Events

Wonderful To See Babies Burning: On Howard Zinn’s The Bomb

City Lights Open Media Series has done the U.S. public a service in publishing historian Howard Zinn’s The Bomb, a two-part pamphlet that is a contribution to critical thinking about war, and about one of its modern manifestations, that of high-altitude bombing.


Part 1 is Zinn’s essay on the atomic bombings of Japan and part 2 is about his own wartime participation in and later retrieval of the history of the Allied napalm-bombing   of a French town, Royan. Both essays could be read in less than a couple of hours but it will take a lifetime to integrate their implications in our personal and collective lives.


In his first essay, Zinn reminds fellow citizens of the enormity of unnecessary damage and destruction done by the two U.S. atomic bombings of Japanese civilians.  Statistics point to some 200,000 killed immediately by the two bombs. But Zinn stresses that “we need personal testimonies, not statistics to free us from our numbness: Only with those scenes in our minds can we judge the distressingly cold arguments that go on now, sixty-five years later, about whether it was right to send those planes out those two mornings in August of 1945. That this is arguable is a devastating commentary on our moral culture” (26).


For example, in the immediate aftermath of the bombing, a Japanese man said to a filmmaker:  “I ordered the driver to stop, with the funeral pyres still burning in the city, and turned to the American soldiers: ‘Look there. That blue light is women burning. It is babies burning. Is it wonderful to see the babies burning?’”  (52).


Zinn’s second essay is based on research he did in the mid-1960s about the French town of Royan, which he had helped bomb in the spring of 1945. The official line was that it was a military necessity to bomb the German soldiers garrisoned in the vicinity of Royan, even though the end of the war was clearly in sight.  The task for Zinn and his fellow pilots:  “…to bomb pockets of German troops remaining in and around Royan, and that in our bomb bays were thirty 100-pound bombs containing “jellied gasoline,” a new substance (now known as napalm)” (66).


After the town was bombed for three days, the German soldiers surrendered.   Practically all the buildings of the town had been destroyed.  Zinn notes that “[t]he evidence seems overwhelming that factors of pride, military ambition, glory,  and honor were powerful motives in producing an unnecessary military operation” (80).


After his participation in the European theater of the war, Zinn had a leave for some weeks before he was to join the effort in the Pacific.  Reunited with his wife, he noted that one day in August they read the headlines about Hiroshima:  “I remember our reaction: we were happy.  We didn’t know what an atom bomb was, but clearly it was huge and important and it foretold an end to the war against Japan and if so I wouldn’t be going to the Pacific, and might soon be coming home for good” (19). Thus, he was like countless Americans who were jubilant or relieved that the bombs ended the war.


About the bombing of Royan, Zinn recalls, “From our great height, I remember distinctly seeing the bombs explode in the town, flaring like matches struck in fog. I was completely unaware of the human chaos below” (67).  Earlier in the book, he writes more specifically that being such a pilot means “seeing no human beings, hearing no screams, seeing no blood, totally unaware that down below there might be children dying, rendered blind, with arms or legs severed”(18).


Over the decades, Zinn went from being this thoughtless and just-war bombardier to a critical citizen and historian:  By the period of U.S. B-52 carpet bombing in Indochina in the 1960s-1970s, Zinn had become experienced in questioning authority, refusing obedience to the war machine, and facing the victims of U.S. violence.


Able to break through the nationalist propaganda that conditions us to avert our gaze from or minimize U.S. belligerence, Zinn offers us a simple, though demanding, task: “We can reject the belief that the lives of others are worth less than the lives of Americans, that a Japanese child, or an Iraqi child, or an Afghani child is worth less than an American child” (63).


hiroshima-portrait-100days-ga

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The Long Arc of Our Wars

On David Harris, Our War (Random House, 1996)


Today there exist tremendous and unprecedented possibilities for knowing the reality of our world just as it is, with all that it has in it of anti-kingdom and all the deaths it produces. As experience demonstrates, however, to know the world truly and to allow oneself to be affected by it, simple access to data is not sufficient, as abundant and trustworthy as the data may be, including those of the UNDP. Serious analyses are not sufficient either, not are truthful testimonies, as important as all these may be for other reasons. The reality of the anti-kingdom, its magnitude and its cruelty, can be truly grasped only by experiencing it in actu, in action, when it is actually dealing death. That is what is capable of moving people not only to laments, but to the struggle against the anti-kingdom.

