Baltimore IMC : http://www.baltimoreimc.org
Baltimore IMC

Commentary :: Peace

Soldier, Can You Hear?

The international community is demonstrating an unspeakable apathy towards what is taking place in the Middle East. If it does not recognize what is at stake and nonviolently resist these monstrous acts, there is little doubt that the same situation and even worse will become reality for our whole world, perhaps very soon.
The governments of the nations representing, without exception, the elite and powerful of their citizens are going along with today's acts and preparations for state terrorism, or perhaps we could call it legal terrorism. This terrorism is supported by the citizens of all nations (their tax dollars at work) and it is inflicted on themselves. What a tragedy! It seems that our schools, worldwide, for more than half a century were not effective enough to teach us what fascism is and what the result of allowing it to grow is.

I am dedicating the story below to all children, victims of war, and to all adults in every country who have the integrity and boldness to think, speak, and act nonviolently against state terrorism, the real world peril.

To the citizens of the world who still firmly hold the belief that war will solve their problems, I ask the question: WHY?

Please feel free to disseminate this.

Kris, o Mandatoforos

.........................................


Soldier, Can You Hear?

By Andreas Toupadakis


You were dreaming last night of your wife and your little daughter and you felt a great desire to hold them in your arms and tell them how much they meant for your life and happiness. You finally called them and told them "I will be back soon, in just a few weeks, until we finish the job, then I will see you and we will have a good time." You hung up the phone and you could not forget the weeping of your wife. Your daughter was giggling; she would weep too if she knew, but she is just a little baby. You know your wife is weeping because she does not know if she will see you again.

You say to yourself; "My country has given me such a miracle plane, and anyway, I have orders to fly thousands of feet high. I will drop my load and no doubt I will come back. At that altitude, there is nothing that can touch me. I will be back." And with that conviction, the next day you climb your beloved hawk, which has never been used in combat yet. Your are anxious to try the real job and finish it, to restore peace in the world. You enter your plane with confidence and you feel proud of your country. It never crossed your mind that you are high above someone else’s country, ready to kill citizens that never did anything to any one of your country’s citizens or to your family. Again you feel the urgency to hold your family in your arms. You wonder what they are doing or thinking at this moment as you are ready to push the button. Well, what else would they be thinking? They will be thinking what you have always told them. "We serve the world. We are the world’s watchers. We restore peace in every troubled spot on earth. That is our job and we are proud of it." In a second, you have pushed the button. The load is descending and now you are ready to come back. The job is done. You tell yourself, "I have done my duty; I have served my country and peace. I have not died either, and I can do this again and again if I am asked to. I offer justice and peace and in this way, people like me can now enjoy what I will enjoy in a few days, my wife and my daughter, their smiles and their warmth.

You return to the base and you are saluted as a hero. "Job well done" you hear from your lieutenant, and you feel proud and happy.

Oh, Soldier! Your work is anathema to the powers of the universe, to anything that has to do with beauty and life and joy, to everything that you yourself love and desire to enjoy. What you have done is distasteful to your family. If they could see what you have done, they would be horrified. They would not have the strength to touch you, to hold you in their arms. Soldier, what have you done?

If they had seen the hell you created in that village, the different parts of human and animal bodies scattered under the trees on the grass of the earth, the blood everywhere, the agony of that little boy weeping for the family that is gone forever. Yes, over there is the head of his little sister and over there is the hand of his beloved mother, the same hand that touched his hair a moment before. He remembers the words of his mother, "Do not be afraid, everything will be okay. There are some good people in their government and they will stop it." But now it happened. The mother is no more, only her pieces can he see scattered around, and such a force comes out of him. The little boy is devastated. The first thought comes, "When I grow up, I will go and find those who took my mother’s kind smile away. I will kill them all the same way they killed my mother and my family. I will turn them into pieces." Then after the prolonged weeping, silence comes and out of these strong feelings and terrible vision, the kind smile of the mother comes back and her words sound kind and clear, "There are some good people." The boy finds peace in his soul; his mother hasn’t really died.

And if your family, soldier, had seen the beautiful eyes of the 15-year-old girl in the hospital, unable to speak because of weeping, her body, her legs full of metal pieces, metal pieces from your load, soldier. And a few of them hit her spine. She will be in a bed forever. And if your family, soldier, could see the man without any legs in the hospital, what would your wife think of you? And the man is a brave man. Listen to what he said, soldier, "Life is beautiful; I feel that I can still live on." And does your daughter know? Will you tell her when she grows up that a little girl with soft hair and as innocent a smile as your daughter’s was lying on a pile of rocks and wood, a lifeless body, because you served peace, as you said?

