Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Imagine a world without wars

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Imagine a world without wars

    Ottawa Citizen
    November 11, 2004 Thursday
    Final Edition

    Imagine a world without wars

    by David Ljunggren, Citizen Special


    The head of one adult male was neatly split in two. Next to him lay a
    man -- or maybe it was a woman --- whose head had been dipped in acid
    until only a chalky white skull remained. Further back in the unlit
    barn I could make out the bodies of children laid out on the dirt
    floor.

    These corpses were once people living in the town of Khojaly, which
    had the fatal misfortune to be located in a part of Azerbaijan
    claimed by neighbouring Armenia.

    One night in February 1992, a large force of Armenian gunmen
    descended on Khojaly, and those inhabitants who were not killed in
    the initial attack fled through a snow-laden valley where countless
    dozens perished from the cold or their wounds. Estimates of the death
    toll ranged from at least 500 to more than 1,000 -- many of them
    women and children.

    Despite the passing of a dozen years, the memory of those smashed
    faces remains with me still, especially on a day like today. What
    happened in that remote corner of the crumbling Soviet empire was a
    wartime atrocity like so many others in the past and, I fear, like so
    many to come. How many new victims of war will they be remembering on
    Nov. 11, 2104, I wonder?

    Rather than paying homage to those who died, isn't it about time we
    began to find a way to stop having to commemorate our war dead in the
    first place?

    In my gloomier moments, I sometimes suspect the human race is
    genetically hot-wired to cull itself every few dozen years,
    regardless of how often new generations are taught about all that has
    gone before.

    As someone born and raised in Europe, I can testify that the
    miserable lessons of the past often seem to be written on water.
    There are wars crammed into every corner of our roots and still, it
    seems, we want more. I sometimes feel as though Europeans walk with a
    slight stoop, as if weighed down by centuries of suffering built up
    during that continent's often miserable history.

    We've launched every kind of war for every possible reason and
    already fought one war to end all wars -- the one from 1914 to 1918.
    It doesn't surprise me that when British author Virginia Woolf
    committed suicide in 1941, part of the reason was that she had become
    so disturbed by the new global conflict and all it signified about
    the stupidity of mankind. Is this really all we are good for?

    As the Second World War drew to a close, Britain's Daily Mirror
    newspaper published a memorable cartoon of an exhausted, wounded
    soldier holding a garland of peace.

    "Here you are. Don't lose it again!" was the caption.

    It seemed as though Europe was paying attention, for we saw no more
    battles for another 45 years, a development that prompted hope that
    this might really be the start of a new, more rational era. Then the
    former Yugoslavia disintegrated and we saw a new series of massacres,
    as well as the return of concentration camps.

    Although the major European powers were lambasted for their
    reluctance to intervene, I don't think they were cowards, but rather
    dumbfounded by the sight of yet more carnage and misery on their
    doorstep. "We've tried this before on countless occasions and it
    doesn't work. I thought we all agreed on that. So what on earth are
    you doing?" was the loud unspoken message.

    You don't have to look at a globe for long to spot the sites of
    possible future conflicts. How about India against Pakistan, or China
    against India, or China against Taiwan and then the United States, or
    Israel against Iran, or Syria against Israel? There is no shortage of
    options. The victims of Khojaly are in the ground now, but will
    surely soon be joined by women and children from Fallujah, Abidjan,
    Kashmir, Chechnya and more places on Earth than you ever knew
    existed. And outsiders such as ourselves will shrug and sigh and say,
    "Well, that's sad, but these things happen." Not for us the screams
    of the massacred, thank you very much.

    So do we teach our children about the dangers of war until we're blue
    in the face, or do we just let them get on with carving out a tragic
    chapter of their own?

    Mankind has been on this planet for quite a while, long enough to
    iron out most of the flaws, yet seems totally incapable of stifling
    the urge to kill.

    What a miserable species we can be sometimes.

    David Ljunggren is the Reuters national political correspondent in
    Ottawa.

    E-mail: [email protected]
Working...
X