–Jon Sobrino, El Salvadoran theologian


1.


Reading this book may make you repeatedly squirm in your seat, as much for the past it recounts as for the present in jarringly illumines.


David Harris was a draft resister during the Vietnam War. Protesting and resisting that war took a good ten years of his life, from 1965 to 1975. It took him twenty years before he could write and publish Our War. For Harris, it wasn’t just the troops’ war, or the politicians’ and generals’ war: It was the entire country’s. He argues that, as a nation, we have not reckoned with what we did in Indochina and what it did to us, our politics and collective soul.


And it’s unnerving to realize that sometime in the near future, another resister (a soldier, perhaps) may write a book called Our Wars, referring to the catastrophic U.S. occupations of and intrusions into Iraq, Afghanistan, and Pakistan.


2.


Harris was the All-American Boy. Student body president at Stanford University, he had the potential to achieve anything he wanted. But he paid attention to what had been going on in Southeast Asia since the early 1960s. By that decade’s middle, he had come to the conclusion that U.S. policy there was intolerable. Therefore, he attempted to put his body in the way of the U.S. killing machine.


He traveled relentlessly around the country to encourage other young men not to go. He gave over a thousand speeches and participated in hundreds of demonstrations. He spent two years in prison. Unlike “the best and brightest”—the men in Washington who planned, initiated, and deepened the war–he was outraged by its murderous devastation and sought to resist it with his whole being.


A common belief about the U.S. war in Vietnam is that it was a “mistake,” although it was said to be motivated by our traditional good will and honorable intentions. Harris’s disagreement couldn’t be stronger:



In this particular “mistake,” at least 3 million people died, only 58,000 of whom were Americans. These 3 million people died crushed in the mud, riddled with shrapnel, hurled out of helicopters, impaled on sharpened bamboo, obliterated in carpets of explosive dropped from bombers flying so high they could only be heard and never seen; they died reduced to chunks by one or more land mines, finished off by a round through the temple or a bayonet in the throat, consumed by sizzling phosphorous, burned alive with jellied gasoline, strung up by their thumbs, starved in cages, executed after watching their babies die, trapped on the barbed wire calling for their mothers. They died while trying to kill, they died while trying to kill no one, they died heroes, they died villains, they died at random, they died most often when someone who had no idea who they were killed them under the orders of someone who had even less idea than that. Some of the dead were sent home to their families, some were reduced to such indistinguishable pulp that they could not be recovered. All 3 million died in pain, often so intense that death was a relief. They all left someone behind. They all became markers visited by those who needed to remember and not forget. The loss was enormous, and “mistake” is no way to account for it. A course of behavior that kills 3 million people for no good reason cannot be passed off as something for which the generic response is Excuse Me. [15-16]

In his 1995 book, former Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara did apologize to Americans for the loss of American life in Vietnam. It is impossible, though, to imagine any American leader acknowledging the mass death inflicted on the Vietnamese, Laotians, and Cambodians by the United States.


3.


What did the United States do in Vietnam that demands, even at this late date, a reckoning and accountability? According to Harris,


[u]nable to locate our guerrilla adversaries, we uprooted whole villages and evacuated them to bastions surrounded by barbed wire, almost always against their wishes. Since we were in control of both everything and nothing, we measured our success by how many people we were able to kill and announced those statistics on a daily basis. We created free-fire zones where we claimed the right to do anything we wanted to anyone found there without our permission. We burned the homes of people we suspected of helping the other side. We tracked our adversaries with a secret police network of political prisons and assassins. We often killed whoever aroused suspicion and asked no questions. Eventually, we barricaded ourselves in urban forts and attempted to drive the countryside to us. We marked off sections of landscape on the map and sent bombers to saturate the areas in the hope of making them inhabitable. Before we left, we had dropped some 250 pounds of high explosives for every single human being in that part of the Southeast Asian continent. We also occasionally raped, pillaged, killed for sport, and transported heroin. The first three crimes were usually spontaneous actions by individual soldiers that went virtually unpunished; the fourth was a de facto government policy. Everywhere we stayed for any length of time, young children scavenged our garbage dumps, old women sold us dime bags of heroin, and impoverished teenagers sold us blow jobs. [40-41] We thought our interests had automatic precedence over anyone else’s. We thought we were civilized and they weren’t. We thought our purposes were sufficient cause to poison their countryside. We couldn’t fathom that getting rid of us would be sufficient incentive to mobilize millions of people to risk everything. We thought we could win concessions at the bargaining table that we had never won on the field of battle. We thought we couldn’t trust them but they could trust us. We thought that whatever we said was true just because we said it. We thought our government knew best. We thought our government would never tell us lies. We thought that if we escalated just a few more notches we’d have them right where we wanted them. We thought no one could match us toe to toe for a year, much less ten. We thought what they did to our prisoners was shameful but thought nothing about what we did to theirs. We thought our surrogate government, still with little or no support, could resist the force that had kicked our ass for years. We thought we could save face by leaving the war with the South Vietnamese army still in the field. We also promised to repair war damage and normalize our relations after the war was over when we never had any intention of doing so. [63-64]

