|
April 16, 2003The 10 Plagues of Iraqby Joe Katzman at April 16, 2003 1:03 PM
Passover begins tonight. Family and food. The first great joyous festival of freedom, echoing through the ages. Bound up in Jewish history, in Christian culture and even in the Negro spirituals of the American south: "Go down Moses,Every year we gather together at our Seders, links in the chain of a long and proud story. This year, that story has special relevance. Again. In freedom and liberation, yes. And in the Passover wine, drops spilled from the cup as we mourn the blood spilled by the heaven-sent plagues that eventually ended Pharaoh's rule. Iraqi dissident and human rights activist Kanan Makiya wrote on April 9th: "Baathism died in Iraq yesterday". Beyond all hope comes the force of a mighty hand, and Pharaoh is fallen at last. Along the way, however, the Iraqis too have suffered their own version of the 10 plagues. This Passover, as we sit at our Seders, let us spare a thought for them:
We know, too, as the Israelites learned, that physical liberation is only the first step. To make the rest of the journey requires changes in the human heart. Even G-d's mighty hand cannot command this, a subtlety whose 2 sides are demonstrated by the 2 key events of Sinai: The Golden Calf, and the people of Israel's required shout of assent to the 10 Commandments. Failure, and freedom. Illusion, and responsibility. Idols, and truths. Iraq, too, faces a difficult journey from plagues to plenty. Old idols may yet be worshipped, idols of blood and hate, of passivity and mistrust. To succeed is to inherit the promise of a land of milk and honey. To fail is to wander in an endless desert, both spiritual and material. A desert that has swallowed many of their brethren in the Arab world. Perhaps this time will be different. Perhaps this time, there is hope again: "The road ahead is, no doubt, very difficult. And now the burden shifts onto our shoulders, the shoulders of Iraqis inside and outside of Iraq. We thank you people of the great United States for the gift that you have bestowed on us. I cannot promise that we will succeed in making good of it. But I do promise that we will try very hard." (Kanan Makiya)As we remember their suffering this Passover, let us pray that the Iraqis too learn to break the chains of hatred and passivity that have bound them, and embrace a set of higher ideals and practices that will make their enduring freedom a reality. "No more in bondage shall they be,May the spirit of the Lord guide them, children of Abraham, along the path to true liberation. UPDATE: Diana Moon writes to point out that fittingly, there will be several Passover Seders held in Baghdad this year. Tracked: April 17, 2003 9:33 AM
PASSOVER, 2003 from Pejmanesque
Excerpt: Jews won't be the only ones celebrating freedom, as Joe Katzman appropriately and movingly points out....
Tracked: April 20, 2003 3:57 AM
"Americans Love A Winner....." from The Noble Pundit
Excerpt: "Americans love a winner.........", four immortal words from the opening speech of Patton. I was reminded of them by an exchange in the comments of this post over a Winds of Change.NET. The original post (very good, by the way,
Tracked: December 16, 2005 7:23 AM
Jews for Bush coming out of the woodwork Dept. from Kesher Talk
Excerpt: Previous collection of liberal Jews for Bush anecdotes and news stories, and links to other entries here. This is not a particularly savory analogy given some historical antisemitic stereotypes, but here goes: There's a rule of thumb that for...
Tracked: December 19, 2005 7:07 PM
Reform Jews talk back, part II from Kesher Talk
Excerpt: We posted about the first stirrings of disagreement with the resolution against the Iraq war presented at the annual conference of the Jewish Reform Denomination. That disagreement is boiling over. [Republican Jewish Coalition] executive director Matth...
Tracked: April 9, 2006 1:56 PM
Iraq Liberation Day: from the narrow places from Kesher Talk
Excerpt: Three years after the end of the Iraq War, Families United for Our Troops and Their Mission encourage the media to mark the anniversary by showing some of the positive results of the war as well as the negative. The...
Tracked: April 12, 2006 4:28 PM
Anniversary: The Day the Statue Fell from Good News from the Front
Excerpt: Three years ago, today. The end of that bronze masterpiece best described as "The Great Leader Hails a Cab." The end of creatures who bear the official title "violator of womens' honour" (i.e. official rapist). Of torturing small children...
