Compiled by Kate Cowley
January 18, 2010
Dear Friends,
This morning, on Day Eight of our fast, we gathered together for a conference call with the Afghan Youth Peace Volunteers, a group of young people working for peace and justice in Afghanistan (http://ourjourneytosmile.com/blog/). They have been fasting for two days in solidarity with all of us.
It is difficult to try to encapsulate the richness of the dialogue we exchanged with this group of young people so dedicated to the struggle for peace and justice, and so entrenched in the sorrow and pain of war. The dialogue and connections across such a distance was very inspiring to all of us.
At one point in the conversation, Jerica mentioned to them that we’ve been singing a lot lately, and asked if they sing songs together. They in turn asked us to sing for them, and so Kathy led us in another round of “Hold on, keep your eyes on the prize.” They returned the favor by singing a song for us in Arabic that translates into English as: “Mountains cannot reach mountains, only men can reach men.”
Carmen brought up that it was Martin Luther King Day and asked if they were aware of the significance of this day in the history of the U.S. They responded to this by reading to us MLK quotes in Arabic that they had learned together. It was quite a fitting close to our conversation and a beautiful homage to Martin Luther King Jr. We will keep these young Afghan Peace Volunteers in our hearts and be with them in their struggle!
At end the day, we joined with survivors of torture from TASSC International at St. Stephen’s. In sharing their stories with us, they expressed the difficulty of starting life over again after being tortured and re-assimilating to life again in a different place. They focused on the importance of prayer for them, and shared their gratitude at learning that there was a group of people praying with and for them. We listened as they spoke about the effects of certain methods of torture, particularly solitary confinement, and the de-humanizing effect it can have. They also discussed the way violence of torture perpetuates itself, how often the tortured can become the torturer.
They told us that one of the most difficult things about being a survivor of torture is the loneliness. We have talked as a group before about this feeling of loneliness, and how it is one thing that all human beings share. Again and again we come back to this idea of community, of being able to reach out to one another, as a way of rebuilding our humanity.
Thank you for all you are doing.
Peace with Justice,
Witness Against Torture
www.witnesstorture.org
- Witness Against Torture: Trying for 'Tough Minds and Tender Hearts'
- The Guantánamo ‘Suicides’: A Camp Delta Sergeant Blows the Whistle,” Scott Horton, January 18, 2010.
- Murders at Guantánamo: Scott Horton of Harper’s Exposes the Truth about the 2006 “Suicides”
- A Reflection on Salah, Mani and Yasser Murder and CIA Black Sites at Guantanamo by Witness Against Torture
- Why Torture? Joshua Brollier
- Video from Day Eight (see Witness Against Torture sing!) followed by complete audio recording
Why Torture?
Joshua Brollier, January 18, 2010
Taking part in Witness Against Torture’s Fast for Justice has caused me to reflect the nature of torture and why it exists in society. For the past couple years I have been involved in one way or another in both the movement to shut down the U.S. detention center at Guantanamo Bay and the movement to seek justice for over 20 police torture victims that still remain incarcerated in Chicago based on confessions extracted by torture by former police commander Jon Burge.
While working to end torture and its repercussions, meeting survivors of torture and participating in this fast, I have often found myself looking for rational explanations to explain both the plight of the tortured and the torturer. Many of the individuals who have been tortured—both those I have known and read extensively about-- belong to some minority or excluded group. Listening to and looking at their stories, there are some strong socio-political connections to be made.
An African-American man in racist Chicago;
A bi-sexual man from an intolerant Cameroon;
A Muslim man from Yemen caught in the indiscriminate and ever-expanding spider’s web of the United States War on Terror.