We left three countries in ruin and for years acted as if the only issue arising from the war years was the fact that a few hundred of our troops were MIA and thus unaccounted for. Like Cuba after the overthrow of the U.S.-backed dictator, Vietnam paid a price for its triumph by facing years of a fierce U.S. economic embargo as well as the U.S. refusal to honor Nixon’s pledge of $3.25 billion in reconstruction.


4.


What still stick in some Americans’ craw is that Vietnam is the first war we “lost.” Accustomed to being the winners, the righteous, the talented, the land of the free and home of the brave, Americans knew that they had the most formidable military machine in human history, and yet were unable to impose their will on the Vietnamese resistance.


There are lots of explanations, but the simple truth is that we ran into a group of people who brought considerably more seriousness to this fight than we did: they lived underground, the huddled in the jungle, they moved by foot and bicycle, they fought on a little rice and a little ammunition. They absorbed enormous punishment, bore great sacrifice, endured untold hardship, and fought us and all our war machines to a dead stop. If they survived, they fought until the whole thing was done, some for as long as a decade. They did not back off, and they held the field until we finally lost our stomach for the fight and went home. And not only did we lose, but we were poor losers. When we finally left, we left like a whipped dog, pissing on one last bush as we fled down the street. [172-173]

Nevertheless, the U.S. inflicted such vast ecological, infrastructural, and human damage during the war that post-1975 Vietnam posed no serious threat to other nations of becoming an inspiring example of independence and social development.


5.


It was a commonplace for liberals during the Bush years to decry that Administration’s policies, which created a terrible blemish on America’s moral standing in the world. One can only mouth such idiocies if one totally ignores our wars in Indochina, which spanned from the Truman Administration to the Ford Administration. Such commentators evidently can’t handle the truth of what we did and who we really were.


As it turned out, we got little of it right and almost all of it wrong, and our war was the proof. It was the wrong fight, at the wrong time, in the wrong place, against the wrong people, for the wrong reasons, with the wrong strategy, the wrong tactics, and the wrong weapons. It was the wrong approach, to the wrong situation, betraying the wrong motives, from the wrong perspective, with the wrong attitude, to the wrong end, using the wrong means, effecting the wrong result. It was both the wrong twist and the wrong turn, arriving inexorably, of course, at just the wrong moment. It was the wrong choice, the wrong answer to the wrong question, altogether the wrong way to take care of business. And it wronged just about everybody it touched: it wronged the wrong and it wronged the rest of us as well. [177] And now, twenty years after we finally left the war behind, all that hasn’t changed. What remains is for us to finally engage in the public arithmetic and admit we had no right to have been there and no right to have done what we did and no right to continue pretending otherwise. [178]

But the pretending continued and eventually helped to facilitate the on-going U.S. production and distribution of Iraqi corpses and refugees.


6.


Like their predecessors before them (Johnson and Nixon, McNamara and Kissinger), George W. Bush, Donald Rumsfeld, and Dick Cheney walk free and easy, now that they are out of office. Like many previously engaged but finally weary U.S. citizens after 1973, people today are in the process of forgetting what just happened and, even worse, ignoring the continuance and even expansion of Bush’s criminal policies by the current administration.


