

Never had I fathomed, not even in my remotest imagination, that a day will come when God's houses will be attacked and destroyed. The way they are today, in Iraq . . . Never.



This Red Line is now crossed . . . Crossed, transgressed, trespassed into blasphemy. Layla Anwar "A Red Line" from An Arab Woman’s Blues



According to a recent UN report, the Green Zone is now coming under heavy fire on a daily basis. The report said that the so-called "International Zone" -- which houses the U.S. embassy and Iraqi government offices -- is being pelted regularly with a "barrage of mortar bombs and missiles . . . The attacks have become more frequent and more accurate."(Reuters)



The news of the mortar and missile attacks has been largely concealed from the American people. The public already believes the war was a "mistake" and the persistent bombing of America’s "last sanctuary" in Baghdad just adds to the nation’s sinking morale. The US is progressively losing its grip in Iraq and the fighting is degenerating into a vicious free-for-all. The "surge" has failed to achieve its political objectives, and this is forcing the occupation to rely more and more on aerial bombardment and counterinsurgency operations.



The war is in its fifth year, and, still, Bush has not produced anything even vaguely resembling a political solution. He is utterly clueless.



The world’s oldest civilization is being destroyed before our eyes -- its cities laid to waste, its people slaughtered by the tens of thousands. Saddam never could have dreamed of devastation on this scale. We’ve ruined everything. Truckloads of dead men are delivered to the Baghdad morgue every morning where they are processed and then dumped in mass graves in abandoned soccer fields or schoolyards. Twenty percent of the population has either been internally displaced or forced to flee into Jordan and Syria. In Falluja alone, 65 percent of the buildings have been destroyed and tens of thousands of its citizens are left living in tent cities scattered across the desert -- exposed to the elements, living on crusts of bread and foul water. The number of refugees has risen rapidly: 2 million in Amman, Damascus and Cairo. They go wherever they can to avoid the bombing and find safety or shelter.

I will write for the refugees . . .

(with) no homeland except

the wind of illusion

and no shelter except

the humiliation of tents



"For Whom do I write" by Musa Shu`ayb The Iraqi people are now facing what Juan Cole calls an "everyday apocalypse" -- a complete security meltdown in which crime and terror flourish in the seedbed of foreign occupation. Bush’s war has created the greatest humanitarian catastrophe of our time -- 700,000 dead, millions more maimed or traumatized for life, and an entire country reduced to rubble.

The dustbins overflow

with corpses

and human decay.

Where to now my enemy?

Where to now my oppressor?



Layla Anwar "Poem about America" Among those who follow the daily accounts of the war, the mood has grown increasingly dark and pessimistic. It’s clear that the Democrats are now as committed to the goals of the war as Bush. They are both equally guilty.



The Iraq war is no accident. It is the logical consequence of a corrupted system where all the protections for human rights and civil liberties have been abandoned. All that’s left is the voracity and bloodlust of an unelected oligarchy who dispense death and destruction with complete indifference. Democracy has been subverted in America -- every part of the body-politic is diseased. The war is just a reflection of America’s moral degeneracy.



Am I being too harsh?



Consider this article which appeared on Uruknet.info last week. It provides photos of 24 "special needs" children who were found naked, starving and lying on concrete floors, in their own excrement, their bodies covered with sores. All of them were chained to their cribs. Some of them were near death. This is the Nazi-like terror we have unleashed on Iraq under the rubric of "democracy." This is what "neoconservatism" looks like when it is stripped of its ideological pretense and we can see its true face -- pure, unalloyed evil. It is no different than Hitler’s fascism.



We are starving and brutalizing children while we extol the "America’s fallen" as if one life is more valuable than another. What sort of sick joke is this? This is nothing more than cultural narcissism served up by pseudo-patriots in the political establishment who are drunk on death and power. They worship violence like a god and they are pushing us all towards Armageddon.

I will not pray to a god who

made the usurpers victorious . . .

My God has been lost

among the conquerors

I will not pray to a God

who is lost among the conquerors.



"The Missing God" by Musa Shu`ayb True -- God has been lost among the conquerors, the occupiers and the foreign armies.



Why don’t we hear the voices of the war’s victims? Why do we never hear the stories of the people who are forced to live beneath America’s bombs?



For five years, the Western media have covered the war from the perspective of the struggling American GI and the hardships he faces in a foreign land. That may be true, but what about the Iraqis who must endure the "everyday apocalypse," don’t they count?



The US invasion has turned Iraq into a testing-ground for new theories on counterinsurgency. One by one the cities in the Sunni region have been surrounded with razor-wire; vital supplies have been cut off, check-points set up, snipers placed on rooftops, and the siege begins. Civilian neighborhoods are branded as "terrorist strongholds" and pounded with heavy artillery and aerial bombardment. We have declared war on some of the poorest people on earth -- ghetto warfare with the most sophisticated high-tech weaponry ever invented.