Comments
Nicely done, thank you. Pesach v'Sameach Excellent, Joe! You should get this published more widely. PS I worked your link into my running Pesach commentary on Kesher Talk. Hag sameach. Beautifully done, Joe. I'm a bad Jew and won't be celebrating Pesach anywhere this week, but hag sameach and have a good Pesach - thank you for reminding me what it's really about.
#4 from David at 11:56 pm on Apr 16, 2003
Regarding plague #9. you said "For the spiritual darness suffered by the Iraqi people over the last 20 years." Do you not think it would be more accurate to say since the dawn of Islam? Granted the entire country is not Muslim, but Iraq is an Islamic state for the most part. I would say that they have been living in spiritual darkness for much longer than the reign of Saddam Hussein. Donald Sensing has a good blog on this titled "God and Allah". http://www.donaldsensing.com/2003_04_01_archive.html#200154917 Great metaphor and beautiful writing. Thank you.
#6 from Jeff at 5:49 am on Apr 17, 2003
This is the second people shredder reference I've seen. Is this true? The very idea makes me want to puke, cry and rage. Could someone post a link to a reputable report on it? Thanks. It's completely true, I'm afraid. Typing "shredder" into the search engine here at Winds of Change.NET would get you this link. The reports were compiled and checked by left-wing British Labour MP Ann Clwyd.
#8 from Bob at 9:11 pm on Apr 17, 2003
You left out the 11th, 12th, and 13th: 11)US invasion. Munitions include cluster bombs (which will kill and maim for decades) and depleted uranium (which will cause cancer and birth defects for generations. Hospitals are full and without electricity. Basra has not had water in 3 weeks. Disease is starting to run wild all over. 12)Chaos and ethnic cleansing. The kurds are moving back from the north and forcing Arabs out of their homes and killing many. Any Suni is a fair target in a Shiite neighborhood. Life savings are dissapearing with the looting of banks and devalutation of Iraqi currency. At the moment, residents of Baghdad are not even allowed out of their own houses, inside their own country, at night, with a curfew eerily resembeling some policies in the occupied territories in Israel. 13)Loss of history. Thousands of years of historical and cultural artifacts and texts gone. Looted. Burned. Destroyed. A tragedy on the level of the burning of the Library of Alexandria. Imagine if the West Wall were destroyed. You can say that all of this is a small price to pay for the Iraqis liberation, but just remember that it is the Iraqi people, and not you, who will be paying the price. Maybe it will work out and a decade from now the Iraqi people will celebrate their liberation over quiet dinners with their loved ones. Or maybe it won't and ten years from now Iraq, and perhaps Syria and Iran, will look a lot like the Gaza strip. Or maybe it will devolve into civil war. Or a militant fundamentalist Islamic state. As for Kanan Makiya thanking America, I worry that might be a minority view. Outside of the interim government meeting between 5 and 20 thousand gathered in protest chanting "No to Saddam, No to USA." Some of the allies of both the US and Israel are brutal dictators much like Saddam; will we free them from their plauges? The world is so much more complex than your post would assume.
