Ruminations of an Afghan Girl Burning to Death in
a Hospital Bed
By David Swanson
October 05, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - Life is a very jumbled
mixture. The pain of it, if you're awake and thinking, brings into
your mind the happiest moments you can remember and transforms them
into agony unless you resist bitterness with every drop of strength
you have left, if not more. Physical pain makes clear-thinking and
generous thinking more difficult, until death appears in front of
you, and then the physical pain is as nothing.
I know that I'm not supposed to be bitter, and yet
that somehow makes it harder not to be. When my father and sister
and two cousins were blown into little pieces last year, it was the
action of some distant office worker pushing a switch on a
remote-controlled airplane. And I'm supposed to believe that they
meant well. And this is supposed to make it better. But somehow it
makes it worse.
The war that landed me in this hospital in Kunduz,
along with all of the screaming men, women, and children around me
whose voices have now faded into what I imagine the roar of the
ocean must be, this war comes from a distant land that we are told
means well. Yet it generates enemies through its horrors. It funds
those enemies through its incompetence, corruption, and insistence
on buying protection for its occupiers. It fights those enemies with
such marvelous weaponry that it kills and kills and kills until many
more enemies face it, and it goes on fighting from afar. I'm told
the people in America believe the war ended, that it isn't even
happening, that it isn't entering Year 15 in four days, while I will
never enter Year 14.
I've only known war. I've only heard of peace. Now
I will know only the peace of the dead. And I've been told that the
dead go on with living somewhere else, but I'm told this by people
whose other statements are nothing but lies, so I prefer to wait the
endless moments of this hospital burning to the ground with me
inside it, and then see for myself.
I understand that I am only an Afghan. I am not an
American school student wrongly murdered. I am not an Israeli
settler brutally blown up. I'm not a U.S. soldier or a Syrian or
Ukrainian who was killed by the wrong side. But this is what makes
my bitterness so hard to push back against. I'm an Afghan being
bombed for women's rights that I will never ever have a chance to
exercise, because I will never ever be a woman. So, I must focus on
my gratitude to those who have been kind to me, including those who
left this world ahead of me to guide the way.
When I focus on the good in my life intensely, I
can shut out any echoes of the evil. I can almost even come back to
the evil with a sense of forgiveness and the realization that
really, truly, the people who do these things must not know what
they are doing. I understand that no one could really begin to
understand my experience who isn't me.
David Swanson is an American activist, blogger
and author.
http://davidswanson.org