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pberq Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-02-05 12:03 AM
Original message
kidnapped peace activist
Great article on one of the kidnapped peace activists. I knew this guy for a while as a fellow musician - very accomplished and sincere.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/11/30/AR2005113002134_pf.html

Va. Man Foresaw Dangers In Iraq
Activist Had Plan Before Kidnapping

By Timothy Dwyer and Michael Laris
Washington Post Staff Writers
Thursday, December 1, 2005; B01

<snip>
As Tom Fox headed toward the end of his first week in captivity in Iraq, friends said the 54-year-old musician and peace activist was well aware of the dangers he faced in the war-ravaged country.

He was so realistic, in fact, that he devised a written plan he distributed to friends and co-workers that they should follow if he were taken hostage. Don't pay ransom for his return, he wrote in an October 2004 e-mail, and reject the use of violence in trying to win his freedom. Don't "vilify" the abductors, he said, but instead "try to understand the motives of their actions."

<snip>
At the service in McLean, where Fox's e-mail from 2004 was read aloud, his friends reminisced about his ideals. One woman said that just before Fox left for Iraq, he told her, "Too many are willing to die for war and too few are willing to die for peace."

Although worried friends talked about him in careful terms, saying they feared something they might say could endanger him, they all focused on his love of peace and his fierce dedication to its principles.

(much more at link . . .)
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Adenoid_Hynkel Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-02-05 12:12 AM
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1. he kept a blog
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pberq Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-02-05 12:29 AM
Response to Reply #1
3. Thank you for passing that on
This link has a picture of a group of Palestinians calling for the release of Tom and the others:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/photo/2005/11/30/PH2005113001456.html
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DS1 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-02-05 12:15 AM
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2. Rush Limbaugh is glad
No, really. Rush said he was happy that these folks were kidnapped.
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pberq Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-02-05 12:48 AM
Response to Reply #2
5. Well bless Mr. Limbaugh.
That's a true patriot there.:sarcasm:
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pberq Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-02-05 12:35 AM
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4. More links with info , photos, and words by Tom Fox
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/photo/2005/11/30/PH2005113002187.html

http://washtimes.com/national/20051130-111659-4665r.htm

http://vitw.org/cat/voices-from-iraq/tom-fox/

One of Tom's blog entries from the above site:

Sanded In Baghdad
July 15, 2005 | category: Recent Updates • Voices from Iraq • Tom Fox

by Tom Fox
Christian Peacemaker Teams

Spending three days in the Baghdad airport waiting to see if the sand and dust would let up enough to allow flights to arrive (and then allow me to leave) was more stressful that I imagined. Of course, six trips on the airport road may have been a factor in increasing my stress level.

There were a number of internationals in the same predicament I was in. Many were people I’ve had very little contact with in my time in Iraq. Some were private security contractors who work for the large international firms like Dyncorp and KBR and are paid substantial sums (many 1,000 dollars a day) to protect international facilities and personnel. Others worked for NGO’s and organizations that were business related, such as a firm that did management training for Iraqi entrepreneurs. I took the opportunity of being stuck there to try and get to know a number of them.

Perhaps the stress of cancelled flights and having to reschedule and arrange transport back to the Green Zone or other international facilities made their comments harsher than would be the case under different circumstances. But nonetheless, I was dismayed with what seemed, to me at least, to be very racists and colonialist statements by almost every contractor or entrepreneur I talked with.

Having grown up the Southern U.S. and having a very racist father, it was a very bizarre experience hearing almost the same comments being made against Iraqis that I heard as a child being made against blacks. The same venom, for lack of a better word, was coming out of their mouths as they denigrated the people, culture and societal norms of Iraq.

Equally disturbing for me was the colonialist attitude of most of the business- connected internationals (most of the contractors I talked to were South African or English and most of the businessmen were American and all except one were white males). Remarks like, “We have to show them how it’s really done”, or “They don’t have a clue how it’s done in the West”. There seemed, to me at least, to be no attempt at understanding, much less respecting, the culture of the people they ostensibly are here to work in partnership with.

I have to assume the racist attitudes of the security contractors stems from the necessity for a human being to dehumanize and marginalize another human being in order to kill them. Dehumanization is a mind game military-leaders the world over have used to indoctrinate recruits with and it also seems to be the case with these mercenary soldiers.

The colonialist attitudes are harder to grasp. Is colonialism something unique to white, male Westerners? (And I include myself in this category.) Do we see Iraq the same way as Kipling saw India, that of being “the white man’s burden” to bring Western civilization to the uncivilized Arabs and Kurds?

Those three days at the airport are woven deeply into my spirit. I’m wondering if I have swallowed poison that will harden or embitter me. Or perhaps I have been blessed with a homeopathic remedy of absorbing just enough poison to begin to cure me of my own subconscious racist and colonist tendencies and then be able to help others cure themselves. Time will tell.
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pberq Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-02-05 08:27 AM
Response to Original message
6. Here's another blog post by Tom Fox
http://waitinginthelight.blogspot.com/

Tuesday, November 08, 2005
There Are No Words

<snip>
“The ongoing difficulties faced by Fallujans are so great that words fail to properly express it.” Words from a cleric in Fallujah as he tried to explain the litany of ills that continue to afflict his city one year after the U.S.-led assault took place.

“All the men in the mosque were from my neighborhood. They were not terrorists.” Words from a young man who said he left a room of men either injured or homeless thirty minutes before the raid on his mosque, the same mosque shown in the now-famous videotape of an American soldier shooting unarmed men lying on the mosque floor.

“There haven’t been any funds for home reconstruction available since the change in Iraqi government last January.” The words of a civic leader from Fallujah as he showed CPTers the still-devastated areas of his city.

There are no words. A city that has been demonized by Americans and many Iraqis, using the words “the city of terrorists.” A city that its residents call “the city of mosques.” A city that even its residents have to enter at checkpoints, often taking up to an hour to traverse. A city that is being choked to death economically by those same checkpoints.
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