Bruce Wallace, a member of Peaceful Tomorrows and a high school teacher, had an extraordinary idea: opening correspondence between American students and their Iraqi counterparts in an effort to give a face to those living in war as well as allowing the students the opportunity to see how their similarities far outweighed their differences.
The project blog: 121Contact.typepad.com contains some of these moving letters. We are learning great deal from each other. We are becoming friends, and in some cases 'family'. As Eric L., a student member of Peaceful Tomorrows, put it, "When all the peoples of all the world feel united then no government can bring them to war."
Peace & Justice in the Virtual World by Bruce Wallace of September Eleventh Families for Peaceful Tomorrows
The 121Contact Project now exists in the online world of Second Life. 121Contact has been connecting students and teachers in Iraq and the U.S. by email for three years. These powerful emails can be viewed at www.121Contact.typepad.com.
Bruce Wallace created 121Contact to increase awareness about, and provide responses to, the effects of political violence on innocent civilians. Now he has brought the real world into the virtual space of Second Life by creating the Peace & Justice Center. The building sits on Better World Island where activists and artists have carved out an interactive space that is both entertaining and educational. The Peace and Justice Center vividly conveys the naked truth of everyday life in the Iraq. Words, photos, and videos convey the terrible price that innocent civilians must pay every day while the violence continues.
Second Life is a 3-D virtual world entirely built and owned by its residents. Today it is inhabited by over 1,400,000 people from around the globe. While most come to play, there are many who have found Second Life to be a powerful networking and educational tool.
Along with vivid portrayals of the Iraqi plight The Peace & Justice Center offers the visitor pathways to taking part in steering the world toward more peaceful tomorrows.
Mr. Wallace is a Steering Committee member of September Eleventh Families for Peaceful Tomorrows (www.peacefultomorrows.org ). He can be reached at bruce@peacefultomorrows.org
Visit Second Life and take part by going to http://secondlife.com/. Search for Peace & Justice Center on Better World Island. Mr. Wallace’s avatar name in Second Life is PT Witte.
Below is a Baghdad Post
article, written by Bruce's son Mark, about Bruce's "peace connection",
followed by Bruce's communications with the Iraqi teachers as well as some of
the exchanges between students. For additional and some more recent letters, click here.
THE BAGHDAD POST U.S. & Iraqi
Students Trade Letters As Their Nations Wage War Mail flies faster than
bombs by Mark Wallace
BROOKLYN, N.Y.- On September 11, 2001, my
cousin Mitchell Wallace was working as a court officer a few blocks away
from the World Trade Center. Mitch was an emergency medical technician who
had left his job as an ambulance driver because he couldn't stand the
violence of everyday injuries-car accidents, assaults, heart attacks-despite
having been decorated for heroism. When the first plane hit, he rushed to the
site and was assigned to help retrieve victims from the subway station
beneath the south tower. He was buried when the towers collapsed. All that
was ever found, months later, was his badge and gun. He was 34, a year
younger than me.
Mitch's death hit my father, Bruce Wallace,
particularly hard. In the 1950s, my dad had been a runaway and early adopter
of the troubled James Dean look, before there was a word for it. Though Mitch
took a less wayward path, I think there was a spark of confusion in him that
my father related to.
My dad has always been a peacenik. In the 1960s, he
taught high school in Bedford-Stuyvesant, one of Brooklyn's rougher
neighborhoods. (According to family legend, the Black Panthers once had to
escort my father and his fellow teachers to school through a picket line of
angry union workers.) A few career changes later, dad got in early on the
1980s computer boom and worked as an old-fashioned information technology
consultant for twenty years before the dot-com crash of 2000 left him out of
work. In 2002, he returned to teaching. As a science teacher at John Dewey
High School near Coney Island, he is now as happy in his job as he's ever
been. When Mitch died, my father wondered what he could do to help prevent
such deaths in the future. He decided to teach his kids about the people we
were at war with, but in an unusual fashion. For two days, he roamed the
halls of his school, asking students what they'd ask if they could write to
kids in Iraq. The answers came back: What do you do after school? What kind
of music do you listen to? Do you play ball?
All he needed were some
Iraqi students to talk to. He combed the Internet, searched weblogs from
Iraq, contacted aid agencies. Eventually, a family friend put him in touch
with a journalist, who put him in touch with an aid worker, who put him in
touch with an Iraqi cab driver "who knows everyone," who put him in touch
with Nawar, a 35-year-old teacher at a girls' school in Baghdad. Another
contact put him in touch with Numair, a 22-year-old student teacher at a
boys' school nearby. Excerpts from their email correspondence appear below,
followed by excerpts from students' correspondence. Except for my father and
cousin, everyone's names have been changed. Due to limited space, some
passages and letters have been omitted.
