Skip to content

Civilians everywhere - hold hands

President Bush has rallied his troops for what he calls “The first warof the 21st century”. What is your view of this crisis, where, briefly, do you stand? This is the question we are putting to people around the world, especially those with their own public reputation and following. Our aim, to h

Published:

Yesterday I looked out at San Francisco bay, a beautiful body of  water I can see from my window. I remember on the morning of 9/11  looking in the same direction warily. One of the hijacked planes had  been scheduled to land in San Francisco. For the first time in my life I experienced what so many  civilians have suffered for over a hundred years. There was nowhere to  run. No way to protect my daughter, my grandchildren. One understands  from such an experience why they call it "raw" fear.

The light on the water yesterday was exquisite, that kind of piercing  beauty which opens your soul. I had just come upstairs from reading  headlines which reflected the determination of the current White House  to attack Iraq. Three thousand missiles in two days. The attack on 9/11  that involved four big hijacked airplanes was called terrorism. This  plan is called "Shock and Awe".

Awe is what I felt looking at the light on the water, the kind of awe  which makes you momentarily larger than yourself. And in this mood the  thought of the shock that is being planned for Iraqi civilians – unarmed  men, women with children, infants, patients in hospitals, grandfathers,  great-grandmothers – was unbearable.

If I felt there was nowhere to hide myself on 9/11, now I feel there is  no way to hide my soul. Let it end now, this cycle of violence in which  always, always, civilians become the major targets, the ones who suffer  most. I could have been born in Iraq as easily as I was born here. And  had I been born there, would I cherish my family, my life, my friends,  my city, my livelihood, the landscape around me, my country any less  than I do now? Let us all, we civilians, who have been made targets of  missiles and chemical weapons and hijacked planes and crazy suicide  missions, and smart and not so smart bombs hold hands now across space,  across the thousands of miles that the warships and missiles and perhaps  terrorists of other kinds are travelling now. Let us hold hands and  pray and sing out and speak out now for our right to live in peace.

© Susan Griffin 2003

Originally published as part of a debate on 6th February 2003 Writers, artists and civic leaders on the War: Pt. II

See also Writers, artists and civic leaders on the War: Pt. 1.

Susan Griffin

Susan Griffin is an author and social thinker, whose books on the historical fate of the female body (Woman and Nature), pornography (Pornography and Silence), and war (A Chorus of Stones) combine the

All articles

More in Conflict & security

See all

More from Susan Griffin

See all