#9 from Samuel Tai at 6:18 am on Apr 19, 2003
Bob, what would have done? Left the Iraqis to Saddam's tender mercies? Left them to be rescued by the appeasers? Yes, there are difficulties. But consider the lives being lost now, and compare them to the number that would have been lost had Saddam remained in power. That, sir, in the real world, is the sole objective measure of whether we did the right thing or not. As to each of your points: Furthermore, we have also done our utmost to avoid damaging hospitals, water plants, electrical utilities, etc. It is more likely the lack of water, power, etc., is due to Saddam's regime not maintaining them even though it had much wealth. 12) Chaos and ethnic cleansing. Unfortunately, this is par for the course as the various factions settle scores. Would you have us brutally put these down? 13) Loss of history. You are not the first to blame the US Army for not protecting antiquities. First things first! Wasting combat power to protect antiquities (which are reported to have been appropriated by smugglers, not looters) just prolongs the end of armed conflict. In a war, the proper use of forces is to destroy all enemy forces as quickly as possible. I agree with you the Iraqis alone can determine their future. Faced with a choice between Kanan Makiya's optimism and your cynical nihilism, the Iraqis would do better to embrace hope. Sir, just because the world is complex does not justify inaction in all cases. Why don't you state your hidden thesis? The US has vast power, unparalleled in history. Power corrupts absolutely, in time. Therefore, the US (and by extension its motives and actions) is corrupt in all it does. Anything that can blunt the power of the US is then a priori good. The US is not Washington. The US is not corporate America. The US is me, the individual citizen. I, and my fellow citizens, are the force behind Washington. We determine which corporations live or die in the marketplace. We are the ones who have chosen this course of action, because we will not cower in fear. We refuse to wait behind ramparts for the next blow to fall. The best defence is a good offence. If you believe the polls, 3 out of 4 US citizens agrees with this position. I reject your categorization of me and my fellow citizens as corrupt. I reject your sophistry. I reject your shallow intellectual arguments for passivity. We did not ask for war. The enemy has warred against us since 1978, when Khomeini took the US embassy hostage. We have had enough.
#10 from Bob at 4:45 pm on Apr 21, 2003
Khomeini???? That was IRAN and not IRAQ. I know they are only one letter apart, but it seems like an important distinction to make. Unless by talking about "the enemy" that has "warred against us" you mean all muslims. You label me a nihilist which is not fair. I am against pre-emption, another word for agression. I was against putting Saddam in power and giving him in power and selling him these terrible WMD. I understand it can be put in historical context, but that would mean admitting that Saddam was out allie in striking back against Iran after the hostage taking that you cite as a reason for this war. I was against encouraging the Iran Iraq war and supplying Saddam with the weapons that he would later turn against his own people. I was against us defending Saddam when he gassed th Kurds. I was against us telling Saddam that we had no interest in his conflict with Kuwait. I am also for things. I support the Syria resolution to to make the region free of WMD. I would like to see us sign the anti land mine treaty and the Kyoto protocal. I would like for us to engage in diplomacy instead of warmongering. I would like for us to encourage our allies to stop bahaving like Saddam (Ethiopia, Uzbekistan, Rawanda, Albania, Colombia, Eritrea, Uganda, etc.) and improve their human rights. This could liberate people from brutal regimes without a war. I would like for us to stop our silence about the genocide in the Congo. You might disagree woth what I support and oppose but it is unfair to label me a cynical nhilist. I have no hidden thesis as you insist. I am a US citizen and I do not think my country is evil. I do not think it is perfect either. I never catagorized you as "corrupt." I believe that your post came from the heart. How could anyone not be sickened by Saddam's brutal rule? But you should accept that my post came from the heart as well. I did not put my real name or email address for fear that I would get hate mail. If you would like to continue this debate in private, let me know by posting something below and I will email you. I find your writing eleqount and I hope that we both could learn from the debate if you are interested.
Post a comment
Here are some quick tips for adding simple Textile formatting to your comments, though you can also use proper HTML tags: |
You're Reading an Individual Post!
If you want to head to the main blog page, just follow the "Main" link in the navigation up top underneath our blog's name. Or click here:
Winds of Change.NET Home
Project Valour-IT
Winds of Change Library
Recent Entries
· Project Valour-IT
· Obama's Web 2.0 Communication Strategy · The Next Tech Boom? · Prince Charles: Defender Of Nothing In Particular · The Australian Sex Party · The Prisons of the Arab Mind. · Well, Solar Works, I Guess... · Almost Solar · John McCain as George W. Bush's Third Term of Office · On My Way to Baghdad · Without Comment · Generations · Veteran's Day 2008 · A Great Day For Choice · Out This Weekend
Support Winds of Change.NET!
Your support & assistance is greatly appreciated, and makes a difference!