BRUCE & NAWAR
6 March
2004
Dear Nawar, I am a member of September 11th Families for Peaceful
Tomorrows and a teacher in an inner-city high school in Brooklyn, New York. I
am running a workshop for selected students. It will focus on a) the
real people caught in the phrase "collateral damage" and b) communicating
with children of school age in Afghanistan and Iraq. Can you please help
connect my students to our children in school? I have many questions. Please
let me know if they are a bother to you.
Where are you? How old are
your students? Is there anything we can do for you? With respect,
Bruce
14 March 2004
Hello, You can ask me whatever you want, and
if I'm bothered I will let you know immediately. I do appreciate our new
friendship and I also don't want to bother you. I'm in Baghdad, if that is
what you want to know . . .I want to know a lot about you, what kind of
material you teach, how old are you, what do you think of us, what are you
thinking of now. Oh, there are a lot of things I want to ask you about, let
it be one by one. Let us share ideas, information. Anything you find
interesting and don't forget you can ask whatever you want. Yours sincerely,
Nawar
16 Mar 2004
Nawar, First, a general thank you. We are a high
school in Brooklyn, New York. The ages range from 15 to 19. I teach Earth
Science and Space Science. I am 62 years old (today is my birthday). I was a
management consultant before September 11, 2001 and lost my business then. I
taught many years ago and thought that it would be good to return to the
classroom, and it has been wonderful. I love the kids. The administration is
a blind giant, but the kids are wonderful I want to wage Peace. I know the
pain of losing dear ones to the madness of political actions. I know you
must feel some of this pain also. I believe there are other ways to solve
problems. Respectfully, Bruce
4 April 2004
Hello Bruce, Thanks
for asking about me and thanks for your delicate feeling. I'm in need for
such words today. I'm very sad today. The occupation soldiers came to our
Institute, they were so rude and they have no decency. They treated my girls
badly. I can't say anything more because I'm so, so sad. Yours,
Nawar
4 April 2004
Nawar, Well, then. Take a walk in the park with
me. The first hints of spring are in the air. The yellow forsythia flowers
shine in the misty rain like chains of butterflies on long stems. Green
fingers of tulips-to-come peek up from the moist brown soil and there is a
smell in the air of rich earth. A squirrel watches me, still in her sure
knowledge that I cannot see her if she does not move. There! A cardinal sits
on a high branch. Incredibly bright red-a beacon through the fog. No
one can say how long this occupation will last. There are those who strongly
oppose it and the next election may give a change in direction. In the
meantime I think you have to focus on the girls. I know when I look up (at
administration, red tape, government) I am extremely frustrated, but when I
look 'down' at the students, then I see the light. No, I do not compare my
soft position to yours. It is only that I want you to focus on the good, the
girls, and the possibility of a better future. -Bruce Wallace
14 April
2004
Hi Nawar, Some of your student mail is coming through now, and I am
glad for many reasons. The first reason is selfish, because it means you and
the students are well and I will worry less. I hear horrid news from
Fallujah and pray that things like that stop-forever!-and that you and your
students may never know such things. It is hard for me to put this into words
because I stop myself from writing words clearer than "things." Regards,
Bruce Wallace
28 April 2004
The last two weeks were very
crucial in the neighborhood. My house was shot because of the random shooting
on the highway. I'm confused and tired, I hope this will end forever. We are
the victims of nothing. How are you? Yours, Nawar
1 May
2004
Nawar, I hope you are well, and I hope that some simple quiet can
come into your life I notice that the letters from your students have slowed
down. Is this because they are not interested? Is this because of the war? I
wonder how the school can keep open in these times. How brave all of you must
be just to be able to go from home to school. Regards, Bruce
1 May
2004
Hi Bruce, I'm fine thanks. The final examination will be next week,
I think my students are working hard for that. Though some of them said that
no one is responding to them. Today is my birthday, I'm 35 years now. I want
to visit U.S.A., maybe someday if God wills. Nawar
1 May
2004
Happy, Happy Birthday to you. Ah, 35. I wish I were 35 again!
Actually, I think I am happier now than I was at 35. More settled, more calm.
