Of torturers, victims and the ease of being both
Baghdad, Iraq - In about 1998, she recalls, as a student at Notre Dame,
Sheila Provencher happened upon a magazine article about how millions of Iraqis
were sliding into poverty and then misery under Saddam Hussein's rule and
U.S.-driven economic sanctions.
The condition of 24 million Iraqis was a fact too distant to be seen from
South Bend, Indiana. But some of us do better than others at seeing and
seizing what may be important even if obscure. Provencher -- a Roman Catholic
studying for her masters in divinity and looking for a mission in life -- did better
than most of us ever do. She clipped a photo of Amar, an Iraqi infant stunted
by malnutrition, and has since kept it where she sees it in her daily prayers.
Attuning ourselves to distant sufferings can be a dangerously human step,
of course, because once we pay attention, we start to feel that we should DO
something to help. "I began by doing what I could where I was" Provencher says,
which for her meant prayer and fasting. Later, Provencher, who normally makes
time in a day for both prayer or meditation and running (many of us do well
to manage just one of those), raised money for an aid project in Iraq by
finding sponsors for her finishes in marathons.
Now a Catholic lay minister, Provencher works in Baghdad as a human rights
monitor for the Christian Peacemaking Teams, a Chicago-based humanitarian
group that includes many Mennonites, Quakers and others.
The other day, at her team's quiet apartment in Baghdad, Provencher
startled me by explaining that the scandal of U.S. human rights abuses in Iraq is
similar to the sex-abuse crisis in the Catholic Church. Provencher, having
worked on both issues, explains this well enough that I want to pass it on. (I
think it's not necessary, by the way, to agree with all of her conclusions in
order to appreciate the way she approaches these issues.)
"The sex abuse scandal in the church is rooted in three things," she said..
"One is a hierarchical structure that encourages fierce loyalty among its
members to the point of enforcing silence" when fellow members of the hierarchy
commit crimes. "Two is an unhealthy approach to sexuality," she said. "And
three is the enormous pressure of being a priest, overloaded with work and
isolated by their lives in rectories. Life as a diocesan priest is unhealthily
stressful."
And stress is a human seedbed for abuse of others.
America's human rights violations in Iraq go far beyond the sexual
humiliation of prisoners at Abu Ghraib, Provencher notes. They include the detention
of thousands of Iraqis on the basis of little or no evidence, and treatment
that the Red Cross says amount to torture, even if Pentagon lawyers can split
hairs well enough to declare otherwise.
"The military is another intensely hierarchical structure that requires
its members to have fierce loyalty to their superiors," she said. "Soldiers tell
me that
the worst thing they can do in their culture is to make their
superior officers look bad." For the military, "the unhealthy idea is that the way
to bring peace is to use force." The U.S. military's approach, she said, is
that "there is a certain number of 'bad' Iraqis" sprinkled out there in the
cities and villages, and the way bring peace and democracy is to to just go out
every night and kick down the doors of suspects' houses until you finally
round them all up.
"Where the military sees 'bad guys,' I see frustrated people," she said.
In her view, the military's tactics -- midnight house raids and thousands in
prison -- actually feed the insurgency that they aim to
extinguish.
The final building block for the U.S. military's human rights abuses is
"the incredible stress being put on these soldiers. They are out here on
extended tours, far longer than they ever imagined they would serve, isolated from
their families" and their real lives. "After these months, here I jump at any
loud noise, because I've been too close to too many explosions. For them, it's
worse. They're sitting in the bases being hit by the mortars. They're paying a
terrible price."
"I feel compassion for these soldiers," said Provencher, who is both a
pacifist and the daughter of a retired Army colonel. "I read in military
publications that there are not enough counselors or psychological services for them.
And it's easy to let your stress out on some helpless Iraqi that you see as a
'bad guy.' "
In the end, Provencher's shorthand explanation is an oversimplification,
of course, as all shorthand explanations are. But as I near the end of my
third month in Iraq in the past year, trying to get my own grip on the big picture
here, I find that her simplified version of truth reflects far better the
evidence I see around me than does the government line as voiced in briefings I
hear each day from the U.S. military and civilian spokesmen here.
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