Cold shoulders
By Kathy Kelly
Online Journal Contributing Writer
Jul 10, 2008, 00:20
Over the past two years, here in Amman, Jordan, I’ve
regularly visited the family of Umm Hamdi, an Iraqi woman forced out of her
native Iraq four years ago by terrifying death threats after her husband, very
likely prey to that same threatened violence, disappeared.
Although often met with the proverbial “cold shoulder” when
trying to improve conditions for her family, she persists -- in the daytime she
does child care for another family and, in the evening, she knits, sews, and
makes handicrafts to sell in a local market. Umm Hamdi is tough, strong and
fiercely determined to provide for her children. Nevertheless, she’s wretchedly
insecure as a single mother and one more refugee among thousands in a country
where resources to cope with her anxious needs are very slim. And she is
worried for her son who is still in Iraq.
Several nights ago, I turned up at her small, bare apartment
during an evening when her young daughters were out in the care of a local
charity and she was home alone. I saw how worn out she was from working to
support them, but more telling on her is the frustration and remorse she feels
for Hamdi, her teenage son, who is barred from entering Jordan because he is a
young man over 15 years of age, and whether for fear of spillover violence or
from a wish to concentrate its taxed charitable resources among women and
children, Jordan’s policy strictly bars him entry. In Iraq, Hamdi lives with a
family that resents him for his unemployed status, (there are no jobs), and can
barely spare the little support they offer him.
Umm Hamdi is stricken with remorse over separation from her
son. In regular phone calls, he learns that his sisters are going to school,
that one has completed a vocational training program, and that when the oldest
daughter was recently married the family did everything they could to give her
a traditional wedding. The anguish overwhelms her as she recounts their latest
conversation: “You do everything for your daughters,” he had shouted, over the
phone: “everything for them, but what about me? What about me? I am your son!” She
clutches her hands over her eyes. Between sobs, she repeats, “My son, my son.”
Her son is one of many thousands in Iraq who are out of
luck, out of work, undereducated, and lonely for parents and siblings lucky
enough to escape to neighboring countries.
The International Organization for Migration (IOM) says that
poverty is driving Iraq’s boys and young men, out of desperation, into the
militias. A 2007 IOM report noted that “militant fighters sometimes buy the
loyalty of displaced persons by providing them some of the things they need,
such as food and shelter. More and more children are joining these armed
groups, the militias and the insurgents,” said IOM officer Dana Graber Ladeck.
“Sometimes they do it for money and sometimes for revenge, but we’re finding
more and more child soldiers, so to speak.” [January 30, Voice of America
interview]
Some youngsters agree to carry guns and to man checkpoints
for the strongest and most heavily armed militia in their country, the U.S.
military. Reporting for Reuters, Adrian Croft recently wrote about a “ragtag
band of men toting AK-47s at a checkpoint in Baghdad’s Sadr City,” some of 500
youngsters the US had recruited as part of a new plan to “strengthen the Iraqi
army’s hold” in the backyard of U.S. rival Moqtada Sadr. [Jordan Times, June 27]
New recruits risk their lives to earn $300 a month, guarding these checkpoints.
It’s undoubtedly one of the best jobs in town. Will this option, will one like
it, attract Umm Hamdi’s son?
Other Iraqi youngsters have been swept up by the U.S.
military and sent to prisons, without charge, as a measure to prevent them from
joining an Iraqi militia. On May 19, 2008, Fox News reported that the U.S.
military is holding about 500 juveniles suspected of being “unlawful enemy
combatants” in detention centers in Iraq. In August of 2007, in anticipation of
the “troop surge,” CNN reported that the US had imprisoned, without charge, 800
Iraqi youngsters (or “security risks”) between the ages of 11 and 17, in a
“prison school,” to prevent them from lending their bodies to militias as
decoys or snipers. The CNN reporter said that, within the school, textbooks and
classrooms were another “weapon” against terror. Commanding officer Lt. Glenn
expressed his goal: “We ensure that when they are released that they don’t --
they pick up a book instead of an AK-47 or laying an IED. And that’s what this
really gets back to.” And when it gets back to young men like Hamdi, the
message is perfectly clear: the U.S. will supply plenty of guns and explosives
as long as the attacks are done in the name of protecting U.S. “security.”
Umm Hamdi doesn’t want her son to pick up a gun or lay an
explosive device for Iraq or for anyone. She would rather see him pick up a
book. She cries herself to sleep at night wishing she could just see him. But
she can’t bring her daughters back to the maelstrom of violence her native
country has become with the U.S. invasion. And with Jordan straining to contain
the refugees it has absorbed, she can’t bring her son out of Iraq.
Would it reassure her to think that Hamdi might find more
secure shelter and achieve some educational goals if U.S. military jailers
could imprison him for a year or so? Would it help if I told her that millions
of impoverished parents in the U.S. worry that their sons might land in jail,
and that many see the military as a better option?
I talked with her for a while longer. Her daughters returned
from the event the charity had hosted for them, their faces sparkling with
glitter and their arms colorful with painted designs. Umm Hamdi wiped away
tears from a suddenly, forcedly, cheerful expression. She fetched a small ball
of yarn -- royal blue -- and started rapid work to knit me a sweater, a parting
gift I will take with me when I leave here. “It’s cold in Chicago, very cold!”
she said, laying down the needles and yarn. She grabbed her shoulders to help
me understand that she didn’t want me to have cold shoulders. “No, we don’t
want you to be cold.”
Kathy Kelly (kathy@vcnv.org) is a co-coordinator of Voices for Creative Nonviolence.
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