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As I wrote in Long Time Passing, when "my son was deployed to Afghanistan in 2003 I awoke from nightmares almost every night: the knock on the door, uniformed military personnel on the doorstep, “We’re sorry to inform you…,” images of my son disabled like the soldier in Johnny Got His Gun, bombs raining on a family’s home while a mother screamed out her children’s names…. As an adult immigrant to the United States I didn't grasp that my own children were candidates for military recruitment. Surely, I thought, a volunteer military was, well, voluntary. I was unaware of, so did not consider, the marketing efforts and exorbitant amounts of money the US military poured into maintaining the veneer of "volunteer". It wasn't as if I didn't know about war trauma: my family has generations of conscripts: the British Raj, the Boer War, World War II, and the South African Defense Force. So, when my son returned from Afghanistan and three months later deployed to Iraq, I was determined to alert him to the psychological implications of war...and to learn from Iraqi families about their lives in a beloved land that had become a war zone. What I learned in Iraq in 2004 drove me to re-evaluate the various histories I'd learned ... and to adjust my worldview based on the realities that civilians described about the root causes and effects of war in their lands. For, each one of us is a sojourner on this earth...and it is up to each one of us to surface our basic assumptions, evaluate our worldviews, and reach out to one another with open questions - and listen to and evaluate the answers - rather than simply accept policy positions, political strategies, and polemics. Susan Galleymore continues to share the stories of those affected by war as founder of MotherSpeak, host of Raising Sand Radio, and G.I. Rights counselor. With colleague Peter Dunlap, founder of Center for Political Development, she conducts workshops for effective progressive politics and leadership. She also conducts trips to the countries discussed in the book to meet local people, deepen cultural sensitivity and awareness, and create networks for peace. Learn more > |
Susan Galleymore |
(c) 2010. Long Time Passing: Mothers Speak about War and Terror; 2008 - 2010 | All Rights Reserved | Contact: media@mothersspeakaboutwarandterror.org