smith Ferri
March, 2011
Eleven-year-old Hemad speaks
I
We left our village together in the dark
stars thick overhead.
Ten of us
all from the same village
following ancient footpaths
climbing along creeks into the mountains.
A thin blanket of silence lay over the Pech Valley
the only sounds feet and hooves crunching
our breath puffing.
II
We didn’t know ourselves apart from that silence
and the vast spaces our mountains held in their hands
and a limitless sky above
leaning over us like a mother.
III
We’d known each other since before memory.
We liked being together.
In the mounting uncertainty of life in our village,
it was a comfort.
IV
Unarmed, leading our donkeys along the path,
we could not be mistaken for bandits, thieves, militants.
No one could see us for anything but what we were,
a group of boys awoken before dawn
and forced out under the stars by poverty and cold.
V
We’d done this hundreds of times.
Every rock and plant knew us.
In an ancient language,
the river sang songs of water locked in ice
and sunshine setting it free,
of Afghanistan’s past and future,
and we thought we heard it murmur our names.
At night, as we slept,
these were the waters that invaded our dreams
and carried us away.
VI
But that day in early March
something else came to carry us away.
Something the music of the waters could not defend against.
A threat even its magic could not diffuse.
VII
Arriving, we spread out like a hand over the mountainside.
Like fingers we combed the ravines,
bending and rising
foraging for sticks and branches
and piling them.
We trusted the trees and the soil.
We leaned against rocks to eat our lunch
and lay on the bare ground to nap.
VIII
We had come back together and were preparing to leave
when the helicopters flew overhead
and hovered above us.
Two of them,
so loud they drowned the sound of the water.
We looked up
and before the bullets struck us,
before the missiles tore through trees and exploded,
an instant before my friends were shredded and scattered like paper,
we saw a green flash.
It was the last light they saw.
Now it is the light I wake to in the morning
and the last thing I see at night.
And I cannot hear the river
singing.
Text of video
I lit this candle for my own father ( killed in war )
We lit these candles for children who’ve been killed in the Gaza, Iraq & Afghan wars
We light these candles for all the war victims of Afghanistan
in particular for our brother Ihsanullah, son of Subhanullah, who was 11 years old
We want options, nonviolent options for the People…
We refuse all violent power.
We refuse the violent Power of the Taliban.
We refuse the violent Power of the Afghan government & drug-warlords.
We refuse the violent Power of all regional countries.
We refuse the violent Power of the US/NATO coalition.
We refuse all who wage war on the People for selfish Power & Wealth.
So we say to you…
We said to the Head of UN Ban Ki Moon through his Afghanistan Director of Communications Kieran Dwyer
We said to President Obama through US Congressman Keith Ellison
This is a letter from Hakim & the Afghan Youth Peace Volunteers
This scarf was worn by the 40 young people marching in the streets of Kabul calling for nonviolent solutions in Afg
I will assure you that I will move that letter to President Obama, to his office. I’ll take personal care of it
For the grief & prayers of all Afghan mothers, stop the killings!
Afghans want options, nonviolent options for the People, to live without killing, to end the war.



























































