Letter to the British
People. By an Iraqi Woman
Iman
AL-Saadun
July
10, 2005
Im sending this letter to the
British people and in particular to the residents of
London. For a period of hours, you have lived through
moments of desperate anxiety and horror. In those hours
you lost a member of your family or a friend, and we wish
to tell you in total honesty that we too grieve when
human lives pass away. I cannot tell you how much we hurt
when we see desperation and pain on the face of another
person. For we have lived through this situation
and continue to live through it every day since
your country and the United States formed an alliance and
laid plans to attack Iraq.
The Prime Minister of your country, Tony Blair, said that
those who carried out the explosions did so in the name
of Islam. The Secretary of State of the United States,
Condaleezza Rice, described the bombings as an act of
barbarism. The United Nations Security Council met and
unanimously condemned the event.
I would like to ask you, the free British people, to
allow me to inquire: in whose name was our country
blockaded for 12 years? In whose name were our cities
bombed using internationally prohibited weapons? In whose
name did the British army kill Iraqis and torture them?
Was that in your name? Or in the name of religion? Or
humanity? Or freedom? Or democracy?
What do you call the killing of more than two million
children? What do you call the pollution of the soil and
the water with depleted uranium and other lethal
substances?
What do you call what happened in the prisons in Iraq
in Abu Ghraib, Camp Bucca and the many other
prison camps? What do you call the torture of men, women,
and children? What do you call tying bombs to the bodies
of prisoners and blowing them apart? What do you call the
refinement of methods of torture for use on Iraqi
prisoners such as pulling off limbs, gouging out
eyes, putting out cigarettes on their skin, and using
cigarette lighters to set fire to the hair on their
heads? Does the word barbaric adequately
describe the behavior of your troops in Iraq?
May we ask why the Security Council did not condemn the
massacre in al-Amiriyah and what happened in al-Fallujah,
Talafar, Sadr City, and an-Najaf? Why does the
world watch as our people are killed and tortured and not
condemn the crimes being committed against us? Are you
human beings and we something less? Do you think that
only you can feel pain and we cant? In fact it is
we who are most aware of how intense is the pain of the
mother who has lost her child, or the father who has lost
his family. We know very well how painful it is to lose
those you love.
You dont know our martyrs, but we know them. You
dont remember them, but we remember them. You
dont cry over them, but we cry over them.
Have you heard the name of the little girl Hannan Salih
Matrud? Or of the boy Ahmad Jabir Karim? Or Said
Shabram?
Yes, our dead have names too. They have faces and stories
and memories. There was a time when they were among us,
laughing and playing. They had dreams, just as you have.
They had a tomorrow awaiting them. But today they sleep
among us with no tomorrow on which to wake.
We dont hate the British people or
the peoples of the world. This war was imposed upon us,
but we are now fighting it in defense of our selves.
Because we want to live in our homeland the free
land of Iraq and to live as we want to live, not
as your government or the American government wish.
Let the families of those killed know that responsibility
for the Thursday morning London bombings lies with Tony
Blair and his policies. Stop your war against our people!
Stop the daily killing that your troops commit! End your
occupation of our homeland!
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