At the conclusion of his book, Harris offers these words for our past and present wars: “I still cannot listen to the whump of helicopter rotors without recalling now middle-aged evening news footage of American boys armed to the teeth, arrogant and terrified, leaping though the downdraft and into the tall grass, ten thousand miles from home. Most came back, many came back in pieces, and some didn’t come back at all. I remember, and, like many who lived through the war, I remain suspicious of power and have never regained much respect for the exercise of force. I still have little use for patriotic displays and no use at all for military conscription. I close my eyes and see wire-service photos of peasants in black pajamas huddling together in the hope of simply making it through the afternoon without being shot or burned alive, and I am still haunted by how easily we defiled and abused, devoid of reflection, hidden from ourselves by a veneer of geopolitics and a parking lot full of denial.” [191]

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Peace in The Holy Land

What: Discussion of Jimmy Carter’s new book, We Can Have Peace in the Holy Land
When: Sunday, March 1, 2009
Where: CTSA, 1077 S. Newstead Avenue, 63110
Time: 4:00 – 6:30 PM

Dr. Mark Chmiel, adjunct professor of theology at Saint Louis University and member of the Center for Theology and Social Analysis, will offer some brief remarks and lead a discussion of Carter’s book We Can Have Peace in the Holy Land. Chmiel, the author of Elie Wiesel and the Politics of Moral Leadership, has traveled to Palestine to work with the International Solidarity Movement and is active in St. Louis in promoting a greater understanding of the political and moral issues raised by Israel’s ongoing occupation of Palestine and the Palestinian resistance.

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Thye Impassioned Eye: The Story of a Liberation Photojournalist

A Public/Community Reading of
The Book of Mev
by author Mark Chmiel & Creighton University students

Wednesday 2 April 2008
4:00 p.m.

Kenefick Humanities Chair series on the Humane Life
Co-sponsors: Justice and Peace Studies and Cardoner

SC 104
Creighton University
Omaha, Nebraska

For more information, contact:
rbjps@creighton.edu

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Why Go to Nicaragua: Agendas, Accompaniment, Projectos, and the Prophetic

Mark Chmiel
Talk with 2008 Puleo Scholars headed to Nicaragua, summer 2008
College Church Parish Center
Friday 25 January 2008

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Solidarity with Palestine and Men on Death Row: Creative Maladjustment of a Nonconforming Minority

Mark Chmiel and Megan Heeney
A talk with JustFaith graduates of Saint Francis College Church
Saturday 19 January 2008
Sisters of Saint Joseph of Carondelet Retreat Center
6400 Minnesota Avenue, St. Louis, MO 63111

from Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Strength to Love: Sermons

“’Do not conform’ is difficult advice in a generation when crowd pressures have unconsciously conditioned our minds and feet to move to the rhythmic drumbeat of the status quo. Many voices and forces urge us to choose the path of least resistance, and bid us never to fight for an unpopular cause and never to be found in a pathetic minority of two or three.”

“We are called to be people of conviction, not conformity; of moral nobility, not social respectability. We are commanded to live differently and according to a higher loyalty.”

“The saving of our world from pending doom will come, not through the complacent adjustment of the conforming majority, but through the creative maladjustment of a nonconforming minority.”

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A Potluck Dinner and Round Table Discussion on The Book of Mev

Date: Sunday, December 2, 2007
Time: 6:15pm – 9:15pm
Location: Center for Theology and Social Analysis
Street: 1077 South Newstead

A gathering for anyone who has read the book and has something to say about accompaniment, being present, meanwhile elsewhere in the world, community, face to face, seeing the world, remembering the dead, letting go, the holy contour of life, hair, bearing witness, poverty and riches, love letters and the gospel according to yourself.

Potluck dinner at 6:15: Bring some food or drink to share
Discussion of book begins at 7:00: What about the book got you to think about your life, work, and path?

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Why Go to Palestine

Dr. Mark Chmiel
Tuesday 27 February 2007
7:30 p.m.
Free and open to the public
Sponsored by the Justice and Peace Studies Program and the Cortina Community
For more information, contact Dr. Roger Bergman rbjps@creighton.edu

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Book of Mev Lunch Discussion

Tuesday 27 February 2007
Noon
Student Center
Creighton University
Sponsored by the Cardoner Program at Creighton

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Why Go to Palestine

A Talk by Mark Chmiel
Busch Student Center 253
Saint Louis University
Wednesday 21 February 2007
Noon
Sponsored by the Center for International Studies

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Why Go to Palestine

A sermon by Mark Chmiel
First Unitarian Church of Alton
Alton, Illinois
Sunday 4 February 2007
10:30 a.m.