These seem to be somewhat obvious cases of racial prejudice, heterosexism and what I see as U.S. imperialism coupled with a war against Islam. But why are similar scenarios and many less rational occurrences of torture so prevalent in human societies? What incrementally drives the torturer towards cruelty? I can’t say for sure. There are social hierarchies and peer pressure in law enforcement and military circles. But not all torture occurs in this realm. It happens in families and sometimes by random individuals. I am always shocked to hear the almost arbitrary and unpredictable nature of many of the specifics of torture cases. A young black man at the wrong place at the wrong time; a family turned on their son; a man in need of medical attention and sold for a bounty in Pakistan.
The suffering caused in these lives seems so needless and the level of intensity incomprehensible, yet the effects last for years. Twenty years on death row in a state penitentiary separated from family and friends; a risky escape to the U.S. to find a three-month prison sentence in an ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement) facility; five years of torture, hunger strike and three attempted suicides.
Can we even begin to imagine what this anguish is like, not only for the tortured but also for their families? We should also recognize and attempt to comprehend the de-humanizing effects this cruelty has on those who order and carry out the torture.
The human cost of torture set aside, even many so-called military and intelligence experts have conceded that information gained through tortured confessions is useless. Humans will almost all break at a certain point and they will say or do anything that an interrogator demands of them just to stop the pain. So what progress can be made through their false confessions?
Utilizing “enhanced interrogation techniques” and classified evidence, the United States has been able to bring charges against only a few of the 774 men who have passed through Guantanamo. To start with, eighty-six percent of the detainees were captured by Pakistan or the Northern Alliance and were handed over to the U.S. during a time when the U.S. offered large bounties for capture of suspected enemies. And of the 198 men that remain at the base, 103 have already been cleared for release through an intensive inter-agency review process. These men are clearly not “the worst of the worst” that Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld so famously warned us of and there is no justification for holding them indefinitely.
So we come back to the question of “why torture?” It all seems so arbitrary and pointless. But as I fast, it has become all the more clear to me that, in some ways, it does not matter who we torture as a society. It just matters that we torture. This sentiment is not limited to the United States empire, but it is a notion that has been passed down through history. Examples have to be made and dissent has to be discouraged. Fear has to be created and people must be made to trust in the protection of their leaders. You will fear and you will obey. In the past it was kings. Now, governments and committees of bureaucrats make these Machiavellian choices all across the world.
If it’s not Guantanamo, it’s Bagram. If it’s not Bagram, it’s undisclosed CIA black sites. From Chicago to Cameroon, from Egypt to Israel, from Morocco to China, torture is a tool of the state and it sends a very intentional message. Whether written into law through Department of Defense lawyers like John Yoo, practiced blatantly by dictators like Hosni Mubarack in Egypt, or kept relatively secret through the slick PR campaigns of the Obama administration, torture serves a utilitarian purpose. It is a flexing of power and an exercise in control. It’s not just governments and institutions—individuals like an abusive father or a sexual predator—practice a similar pattern to maintain a sense of dominance over their victims.
Dick Cheney talked about the “dark side” and the “shadows” of human nature. Recognizing this and knowing that we need to counter it, we need a worldwide Witness Against Torture campaign to oppose cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment no matter where it may be found - in our neighborhoods, in our police forces and prisons, off our coast at Guantanamo, or across the sea in Afghanistan.
We must begin to look at the people of the world as a community of citizens, sisters and brothers-- each one deserving a dignified pursuit of happiness and all the rights that are afforded to them in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the UN Convention Against Torture.
In closing, I am honored to be here as a part of this campaign to end torture with such a committed, centered and talented group of people. I am encouraged by the richness of each of stories and the experiences they bring to this circle. I have felt a connectedness here with the other fasters and also a connectedness to those still hunger-striking in Guantanamo. But we fast, conscious of the fact that the detainees have many less luxuries and do not have the comforts of community. And so at the beginning of Day 8 of our fast and as we plan for our direct action, we ask ourselves again; “how would the detainees like us to move forward?” and “What can we do that is worthy of their struggle?”
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Video from Day Eight (see Witness Against Torture sing!) and after than, complete audio recording