However, I did know more answers then! (Ha, ha.) I am too old and wise to
think I know answers now.
You should know that whenever you get to New
York you are welcome in our home. I would love to meet you in person. My wife
and I will make a party and we will invite the students to come. There will
always be a place for you in our hearts. Bruce
2 May 2004
Oh
Bruce. Thank you. Thank you. You are so delicate! I remembered
something about my students, which is that not all of them have easy
connection with the cafe, and it is hard and dangerous to go there everyday.
Yesterday, two large vehicles were attacked near my house, it was really a
shock. Yours, Nawar
12 May 2004
Nawar, The news of torture has
affected me and my friends and my students greatly. We are sickened and
embarrassed by such horrible actions. It seems too easy for some people to
forget that they are dealing with people, regardless of politics and
religion. Through all of this I remain optimistic. I try to accept what I
cannot change, and try to change what little I can, and that brings me back
to the kids, and that always lets me feel a little better. Peace be to you
and yours, Bruce
17 May 2004
Hi Bruce, Many people asked me about
the relation between us, what kind of project is this? And what for? But I
believe in the Good power of man on earth, therefore, friendship to me is so
important, this is my answer always ... Sometimes I miss your words. You are
one of my best friends, really. We are human after all, and that's what
friends are for. Nawar
18 May 2004
Nawar, And it makes me feel
good to hear from you. Where were you educated so that you are now a teacher?
My knowledge of Iraq is so poor. I thought that women were not allowed to go
to school until recently.
The picture: I am the guy in the red shirt, and
Marilyn is in front of me in the light blue blouse. I hate pictures of myself
because I am always surprised by how old I look, but I thought you might like
to see this one. These are friends of ours who came to our house for a dinner
party. Regards, Bruce
Mon, 24 May 2004
Hi Bruce, Sure I like to
see this one! Thanks. I really wanted to see you. You are not the same person
that I imagined, I thought you fat and huge! But you are completely
different. How do you think of me, guess how do I look like?
O.K., now
your knowledge about Iraq and Iraqi woman is so so so poor! Women here are
educated well, especially in the middle and north of the country. This
doesn't mean that the women in the south and the west are not educated but
some of them reach particular level or stage of education and stop because of
some family or domestic circumstances such as marriage. I'm against that, but
some people believe that women's responsibility lies in raising children
because men do not fit in this difficult mission. As far as my family is
concerned, my dear father is different, he always believe that woman has the
ability to change the world itself. He keeps telling me if women are educated
well, men will be born.
I have many sisters and all of them have
different kinds of education: Press, Chemistry, Management and Technology.
About my education, I have: Diploma, B.A and M.A in teaching. I have studied
in my Iraq. So do you think that we are not allowed to go to school until
recently! Yours, Nawar
25 May 2004
Nawar, I have sent your
letter on to the students after changing the subject to "a teacher teaches
Mr. Wallace a few things" Many of us have a distorted view of what goes on in
your part of the world. Don't forget how hard we are being told that we are
bringing to you, with our great armies, a taste of freedom and liberation.
Many of my students do not have a strong belief that they can become whatever
they want. Their sense of hope has been taken away by their place in American
society. We are a complex mix of people and not all are treated equally. Many
of our poor lose hope long before they even enter school. Much of the job of
what I call the True Teacher is to help give kids a sense of their
self-worth, beyond the subject area content of what we teach. I think the
story of your success will help some of them. Several of them already think
highly of you as a brave teacher who carries on in the face of war. Somehow I
think that you are becoming a role model for them. Peace to you and yours,
Bruce
27 May 2004
Hi Bruce Something happened on our way to
school this morning, I'd like to tell you and your students about it. A tank
and two Humvees cut off our way to school on the highway. My students were
frightened and asked to go back home. I refused and got off the school bus
towards the soldiers. I knocked on the glass of the window to talk to the
driver of the first vehicle. I asked him to let us pass because we have exam
and students must be in time. He said: I understand but I can't let you go.
Try another way or you have to wait! I repeat that we have exam and we are on
the highway, there is no other way, only the way back home. He smiled and
said: "Then go back home! I have orders to cut the road!" I saw many cars
turned back but I insisted to go on, so I went to the other guy in the other
vehicle and before talking to him our driver saw small cars passed away,
neglecting the tank so he asked me to get in the bus and we continued our way
to school. Me and the students felt proud. It's our country and we have the
right to stop who wants to stop us even in a simple way. Most of the girls
started to curse the CF [Coalition Forces] for their rudeness. I can't blame
them.