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The Call to Social Justice

A talk by Mark Chmiel and Megan Heeney
Residence Life Winter Workshop
Pierre Marquette Gallery
Saint Louis University
Wednesday 10 January 2007

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Columbia Heights, Washington, DC Discussion

Thursday 16 November 2006
7:30 p.m.
at the home of Lola Weis
1456 Florida Avenue NW
Washington, DC 2009

Discussion on Book of Mev with FCNL lobbyists, ISM activists, and Jesuit Volunteers.

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Poverty Awareness Week at Neumann College, Aston, Pennsylvania

The College will hold its third Poverty Awareness Week from November 12-16. Events will include the week-long sale of Fair Trade coffee and crafts, a lecture, an evening of reflection, a poverty awareness concert, and opportunities for community service. All activities are free and open to the public.

The Fair Trade movement is committed to social justice by returning proceeds of product sales to workers who made them. Its coffee and crafts will be on sale from November 12-16 in the lobbies of Bachmann Main Building and the Abessinio Building. For specific times, see the schedule below. In addition, the main corridor of Bachmann will be outfitted with statistics and images about the plight of the world’s vulnerable throughout the week.

Mark Chmiel, Ph.D., the author of The Book of Mev, will deliver a lecture on Monday, November 13, at 7:30 p.m. in the Schmidt Multipurpose Room. The book is the story of Mev Puleo, an American photojournalist and young Catholic who actively confronted a world of injustice, poverty and violence. From witnessing homelessness in the United States to struggles for social change in Haiti, El Salvador, and Brazil, Puleo used photography and interviews to be a bridge between poverty and affluence, the First World and the Third World. Her familiarity with suffering was dramatically intensified when she was diagnosed with a malignant brain tumor at the age of thirty-one and died twenty-one months later. Chmiel will also facilitate an evening of reflection on Israel/Palestine entitled “Is Peace Possible” at 7 p.m. on Tuesday, November 14, on the second floor of the Abessinio Building.

A group reading and discussion on themes of poverty and wealth from The Book of Mev, for the annual Poverty Awareness Week.

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Community Reading of The Book of Mev

Monday 3 April 2006, 2 p.m., Mount Mary College, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, sponsored by the English Department.

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The Story of a Liberation Photojournalist

“The Impassioned Eye: The Story of Liberation Photojournalist,” at Creighton University, Wednesday 29 March 2006, SC Ballroom East. Sponsored by the Kenefick Humanities Chair Series on the Humane Life, Justice and Peace Studies, and Cardoner.

Join Professor Mark Chmiel from Saint Louis University and Creighton students as they read from The Book of Mev, the extraordinary story of Mark’s late wife, Mev Puleo.

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Faith on the Margins

Mark will be a presenter at a student retreat, Faith on the Margins, sponsored by The Center for Jewish Studies of Baylor University, Waco, Texas, February 10-11, 2006.

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The Impassioned Eye

A Reading of The Book of Mev by Mark Chmiel with a little help from friends Erica Irwin, Tina Moode, Katie O’Brien, Julie O’Heir, Anna Paszyna, Poornima Shah and Jenny Thumann: Thursday 19 January 2006, 7:00 p.m., Pius XII Library Knights Room on the campus of Saint Louis University.

Sponsored by UNA, Amnesty International, Aquinas Institute of Theology, Pax Christi, Micah House, HALO, Arts and Sciences and VOICES.

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Book Reading at Left Bank Books

Time: Wednesday, November 2, 2005 7:00 PM
Location: Left Bank Books
Mark Chmiel—The Book of Mev
Mev Puleo traveled the world as a photojournalist, then brought back images of the poor and suffering. She bore witness to homelessness and to struggles for social change ever alert to how her work might bridge the gap between rich and poor, ignorance and advo-cacy. With the delicacy that befits his subject, Mark Chmiel, professor at both Saint Louis University and Webster University, has written a tribute to his wife’s life and premature death at 32 from a malignant brain tumor. A kaleidoscope of everything from their love letters, to her photographs and interviews with leaders of the Christian liberation theology movement, this remarkable book celebrates the life and work of a unique human being.

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Book Reading benefit for CAN and CTSA

Mark Chmiel will read passages and sign copies of his new book, The Book of Mev on Friday, May 27th, 7:30pm at the home of Jerry and Marty King: 830 Demun, #302 in Clayton. There will be hors d’oeurves, beverages, and live acoustic
music by Danny Orlet. Suggested donation is $15 to benefit the work of the Catholic Action Network and the Center for Theology and Social Analysis.

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