The Saline Courier

No one owns the future

- By Robert C. Koehler Robert Koehler (koehlercw@ gmail.com), syndicated by Peacevoice, is a Chicago awardwinni­ng journalist and editor. He is the author of Courage Grows Strong at the Wound, and his newly released album of recorded poetry and art work, Sou

Even the internatio­nal condemnati­on of the Israeli devastatio­n of Gaza often feels tepid.

Consider, for instance, the words of U.N. Secretary General Antonio Guterres, in the wake of Israel’s April 1 drone strike on a convoy of cars from World Central Kitchen, a disaster relief organizati­on bringing food to starving Gazans. The strike killed seven aid workers.

Noting that a total of 196 aid workers have so far been killed in Gaza’s six months of bombardmen­t and starvation, Guterres said: “This is unconscion­able. But it is an inevitable result of the way the war is being conducted.”

Yes, of course, this is unconscion­able, but the implicatio­n here is that there are decent, moral ways to conduct a war, to “defend yourself” from an impoverish­ed, occupied population. Wage war if you must, but don’t commit war crimes! When I hear such words, I feel my soul start spinning wildly. War itself is the problem. It cannot be reduced to a just and strategic video game — yeah, soldiers will be killed, but not civilians! No dead children, please (especially under age 6).

The logic void here is that war begins with dehumaniza­tion.

Those people are evil and we have to defend ourselves against them, which means killing them. And this attitude never stays neat and tidy — especially not on this insanely militarize­d planet, which (with America in the lead) regards nothing as more important than keeping humanity on the brink of nuclear omnicide.

Condemning “war crimes” is nothing more than a shrug. It’s war itself that must be not simply “condemned,” but transcende­d. Utterly transcende­d. The time is now. And the lack of any official acknowledg­ment of this, let alone a movement in this direction with real political traction, feels . . . uh, personal.

Two nights ago I had this weird dream, which left me gasping in terror and despair. In the dream, my wife, nine months pregnant, suddenly disappeare­d as we slept. Where did she go? I felt lost and clueless, but made my way to the hospital, thinking she’s about to give birth but forgot to bring me with her to be part of the process. At the hospital, I eventually find the delivery room, but there’s a line of people ahead of me, waiting to get in. I have no idea who they are. I’m filled with desperatio­n — my God, my God, our child is about to be born, I need to be there — and rush to the front of the line, then try to lift myself into the delivery room through an opening, but am unable to do so.

Then I wake up. Huh? This is totally weird. In real life, I had been present throughout my daughter’s delivery (36 years ago) and remain immensely grateful that I could help my wife endure the pain of birth and eventually dance with our newborn.

I had no idea what this dream was telling me, but I remained deeply stressed by it, as though a spiritual theft had occurred. I felt robbed of my family, at the deepest level of love. And then I started reading and watching the news

— a daily flow of suffering from Palestine . . . moms, dads, children in unimaginab­le grief over the deaths of loved ones. Spiritual robbery! My God, this is the daily news. We absorb it as we go about the day. Perhaps the dream was trying to link me to this suffering.

And then I thought about Larry

Hebert, a U.S. airman who recently began waging a hunger strike in defiance of his country’s complicity in the genocide of Gaza. He stood in front of the White House holding a sign declaring: “Activeduty Airman Refuses to Eat While Gaza Starves.”

And Hebert was influenced by Aaron Bushnell, also an active-duty airman, who stood in front of the Israeli embassy in Washington, D.C. on Feb. 24, doused himself in flammable liquid, lit a match and set himself on fire, shouting “Free Palestine!” as he burned to death.

War is personal, even when it’s occurring on the other side of the planet — or it can be. Hebert and Bushnell — and all the others on the planet who feel the same connection with the victims of war— aren’t simply “being critical” of how Israel is “conducting” its war. They’re screaming from their souls: “No! No! No! Stop blowing the limbs off children! Stop killing moms and newborns! Stop dehumanizi­ng them, stop doing what you’re doing. War is wrong!”

And here in the United States, this cry is directed at the president, Genocide Joe, and his ever more wimpy “expression­s of concern” about Netanyahu’s conduct of the war, even as his administra­tion supports it and supports it and supports it, recently, for instance, transferri­ng “billions of dollars in bombs and fighter jets to Israel” — including thousands of 2,000-ton monster bombs. Use them carefully, Benjamin!

And we can’t refuse to vote for Biden without bequeathin­g another term in office to wouldbe dictator and Bible salesman Donald Trump — wow, what a lovely democracy we have here. Maybe Palestinia­n children are terrified, but the Military Industrial Complex has nothing to fear.

Attention, patriots! Attention, mainstream journalist­s! Waging war doesn’t keep us safe. Diminishin­g the humanity of others, then killing them and stealing their land, while it may be embedded in our history, doesn’t make anyone safe. It guarantees endless hell. But guess what?

“Just as individual­s can relinquish their righteous rage and compulsion to punish indiscrimi­nately, so, too, can groups and nations. But doing so requires leaders who can reach across divided communitie­s and provide hope in a seemingly hopeless time to override the all-too-human drive to retaliate.”

These are the words of psychiatri­c researcher­s Jessica Stern and Bessel van der Kolk, who continue: “They must understand that a legacy of trauma makes Israeli Jews and Palestinia­ns vulnerable to reactive violence, leading to a seemingly endless cycle of bloodshed.”

Think of Mahatma Gandhi.

Think of Martin Luther King.

Think of Nelson Mandela or Susan B. Anthony or Frederick Douglass or a million others. Real change is possible, and it’s rarely — perhaps never — violent, but creating it involves the loving wholeness of who we are. The future is a vast unknown, but no one owns it. We have to create it together.

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