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To: All
Rita Lasar, 71
New York, USA

My brother Abe [Zelmanowitz, 55] worked in the north tower of the World Trade Centre, on the 27th floor. He could have got out, but his colleague, Ed, a quadriplegic, was trapped with him. My other brother and sister-in-law called him, begging him to leave, but he said he would wait for help to get Ed out. But help came too late.

Then Bush made his speech at the National Cathedral [September 14 2001]. He mentioned my brother's heroic act, and it became immediately apparent to me that my country was going to use my brother's death to justify attacks in Afghanistan. That was as horrendous a blow to me as the actual attacks on September 11. I hoped and prayed that this country would not unleash forces in my brother's name. When it [the bombing of Afghanistan] happened, I was horrified and devastated. I felt so impotent.

Then I got a call from Global Exchange [a human rights organisation], asking me if I'd like to go to Afghanistan. What I saw there changed my life for ever. I had been a very privileged, blessed American who had only ever seen war on TV. And then I went to Afghanistan and saw the devastation and horror of what happens to innocent people when bombs fall -- anyone's bombs, anywhere in the world. That my brother's name had been used to justify attacks on the people I met, became family with, cried and grieved with, brought it to a point where it was emotional and real. I found nothing but understanding, warmth, hugs -- they knew all about 9/11 and they grieved for us and apologised to us. Every American should go there -- because, if they did, they would stop the plans for war on Iraq immediately.

I did not pay any attention to who was to blame for 9/11 -- there was no place left in my mind and heart other than the grief about my brother and the people who were going to be killed in his name. I didn't feel anger. I didn't want any other sister or mother to feel this way. It was only later that I began to think about how to bring the perpetrators to justice. I knew that bombing was not the answer. We are no safer now than when we started bombing. We are going to war with a country that had no connection to 9/11, our privacy and our freedom in this country are being slowly whittled away, and Muslims are afraid to go out in the street -- in a city that used to welcome everybody.

Revenge for 9/11 is the excuse they are using to bomb Iraq. There are people in Iraq who are alive today and who will be dead next month if we have a war -- and my country will say that they have done that to avenge my brother's death. I will not let my brother, my dear brother's death, be hypocritically used in this war -- the fact that his death is being used cynically hurts me so much, I can't tell you. Imagine someone who you loved, who died violently, being used insincerely and untruthfully in a political campaign. It is an exploitation.

So I have no intention of touching the subject of revenge. If people ask me why I don't want retribution, I say that it is the natural human reaction to not seek retribution -- or it should be. It cannot accomplish anything. My brother is dead. I privately mourn for him every moment. But I am not looking to atone for his death. I'm looking to prevent the death of others. I don't want to see other people die to amend a ghastly, unbelievable death. The world is larger than just me. Things don't have to be done to make up for things that have happened to me. Things have to be done to make things better in the world. I draw from my love of human beings that everyone is the same as I am. That it is possible -- not in a dream, but someday -- for this to be a peaceful planet. I'll fight to the day I die against this war on terror. I don't want my granddaughter to be sitting here at my age, facing the same world that I'm facing now: a world of starvation, war and inequity. Surely we can do better than this.

http://www.ratical.org/ratville/CAH/beNotTerror.html#RL

20 posted on 03/05/2004 2:09:50 PM PST by Hon
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To: All
And what a shock, Teresa Heinz and her Tides Foundation also fund Global Exchange (in addition to Peaceful Tomorrows)


 

Continue to the
Groundspring Home Page

Tides Statement for Peace
The Tides Community Responds to 9/11/01

Since the events of September 11, 2001, the Tides community has responded in a number of ways.

Tides Foundation has granted over $1.5 million to organizations doing timely and essential peace and justice work, including assisting the working poor and immigrant communities in the immediate aftermath of 9/11, promoting peaceful co-existence within diverse and potentially conflicting communities, guarding against the erosion of civil liberties, and elevating the voices of peace and justice in response to the administration's intention to attack Iraq. More on the Foundation's efforts>>

Tides Center has also done critical work to support a peaceful response to the crisis. Shortly following 9/11, Tides Center helped a group of victims' family members form September 11th Families for Peaceful Tomorrows, an advocacy organization seeking effective nonviolent responses to terrorism. These family members continue to be a powerful, persuasive voice in the growing movement to find alternatives to war.

And Groundspring.org (formerly eGrants.org) has played a key role in gathering, processing and granting more than $840,000 in online donations to support a wide range of peace and justice work

Our efforts at Tides are rooted in our over 26 years of working for progressive social change, and we feel privileged to be able to redouble our commitment to such work at this critical time.

Here are a few of the organizations we have been able support over the last year through the commitment and generosity of our partners in social change:

American Civil Liberties Union
Campaign to Defend the Constitution and Human Rights, Education and Law Project.

Afghan Institute of Learning
Providing emergency relief and human rights workshops to Afghan women refugees in Pakistan.

Arab American Action Network
Protecting Arab, Muslim and other immigrants' civil liberties and human rights.

Asociacion Tepeyac de New York
Advocating for and working with families of undocumented workers who died on 9/11.

American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee
Advocating for Arab Americans' civil rights, providing educational programs in schools, and giving legal assistance to hate crime victims.

Center for Constitutional Rights
Public education campaign to educate about the dangers posed by governmental anti-terrorism activities.

Chinese Staff and Workers Association
Ensuring that documented and undocumented Chinese workers and small business owners affected by 9/11 can access needed relief and services.

Council on American-Islamic Relations
Interfaith Coalition Against Hate Crimes project: promoting peaceful co-existence between Muslims and non-Muslims and decreasing the tolerance for anti-Muslim hate crimes.

Global Exchange
United for Peace Coalition

Independent Press Association
Beyond War project

MoveOn.org
Providing a forum for ordinary people to oppose war with Iraq.

National Council of Churches
Coalition building for peace

National Mobilization Against Sweatshops
Assisting immigrant workers in New York, especially the Latino, Afro-Caribbean and Eastern European communities that were hit hard by 9/11.

New York ACORN
Organizing low-income communities to ensure that rebuilding efforts and federal funds benefit all New Yorkers, and especially low-income people.

Peace Action Education Fund
October 26, 2002 Peace March on Washington.

Physicians for Social Responsibility
Campaign to Stop War Against Iraq project.

Renaissance Economic Development Corporation
Emergency loan funds to address the working capital and technical assistance needs of small business in lower Manhattan affected by 9/11.

South Asian American Leaders of Tomorrow
Planning and implementing hate crimes briefings and legislative and law enforcement trainings.

South Asian Network
Media outreach, coalition building, and staffing for civil liberties & detention issues.

https://www.groundspring.org/anti-war_fund.cfm

28 posted on 03/05/2004 2:18:49 PM PST by Hon
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To: Hon
Nice work.

L

53 posted on 03/05/2004 3:18:04 PM PST by Lurker (Don't bite the hand that meads you.)
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