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Tag: Afghanistan Peace Volunteers


  • From Afghan Peace Volunteers: Love letter to Friends on Jeju Island

    Reblogged with permission from: Love letter to Friends on Jeju Island | by Dr. Hakim and the Afghan Peace Volunteers in Kabul *

    See also this related link. Thanks so much, Dr. Hakim for sending this thoughtful and beautiful letter!


     

    My_Window_Scene
    My window scene in Bamiyan

    To our dear friends on Jeju Island who have involved in your noble struggle at South Korea’s Gangjeong Village,

    For seven years I lived in a gorgeous agricultural village in Afghanistan’s Bamiyan Province and like yourselves on Jeju Island, I woke every morning to a window scene of ‘heaven’.

    No one with eyes to see such a view would believe that the hell of wars has been occupying this land.

    My friends, I imagine you walking the simple yet unpolluted pathways of Gangjeong Village and, should you take a moment’s rest, being caressed and cared for by the tree shadows dappled with sunlight, the chatty play of the neighbourhood children, and the wafts of floral perfume dancing by.

    I cannot believe that you, any more than the villagers I lived among in Bamiyan Province, would want to lose such a beautiful and sky-kissed aviary home to the ravages of hatred and greed.

    The Afghan Peace Volunteers and I celebrate the love and dedication which has compelled so many of you to stop the construction trucks with your young and old bodies, trucks used to build the military base on your island – we thank you for demonstrating once again that the human spirit can speak to heavy, metallic machines.

    Those ‘doing their jobs’ to establish the U.S./South Korea naval base have forgotten their duty  to their fellow human beings.  Hopefully, they are amenable to the persuasion of your love.

    How else can we strengthen ourselves against what seems so massive a force, against the largest and most powerful military in history, except by love?

    My 74 year old mother advises, “Don’t be naive or idealistic.”

    But I ask myself, “Isn’t it naive or idealistic to think that the peace of Jeju can be promoted by a U.S. /South Korea naval base?”

    Naive, idealistic presumptions have to be made in order to support a naval base on Jeju Island. That the U.S. and South Korean governments are ‘good and noble’.  That the people of Jeju Island are so ignorant and troublesome they need heavily armed forces to civilize them. That China and North Korea are so ‘evil’ that a base at Jeju is needed to ‘contain’ them.

    How wonderful to find these presumptions being dismissed upon examination, to hear the people of Gangjeong Village say, “We don’t want a base in our heavenly home!“

    We are confident that if ordinary Chinese or North Koreans ever gave you trouble, you would have tea with them, using your imagination and citizen diplomacy to calm the troubles, non-violent paths which are far more effective and kind, and a far better use of tax-payer money (it takes no tax-payer money to drink tea!) than the multi-million premises, personnel and war equipment.

    Such is the priceless power of humane relationships!

    In 2003, I lived in Quetta, Pakistan and did medical humanitarian work among Afghan refugees. There were many suspicious characters in alleyways using satellite phones to arrange their smuggling operations, and there were those said to be the ‘Taliban’.

    One day, I was invited by a student whose brother was a Talib. Yes, presumptions did flash through my mind, about the Talib brother ‘finishing the infidel off’. The opposite was true. I was hosted to a sumptuous meal, “shlombe” which is a milk-yoghurt drink, and a warm conversation.  Would this human-to-human interaction have been possible over a machine-gun, under the visor of an army helmet.

    This everyday truth, reaffirmed daily by Afghan friends who have loved me through their hospitality and protection, has convinced me that if the 99% of every country would befriend the 99% of every other country, we would be well on the way to discarding all weapons, including nuclear weapons. How’s that for a Global Disarmament Treaty?

    On a small but significant scale, this happens among those  of the North and South Korean 99% who cross the U.S.-drawn 38th parallel to reunite with one another in tears.  It has happened between ordinary Iranians and Israelis during the Love and Peace Campaign.

     

    Israel_Iran_Love_and_Peace_(1)
    Love and Peace Campaign, from Israelis

    Osama Bin Laden cited opposition to U.S. military bases in Saudi Arabia as a main motive behind his group’s attacks on September 11th.  So,another thought, for thoughts are merely dreams yet unfulfilled. If those people staying around the U.S.’ 750 overseas military bases said, peacefully, “No!” and compelled the Pentagon to close the bases, how many future tragedies might be averted?

     

    We look at the 9 existing military bases in Afghanistan, intended to be kept for ‘exclusive’ U.S. military use through 2024 and beyond if the U.S./Afghan Bilateral Security Agreement  is successfully pushed through under U.S. threats.  You look at the naval base being constructed on Jeju Island which is named the World island of Peace, and what our senses and our understanding show us is a global 1% in government and corporations attempting to ‘comfort’ the 99% with claims that they care about our homes, our livelihoods, and our desire to live without wars,  when  in practice, they pursue profit and power at our expense.

