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2002/10/14(17:48) from Anonymous Host
ÀÛ¼ºÀÚ : Petrus (art@petruspronk.com) Á¶È¸¼ö : 5394 , ÁÙ¼ö : 30
123WarWar

Any war does not, as the historians like to have it, run from, let¡¯s say, 1940-1945 as was the case with the WW2,but has reverberations till long after the date.  Some to this very day, especially in the psyche of those who lived through it. This is the case for any war, no matter how small or large. War leaves a long black, menacing and dark shadow indeed. It threatens its horribleness well into the period of ¡®peace¡¯ and beyond, both in reality and nightmarish dreams. Its not at all a matter of a few plane/tanks in and out and done. So before we get involved in anything like it again we may just consider that aspect of it.

Open letter to Mr. Howard

Here is a story, for which you may need some imagination. Imagine before you commit us to this tragic, and in the end ¡®loose/loose situation¡¯, event. An event for which we do not have nearly enough imagination.

Four miniature pictures from the other side of war
Imagine a little boy of about five, the age things are beginning to be remembered. This boy would now be about the age you are at the moment. Imagine him, one fine day, walking hand in hand with his mother. They are walking in a street in Holland. There is a war on. The mother is just pointing out the blossoms blossoming into spring and the buds bursting into leaves when a soldier stops them in their tracks and forces them around a corner. A lot of people, huddled into a group, are already gathered there. After a while the little boy manages to let go of his mothers hand and work himself into the front of the gathering. He wishes he had not done this. The forced accidental gathering is made to watch ten arbitrarily chosen people from the neighbourhood (Hey, that is John the grocer, what is he doing there?) being lined up, face the gathering, and get shot in the head in cold blood. Pavement justice for the killing of a Dutch informer. A lifetime memory. Yet it was a sunny spring day in May.

Imagine the same boy a year or so later. He is still living in a war zone. He has become just a little more street wise and seems to recognise one of the soldiers, who shot his friend the grocer, cycle by. In an instant the boy yells something obscene, now the language of the streets, after which the soldier turns his bike and goes after him. The little boy gets away through a series of alleyways and for days, panic stricken, refuses to come out from behind the couch. Does not want to play on the street anymore.

Next door to the little 5 year old boy¡¯s house is another house. In it lives his friend, a little girl of the same age. One night the boy is yanked out of bed. It is very dark. He remembers this as his very first memory. He is firmly held under someone¡¯s arm and ran, down steep stairs, into the cellar. This cellar comprises of a long cold passage with a few small spaces off it on either side. From one of the spaces, a dark hole, a few wooden boxes are fetched. This moment is etched in the little boy¡¯s impressionable mind as horrific, and stay there. The wooden boxes are lined up against the wall in the passage and the assembled people sit down to await the onslaught. The fear is palpable. The light flickers. The area is bombed. Terrifying whistling sounds followed by deep vibrating explosions. They go on for, what seems, a long while. One explosion particularly strong. A local hit. Anxious wait till morning. The house next door has been hit. A huge hole now allows the boy to look inside his friend¡¯s house without going to visit. No one was hurt, which was just a matter of degrees.

A few weeks later the little girl from the bombed house is invited on a country  summer camp. These events are organised despite the war. Compassioned people are still compassioned people. This camp is for children which have suffered as a result of the war. Like the little boy¡¯s little girl friend having her home/privacy/safety and spirit bombed. The bus travels east into rural Holland and in one particularly beautiful flowered spot is strafed, then bombed. All the children die. Including the little boy¡¯s friend. An innocent six year old girl.

The little boy witnesses other things which are somewhat unusual. As the result of the shooting of a soldier, there is no door to door search for the killer. Justice is meted out immediately and with great effect. Across from the point the soldier has been shot, and killed, a block of houses is pinpointed with a general movement of another soldier¡¯s arm. A group of foot soldiers is dispatched  to this block of flats, houses, homes, memories of intimacy etc., hammers on doors and tells the bewildered occupiers that they have 10 minutes to get out. Imagine this Mr. Howard, because the same thing will go on in the war you are about to sign up for. Soldiers are soldiers whatever the colour of their flag and uniform. Back to the story. The little boy remembers many people with hand carts walking, crying in a sad procession, carrying the few things they could quickly gather together. They were lucky to have been warned. The whole block of houses, flats, siting rooms, bed rooms, kitchens, places of intimate memories and family histories are torched. As a memory to this event, there existed for many years a large scorched empty black block of land, on which occasionally  a small bunch of flowers would appear.

Less important but just as intense. At any time of night and or day, there is banging on doors. Nothing is subtle. Foreign soldiers come in, look around, peer, push and prod, commit crimes of privacy and worse. Just at their own behest. People out of control, controlling others. At the same time there are many more much softer knockings on doors. A continuous parade of starving people asking for a slice of bread.

During five years the little boy¡¯s father went underground. Actually he went under and above ground, since all this time he lived between two floors. Entrance under a suitcase in a cupboard. A very cramped living space. However, a better then real prison prison. A hiding place once nearly given away, innocently, by the little five year old boy.

There are no photographs of these memories. They are not needed. These particular images live on graphically, vividly, in the mind.

Dear Mr. Howard, these true stories are the same events, with minimal variations, that will occur, if not here as a consequence then there, as a direct result of your signature. These stories will be played over and over and¡¦...

May you live in peace.

Petrus                                                                                             

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