Who will tell these peoples’ story? The New York Times? FOX News?



Here’s something you won’t read in the mainstream news: The real disposition of the war changed more than two years ago when it became apparent that the Iraqi resistance would not simply throw down their weapons and give up. That’s when the assassination of teachers and intellectuals went into high gear. That’s when archeological sites, museums, and anything else connected to Iraqi cultural and historical identity -- began to come under relentless and withering attack. The attacks on holy sites and mosques have persisted to this day. There is a conscious effort to destroy all the religious symbols and monuments which bind the people together in the shared experience of a common faith.



The same sinister forces that are inciting the sectarian violence are trying to remove all sense of kinship, brotherhood, nationalism and spirituality. Their objective is to "wipe the slate clean" and rebuild the entire society according to their neoliberal model.



If that is not genocide; then what is?



Here is the story of one victim of the US occupation. It is a story of great personal loss and suffering. It’s really the tale about all of Iraq, a nation that never threatened the United States, but which has been crushed by evil, ambitious men who care nothing about the death and suffering they have produced.



The story is called "My Shrine" and it is by poet and author Layla Anwar:

As I was staring out of the window, I noticed the full moon. I remember when I was a child; I associated the full moon with my love for my grandmother. I used to tell her: "Bibi, every time I see the full moon, I see you. You are my moon."



I absolutely adored my grandmother. She loved me kindly, warmly, with no strings attached . . . As benevolently and as gently as the moonlight.



So naturally on a full moon, I remember her. As a matter of fact, I remember all my departed ones, members of my family, my great grand parents, my ancestors . . . Everyone I have ever heard of, even those remotely related to me.



Remembering them gives me a sense of continuity . . . A sense of belonging. And now that Iraq is in pieces, their remembrance is even more of a priority for me.



As a matter of fact, I dream of them often, or more like they visit me in my dreams . . . rather too often, these days. And true to our traditions, every time they visit me in my dreams, I make it a point to offer food or alms to any worship place (be it mosque or church) in their souls name.



Another thing that reminds me a lot of my departed ones is Sheikh al Gaylani (Gilani) mosque and shrine in downtown Baghdad.



Sheikh AbdelKader Al Gilani was a Sufi and a good number of my family followed his teachings. Some even say that we are related to him and can trace our roots right back to 13th century Baghdad through the Gaylani school.



So when I heard that Al Gaylani mosque and shrine was bombed, something in me snapped. I felt it physically, something around my heart . . .



I have often visited this mosque, with members of my family, one of which was my grandmother.



We would sometimes go in the morning and sometimes in the early evenings. In the mornings, women (Sunnis and Shias -- we never thought of these terms before the occupation) would congregate, pray and pay their tributes. Some would distribute candies because a secret vow or wish had come true. So whilst praying, sweets would fall around me and it was always a good omen.



In the evenings, you could hear after the muezzin's call to prayer, the chanting -- Dhikr -- of the sacred Divine names, repeated over and over until they mingled with the sunset and became One.



This shrine is more than just a place of worship for me. Every time I walked in there, I would draw strength, feeling it infusing my roots with a new breath . . . Everytime I sat there, I connected with all those who sat there before me, all the way back to the 13th century . . . This place symbolized for me, my sense of belonging, my sense of being.



In my mind, this place was my point of reference, like some lieu that my inner compass recognized, gravitated towards, affiliated and identified with . . . An attachment beyond time, space and geography. An attachment like some invisible rope handed down through generations of worshippers and contemplators. All the way back . . .



When it got bombed, I asked Aziz who knows this mosque better than anyone else, who was behind it. He replied matter of factly as if he knew it all along: "Mahdi of Iran, Mossad and the Americans." . . . And I believe Aziz for he knows.



And instead of sweets falling as a good omen, falling debris buried the wounded . . . And instead of sacred chants uniting with the sunset, the cries of mourning . . .



What have you done?



Not only have you smashed my country into tiny pieces.



Not only have you slaughtered my people.



Not only have you snatched my loved ones, my family, my friends, away from me.



Not only have you destroyed our homes.



Not only have you exiled thousands of us.



But you have also managed to shatter my memories, pull them out from their roots, like some unwanted weed.



You have managed to reach the only sacred place I had left.



The only place I had jealously safeguarded, secretly held in silence, lest you should find out about it.



But you even managed to penetrate that too.



Leaving me with nothing . . .



Leaving me with absolutely nothing but this pen and paper and a full moon staring coldly back at me. We have destroyed Iraq and left the people with nothing. The American people need to know this.



Mike Whitney lives in Washington state. He can be reached at [email protected] .