    Israel_Iran_Love_and_Peace_(2)
    Love and Peace Campaign, from Iranians

    You see the Jeju shoreline being cordoned off as if to imprison the island, and one of you, Dr Park, used to swim along the shore every day to free it, until they put him behind bars, where he can’t swim. We see the bare, deforested land and hills of Afghanistan beneath its mountains, destroyed and neglected by nations insistent on waging wars.

    You see the 16.5% poor of the ‘Dragon’ South Korean population, and a test-obsessed, economic-geared education system that has contributed to South Korea having the highest suicide rate among 31 OECD countries. We see labourers standing jobless in the streets of Kabul, some going back to makeshift houses to shiver in the autumn cold, and some resorting to drugs under the smelly, trash-packed river bridges.

    You see soldiers, police, batons, shields. We see them everywhere too, even militarizing ‘humanitarian’ aid.

    All of these sights make it so socially essential for us to remain friends, to stand and struggle together for a while or for a lifetime, free in our minds and hearts from borders, and free from the scourge of fear. That’s why the Afghan Peace Volunteers are petitioning for 2 Million Voices.

    Beyond the U.S. military’s hopes of completing Jeju’s one naval base and Afghanistan’s nine are struggles by people in Okinawa, in Diego Garcia and on and on, people we commit to befriending across borders, persisting in building those person-to-person and community-to-community relationships so necessary to saving our world from militarism, from life as machines, from fear.

    Gangjeong
    Gangjeong villagers and peace keepers including the international team
    Borderfree_People
    The Afghan Peace Volunteers with guests, and without electricity in Kabul

    Thank you for your work of love, and for speaking with me and Abdulhai, Ali, Raz Mohammad, Ghulamai, Faiz, Zekerullah and Baraththis past October.

    We’ll have to keep in touch.

    With human solidarity from Afghanistan,

    Dr Hakim with the Afghan Peace Volunteers

    http://ourjourneytosmile.com

    http://globaldaysoflistening.org

     

     

    December 15, 2013

  • Afghanistan Youth send Solidarity Message to Jeju for Catholic Sister Soh Stella

    On Oct. 22, some people in Gangjeong had the chance to talk with Afghanistan peace volunteers through skype interview. See the link here.  The talk was thanks to the bridge efforts by Regis Tremblay, Kathy Kelly, and Hakim Young.  Many of the Afghanistan Peace Volunteers are youths and they are eager to have peace talk with the youths in Gangjeong as well.

     

    Afghan
    ‘The Afghan Peace Volunteers protesting in the streets of Kabul against the killing of two Afghan cattle-herding children by U.S./NATO forces’ (source)

     

    Recently, they sent a short moving solidarity message for Sr. Soh Stella who stood in the court despite her ill health on Nov. 14, for her opposing activities against the Jeju naval base project. It is for the 1st time in the 200 years of Korean Catholic history that a Catholic nun stands in the court. Here are their message sent:

     

    سلام
    تشکر از شجاعت شما ما خبر شدیم که شما ازخا طر اعتراض به پا یګاه نظامی  همرای
    دولت دعوه دارد.
    ما جوانان رضاکار صلح همرای شما هستیم.

    محبت
    همرای
    شما

     

    Dear Sister Stella,

    Salam!

    Thank you for your courage. We know you have a court trial as a result of your protests against the U.S. military base, [in content].

    We, the youth of the Afghan Peace Volunteers are with you!

     

    Love, with you,

    The Afghan Peace Volunteers

     

    (* The Jeju naval base project is officially called the South Korean base. However, as many critics have pointed out, the base would serve in fact, for the US purpose of ‘Asia Pivot.’)

    APVs-at-Band-i-Amir
    ‘The Afghan Peace Volunteers at Band-i-Amir,
    ‘Afghanistan’s first National Parkand also on UNESCO’s world heritage list.’ (source)

     

    An Afghan peace volunteer, Faiz, said in the skype interview as the below: (See the link)

    ‘The mainstream media has generally given the impression that there would be a withdrawal of troops from Afghanistan in 2014, and that the war will wind down. There won’t be a withdrawal. The U.S. military is not withdrawing from Afghanistan. Instead, the U.S. and Afghan governments are currently negotiating the Bilateral Security Agreement , which would establish the long term presence of U.S. troops on at least nine military bases across Afghanistan , and which would grant legal immunity to U.S. soldiers.’

    ‘We understand that the South Korean soldiers have no choice. Likewise, U.S. soldiers need their jobs to earn a living. How difficult it is for them psychologically, doing something they’re not willing to do; 22 U.S. veterans commit suicide every day!‘

     

    Afghanistan has suffered from the attack by the United States and NATO forces since Oct. 7, 2001. We hope our peace talks would be a part of hope and dream a peaceful world without war. The youths in Afghanistan also want to have talks with many people in the world through the Global Listening program.

     

    End Afghanistan Occupation

    No Syria Attack

    Stop the Drones Surveillance & Killing

    No Missile Defense

    No to NATO Expansion

    No Nuclear Power in Space or on Earth

    End Corporate Domination of Foreign/Military Policy

    Convert the Military Industrial Complex

     

     

    (Slogan source: Keep Space for Peace Week)

     

    # Korean version is here.

    November 21, 2013


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