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- Subject: REPORT:MIRacles #7 (Croatia)
- Message-ID: <1992Aug13.175111.15484@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
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- /* Written 1:19 pm Aug 1, 1992 by gn:jsax in cdp:gen.quaker */
- /* ---------- "MIRacles No. 7" ---------- */
- Subject: MIRacles No. 7
-
- ===================================================================
- MIRacles No. 7
- Joel GAzis-SAx
- Zagreb, 1 Kolovoz1992
- Copyright 1992
- ===================================================================
- "I have to tell you what happened to me when I went to Geneva," Nina
- Pecnik told me over coffee. "I went to the QUNO office and there was
- nobody there except for one woman. When I told her that I was here
- about the Yugoslavian refugees, she said 'Those people just like to
- fight.'"
-
- It is easy, I suppose, to invent the history of despair. The Friend's
- careless words hurt my Croatian colleague's feelings. Now Nina
- confesses that she dreads that "peace will come sometime in the next
- century and then the war will only go somewhere else." I empathize with
- her sadness: we are fellow sufferers. When my clearness committee met
- to discuss my concern with me, one of its members said "Those people
- have been fighting for centuries."
-
- Visitors and onlookers to the situation here often do more to undermine
- hope than to build it. Sometimes the remarks come out of personal
- experience: "You Europeans and you Americans are surprised by this
- war," Alfred, a Ghanan who I met in a bar a few weeks ago, told me. "We
- Africans have seen this for years. You get a tribe that is bigger and
- stronger than the rest and it just wants to push the others around. You
- think you are different from everyone else, but you're not."
-
- Others draw upon their intellects: Andre Thomsen, a Danish volunteer
- who devotes his annual vacation to helping others, thinks that the
- answer lies in history. "You can't separate the roots from the flower,"
- he tells me. "You have to go back to understand."
-
- What I have found, however, is that if you go back just a few years, you
- arrive at a mystery. A young Dalmatian man, who works at the Center for
- Peace, Nonviolence, and Human Rights, told me "I don't understand what
- happened. Not so long ago, Serbs and Croats in my hometown lived
- together. They knew each other and they were friends." For him, the
- war doesn't go back centuries: it just began yesterday and he is
- confused and frightened by it.
-
- Nina suggests that historical and sociological simplifications serve to
- distance outsiders from the war. What we don't want to face is how much
- the Croatians are like ourselves. The longer I stay here, I find
- cultural differences to be less important than similarities. What
- shocks me is not how different I am from the Croats: Nina or anyone
- else here could easily be my neighbor back in America.
-
- This realization plus cold historical fact causes me to cast a very
- skeptical eye on the "they just like to fight" argument. The last time
- the Croats found themselves in a war was during the forties. In the
- years since the Second World War, my own country has fought military
- actions in Korea, Cuba, the Dominican Republic, Vietnam, Cambodia,
- Lebanon, Grenada, Panama, and the Persian Gulf. It has contributed
- military advisors and weapons to conflicts on every continent. Its
- "national interests" have extended even to Fiji where it supported a
- coup against a democratically elected regime.
-
- The military invades even our life as civilians. Americans consider war
- toys to be an essential ingredient of a boy's childhood. Operation
- Desert Storm bubble gum was a big seller last year. The glorification
- of war is a mainstay of our contemporary commercial culture and now the
- Croats, ever eager to imitate things American, have started their own
- lines of war- inspired products.
-
- The marketplaces are filled with keychains, patches, stickets, shirts,
- hats, posters, pins and necklaces bearing military motifs. Popular
- items include toy tanks, guns, handcuffs, and shirts. In the window of
- a hat shop, I saw several patches from various Croatian battalions with
- legends in English. One, emblazoned with a skull and crossroads, bore
- the motto "Vukovar '92" and below, in English, "Kill 'em all!"
- "Operation Desert Storm Bubble Gum" has been matched with "CroArmy"
- (once again, the English name is used) and sticker books. Today, I saw
- a boy on the tram wearing a "Camp LeJeune NC" baseball cap. Iron
- Crosses and black shirts are other popular fashion items, inspired by
- fascist movements from abroad.
-
- We must, as Americans and as Europeans, take responsibility for the
- culture of violence and militarism which is developing here. If we
- characterize this conflict as a historical phenomenon, we affirm the
- manipulations of history which Balkan politicians have used to disrupt
- the daily life of Serbs, Croats, and Bosnians. If we do nothing to
- promote peaceful dialogue or to relieve the sufferings of refugees
- because we tell ourselves that the people here cannot be changed and
- therefore not helped, we give substance to a myth: We create a reality
- that kills.
-
-
- Nina told me about a Muslim woman who said, of the Serbs: "We can
- forgive them for killing us. But we cannot forgive them for making
- killers of us." I do not think that the Serbs alone are to blame for
- making killers of the Croats and the Bosnians. "Those people who like
- to kill" were us before they were the present generation of Croats,
- Serbs, and Bosnians. In their famous letter which affirmed their
- pacifism to James II, Friends spoke of their "testimony to the whole
- world". Our best witness on behalf of the peoples of these countries is
- to find that of God in ourselves and to seek it, to support it in the
- Spirit of Love which is the root of our faith. We must not and cannot
- afford to be part of the culture of killing. We must confront our
- personal racism which separates us from the Balkan peoples. We are all
- God's people, Croat, Bosnian, and Serb, American and European,
- Christian, Muslim, and Jew alike.
-
-
- * * * NEEDS
-
-
- 1. Continue to lobby against military intervention. Suggest instead
- that we establish an effective framework for dialogue and that more aid
- to help with refugees be given to Slovenia, Croatia, Serbia, and Bosnia.
-
- 2. If you are a doctor or other health worker, consider spending your
- vacation in Croatia. Your skills are needed to help care for the sick
- and wounded in refugee camps. Call on Friends and others who are
- doctors and dentists to consider this option.
- 3. Upon my return, I will be available to talk to Friends and others
- about the situation here. I especially want to travel to Washington and
- to Chicago. Your help with air fare, housing, food, etc. is critical.
-
- 4. Circulate MIRacles to Friends Meetings in your area. Express my
- desire to extend my witness in the Balkans. This will mean helping my
- wife as well as myself to establish ourselves (with other foreign
- volunteers) in Zagreb.
-
- ABOUT THE TITLE: Brethren theogian Dale Brown once counted the ability
- to believe in miracles as an essential component in the psychic
- constituency of the peace activists. "Mir" is the word for "peace" in
- Croatian, Serbian, and most other Slavic languages. The title,
- therefore, reflects the writer's personal belief in persistant
- peacemaking.
- * * *
- This publication is circulated over the Association for Progressive
- Communications Networks, Quaker-L, EcuNet, Cerbreus, FidoNet, and UseNet
- by Joel GAzis-Sax. Users may download this article for their own use,
- but are asked to make a donation to help support Joel's work in the
- Balkans.Checks should be made in U.S. dollars and made out to Palo Alto
- Friends Meeting and earmarked "Balkans Peace Fund". The address is:
- Palo Alto Friends Meeting,957 Colorado Avenue, Palo Alto, California
- 94303 U.S.A.
-