The Winds Crew:
Town Founder: Joe Katzman joe {at} windsofchange. net Joe's Normblog Interview Left-Hand Man: Marc 'Armed Liberal' Danziger armed {at} windsofchange. net A.L.'s Normblog Interview Other Winds Marshals 'AMac', aka. Marshal Festus (AMac@...) Robin "Straight Shooter" Burk 'Cicero', aka. The Quiet Man (cicero@...) David Blue (david.blue@...) 'Lewy14', aka. Marshal Leroy (lewy14@...) 'Nortius Maximus', aka. Big Tuna (nortius.maximus@...) Other Regulars 'Callimachus' (callimachus@...) 'Demosophist' (demosophist@...) Rev./Maj. Donald Sensing 'Molon Labe' (molon.labe@...) 'Neo Neo-Con' Tarek Heggy (tarek@...) Semi-Active: Arthur Chrenkoff 'Gabriel Gonzalez' (in Paris) Tim Oren (tim@...) Trent Telenko (trent@...) Posting Affiliates Athena: Terrorism Unveiled Chester: The Adventures of Chester Dave Schuler: The Glittering Eye Grim: Grim's Lair et. al. Joel Gaines [Russia] Michael Totten MILblogging.com: The MilBlogs directory Murdoc [Military] Situational Awareness team [Military] Nathan Hamm [Central Asia] Randy Paul [Latin America] Robert Koehler [Koreas] Robi Sen [India & S. Asia] Nitin Pai [India & S. Asia] Simon [China & E. Asia] Yehudit: Kesher Talk Emeritus: Adil Farooq (adil@...) Andrew Olmsted [KIA, Iraq] Celeste Bilby (celeste@...) Dan Darling Gary Farber (gary@...) Hossein Derakhshan (hoder@...) T.L. James (tljames@...) Robin Burk (robin@...)
Winds of Change.NET Blogkids & Affiliates
· The Argus: covering Central Asia · Canis Iratus: Glen Wishard · Correct-Amundo: Tech & society · Discarded Lies: Ev & Zorkie · The Flying Kiwi: Donovan Janus · The Glittering Eye: Dave Schuler · Gumptionology: Nortius Maximus · Hot Needle of Inquiry: 'Jinnderella' · Laughing Wolf: C. Blake Powers · Out The Mazoo: 'Mazoo' · Power and Control: M. Simon · Praktike's Place: 'Praktike' · Random Probabilities: Robin Burk · Siberian Light: covering Russia · The Spirit of Man · Good News From the Front · WATCH/: covering the war on terror
Archives By Category
-FEATURES: 48 Ways to Wisdom (24)
-FEATURES: Diaries & Roundups (10) -FEATURES: Military Transformation Uplink (12) -FEATURES: New Energy Currents (20) -FEATURES: Reader Highlights (2) -FEATURES: Regional Briefings (166) -FEATURES: Sufi Wisdom (158) -FEATURES: The Bard's Breath (32) -FEATURES: Winds of Discovery (6) -FEATURES: Winds of War [WoT] (445) 4 HA: 4th-Gen Warfare (103) 4 HA: al-Qaeda (159) 4 HA: Crime, Organized (26) 4 HA: Evil Exists (111) 4 HA: Intelligence/Spycraft (100) 4 HA: Military (531) 4 HA: Nukes, Poisons, Germs (136) 4 HA: Statecraft (29) 4 HA: War on Terror articles (708) Best Of... (180) BIZ: Business & Organizations (136) BIZ: Economics (103) BIZ: Energy (75) CIVIS (236) CIVIS: Copyright Wars (25) CIVIS: Drug Wars (18) CIVIS: Edu-Kooks (76) CIVIS: Free Societies (295) CIVIS: Hall of Shame (163) CIVIS: Hatred Rising (114) CIVIS: Journalism & Media (412) CIVIS: Spirit of America.NET (32) CIVIS: War Within the West (312) COLUMNISTS: M. Simon (13) COLUMNISTS: Tarek Heggy (33) GEO: Afghanistan (79) GEO: Africa (104) GEO: Asia (117) GEO: Aussies & Kiwis (22) GEO: Canada (70) GEO: China (87) GEO: Europe (183) GEO: France (71) GEO: India-Pakistan (113) GEO: Iran (223) GEO: Iraq (967) GEO: Israel (248) GEO: Koreas (64) GEO: Latin America (63) GEO: Middle East (257) GEO: Russia (83) GEO: Saudi Arabia (64) GEO: Sudan (36) GEO: U.K. (71) GEO: U.N. (61) GEO: U.S. of A (506) HUMANITY (88) HUMANITY: Art & Culture (161) HUMANITY: Art - Music (32) HUMANITY: Art - Poetry (6) HUMANITY: Christianity (53) HUMANITY: Heroes & Achievements (232) HUMANITY: History (126) HUMANITY: Islam (183) HUMANITY: Judaism (137) HUMANITY: Love (32) HUMANITY: Philosophy (49) HUMANITY: Spirituality & Religion (74) HUMANITY: Zen & Buddhism (28) Humour (199) Misc. (44) NET: Blogosphere (397) NET: Cyber-Security (16) NET: Grid Computing (3) NET: Spam (24) NET: The Internet (39) NET: The Open Source Meme (18) Personal (198) SCI-TECH: Biotech & Medical (84) SCI-TECH: Eco-tech (82) SCI-TECH: Nanotech (27) SCI-TECH: Science (112) SCI-TECH: Space (75) SCI-TECH: Technology (146) SPORTS (45) SPORTS: Baseball (76) Trends (66) USA: America Catch-all (20) USA: Anti-Americanism (6) USA: California Politics (16) USA: Conservatives & GOP (43) USA: Dem Party Renewal (77) USA: Domestic Issues (56) USA: Elections (132) USA: Grand Strategy (15) USA: Homeland Security (106) VictoryPAC (3) Winds of Change.NET (55)
Archives by Date
November 2008
October 2008 September 2008 August 2008 July 2008 June 2008 May 2008 April 2008 March 2008 February 2008 January 2008 December 2007 November 2007 October 2007 September 2007 August 2007 July 2007 June 2007 May 2007 April 2007 March 2007 February 2007 January 2007 December 2006 November 2006 October 2006 September 2006 August 2006 July 2006 June 2006 May 2006 April 2006 March 2006 February 2006 January 2006 December 2005 November 2005 October 2005 September 2005 August 2005 July 2005 June 2005 May 2005 April 2005 March 2005 February 2005 January 2005 December 2004 November 2004 October 2004 September 2004 August 2004 July 2004 June 2004 May 2004 April 2004 March 2004 February 2004 January 2004 December 2003 November 2003 October 2003 September 2003 August 2003 July 2003 June 2003 May 2003 April 2003 March 2003 February 2003 January 2003 November 2002 October 2002 September 2002 August 2002 July 2002 June 2002 May 2002 April 2002 Joe's Old Archives, By Title: April - June 2002 July - December 2002
Winds Blogroll
Top Prospects
SP Normblog (LHP) SP Solomonia (RHP) RF Mader Blog CF Donklephant LF Harry's Place C Critical Mass 1B Tigerhawk 2B Gideon's Blog SS Alexander the Average 3B Democracy Arsenal UT INF Pundita DH Counterterrorism Blog PEN Liberals Against Terrorism CL Gates of Vienna MASCOT Huffington's Toast MGR Robert Tagorda GM Conservative Grapevine Humour Blogs
Support VictoryPAC· Cox & Forkum (cartoons) · Day By Day (cartoons) · User Friendly (cartoons) · Iowahawk (satire) · Scrappleface (satire) Religious Blogs · Conscientia (baha'i) · Unlearned Hand (bud) · Eve Tushnet (cath) · Muslim Under Progress (isl) · Ideofact (isl) · Kesher Talk (jew) · Rabbi Lazer Brody (jew) · Rishon Rishon (jew) · Rev. Donald Sensing (prot) Other Team Memberships · AlwaysOn [JK] · Blogcritics.org [JK] · Tech Central Station [JK] Blog Services< · NZ Bear's Ecosystem · Blogstreet · Daypop Top 40 · Technorati · Movable Type.org · New York Times Permalinks · Write A Better Blog |
http://www.windsofchange.net/windsopcentre-cms/trackback.cgi/1097
Listed below are links to weblogs that reference
"The 10 Plagues of Iraq"