You never really wondered why you dropped your load from so high, ‘bombing from fifteen thousand feet above the victims.’ You thought it was to save your life and that was a good reason not to question it further. You think that you are not a coward; you are a brave soldier, as you were told. But it never occurred to you, and you were never interested enough to find out, that the political agenda of your government was, "Never again will we bring body bags back to the country. We need the public to be quiet. Therefore, do the job with whatever it takes but with no casualties on our side." And this agenda serves you, soldier, because now you are not dead, you can go and see your family again.

You come back and yellow ribbons are all over the airport and the city, and your family and friends are now calling you a hero. You accept all this and after you have touched your wife and daughter and you have enjoyed their smiles, now you again feel that you are not the same as the enemy. You think that they murdered, but you brought peace. What makes you think that you are not doing the same thing as the enemy? Because you pushed the button and you saw no hell? Your government has the power to justify what you have done around the world and present it as just and noble, and so the years go by.
And one day it happens. Your daughter, now a college student, has become an activist and has invited you and your wife to a lecture by a pacifist, and after the speech you cannot walk away from the room. You come forth and you say to the pacifist, "I understand what you are saying," and you break into tears before the crowd of the people. Your wife now pulls you away. "Let’s go home, let’s go." But now you feel like speaking; you must speak; otherwise, it remains a real hell for you."

Soldier, now that you have heard, now that you have understood, will you tell the others?

(c) 2002, Andreas Toupadakis. All rights reserved.
May be copied, distributed or posted on the Internet for non-profit purposes only.

Andreas Toupadakis, Ph.D.
Former Scientist of Los Alamos and Lawrence Livermore National Labs
westbynorthwest.org/andreasnotebook



BIOGRAPHY

Dr. Andreas Toupadakis has spoken about peace and the urgent need for nuclear disarmament at the United Nations as well as numerous colleges, universities, and other venues in the US, Japan, and Greece. He was a featured speaker at the 2000 World Conference on Atomic and Hydrogen Bombs in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan, and he has been the recipient of numerous peace and justice awards. The City of Berkeley adopted a resolution honoring him for the courage and personal sacrifice he displayed in leaving his job at Lawrence Livermore Laboratories.

He resigned dramatically from Lawrence Livermore Lab and his $91,000 salary in January 2000 when he discovered they were using the results of his environmental work in the Stockpile Stewardship Program to illegally maintain and develop new nuclear weapons with increased destructive power. He blew the whistle and joined the peace movement, saying that his conscience would not allow him to work for such a cause. He instantly became an outspoken advocate for peace, and especially for immediate unilateral nuclear disarmament.

He is a native of Greece with a Ph.D. in Chemistry from the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. He has taught chemistry at colleges and universities in the US and Greece, and he worked as a chemist in industry as well as at Los Alamos and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratories. He has a wife and two daughters. He believes deeply in non-violence, and he revels in the teachings of such varied figures as Gandhi, Plato, Socrates and Einstein. He is currently writing his first book on life planning through wise career choice and on career change, and while he is visiting the USA, he is giving lectures and seminars on peace, sustainable living and career satisfaction across U.S. campuses.

AUTOBIOGRAPHY

I was born in Greece on the beautiful island of Crete, in Rethymno, and I received my primary education while living in the mountainous village of Argiroupoli near the coast. To get an idea of how I lived the first eight years of my life, you can read a little story I wrote about it, which I think you will like at: www.swans.com/library/art7/atoup005.html

After receiving my B.S. from the Aristotelian University in Thessaloniki, I began graduate school in the U.S. I received my Ph.D. degree in chemistry from the University of Michigan in 1990, and I have lived in the U.S. for more than 20 years. I did research as a chemist in industry, academia, and two U.S. national laboratories. I also taught at several colleges and universities in the USA and in Greece.

My resignation from Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory on January 31, 2000 received media coverage in many places, especially in the U.S., Japan, and Greece. In protest, I followed my conscience and resigned from a high-salaried permanent position rather than devote my knowledge and energy to the further development of nuclear weapons. Since then, I have been speaking on peace, environmental issues, and wise career choice and career change at universities, colleges, and various conferences.

I spoke at the 2000 World Conference against Atomic and Hydrogen Bombs in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and I saw first hand what most of us do not realize about nuclear weapons. I cried. When will our leaders cry? If you are interested in what I am trying to say to people about our future you can read some of my articles at westbynorthwest.org/andreasnotebook

I often remind people of Gandhi’s words, "Be the change you want to see in the world;" of Plato’s words, "Science without virtue is immoral;" and of Socrates’words, "Know yourself."



--
"It is better to light a candle than to curse the darkness."
-- Chinese proverb --

"I myself would wish neither; but if it were necessary either to do wrong or to suffer it, I should choose to suffer rather than to do wrong."
-- Socrates --
 
 
 

This site made manifest by dadaIMC software