Yours, Nawar
30 May 2004
Hello Bruce, It's a lie.
What kind of Liberation & Freedom you are talking about?
What is
the benefit of legs when you cannot walk? What is the meaning of your life
among tens of your people's bodies who are killed here and there? I don't
dare and say that Saddam was good, but the situation here is more difficult.
You cannot walk with your wife or sister or daughter in the street after six
o'clock evening (unlike before), checkpoints everywhere, barbed wires
surround each building, tanks in the streets instead of cars, armed men
everywhere and above all you are sure if you go out you will return home a
body! This is so hard a feeling believe me. I understand that freedom means
respect others' opinions, rituals, religion, habits, beliefs: Respect what
the difference means. Not enforcing people to do what others want to do. Oh
Sir, don't tell me freedom or liberation. Your government declared it from
the first moment its invasion. So how it comes invasion
and freedom?
I'm sorry. I don't want to hurt you. It's not your fault
or even mine. Your country hurt also, but we are the victims of those who
regard themselves powerful. We still live in the forest fearing the lion that
will be eaten by worms one day.
Yours, Nawar
30 May
2004
Nawar, Many of us tried to stop the invasion before it started. We
saw through the lies in the beginning. We failed. We are trying to influence
our politicians to end the invasion. We have not yet been successful, that
is true, but we are still trying. We march in protest; we write letters
to politicians threatening to take away our vote if they don't act
responsibly; we put money into advertising campaigns to educate the American
people about the lies they are being told. We try, Nawar, we try, and it
makes me cry that we have not had success. I cry for you, and I cry for the
dumb Americans who are so easily fooled that they will let their children go
to war for such lies.
I wear the cloth my government weaves, and
sometimes I am shamed by it. We all suffer the blindness of our leaders. I
weep when my government hurts so many. Did you not weep for the atrocities
that Saddam committed which hurt so many? But that is history, and the war is
now, and it is horrible. Horrible that so many suffer-for any reason. More
horrible that they suffer because of lies that are supposed to make it O.K.
to invade your country. There is an invader in your country and until the
armies leave you will not be able to steer your own ship, and that is the
basic right of every nation. There is a war in your country, and until it is
over there will be civilians caught in the hell that war always
brings.
Nawar, please believe that I am on your side, and so are many
Americans. No, we do not have control of the government now, and there are
many Americans who still believe the lies that the Bush machine tells, but we
are trying!
Today I will bring a red rose of remembrance for my nephew
Mitch who was killed on September 11th, 2001. Today I will bring a second red
rose. It will stand for the innocent people of Iraq who now have a special
place in my heart. -Bruce
31 May 2004
Peace upon you. It's so
sad moments, I know. Please accept my late consolation and bring red flowers
on behalf of me and all the Iraqi people. I'm sorry about your nephew whose
remembrance makes me remember my dear brother's death who was killed during
war for nothing. Oh, Bruce. We share the same suffering. -Nawar
8 June
2004
Bruce, I don't know what to say. It is the puzzle of politicians,
those who created this crime in the name of Freedom & Liberation. Do you
believe that more than five bombs are exploded near my house everyday? We
stopped closing the windows! Now you live this bloody puzzle with the Iraqi
people. Three days ago I talked to a soldier (who was hiding behind a tree
near the fence of my house) who thought that he is tough, doing good job
here. I told him what kind of toughness you are talking about. You don't know
your enemy. You are shooting randomly and killing children and innocent
people. Why you are here? And for what? You brought your enemy with you and
you fight him in our country and your government is proud of
that!
It's a lie. I told you. We are victims. Sorry. I think you expect
this melancholy from a person who lives in the middle of death! Ha ha.
-Nawar
BRUCE & NUMAIR
17 Mar 2004
Hi there, This is
Numair speaking. How are you, Sir? I'm too glad to hear from people just like
you, you and all the people behind the Pacific Ocean are more than welcome to
talk, co-operate, and help the Iraqi students. Well, I'm 22 years old, a
student at Baghdad University College of English. I'm teaching the kids
English language.
Life is just like the woman. It has such a soft skin,
but a murder, poisonous, it is a snake. We have to be careful watchful, we
have to keep alive and survive. Sorry dear, sometimes I feel myself a
philosopher, so do not care of my shit! I think if we do not smile we would
die from sadness.
With my kind regards, Numair
17 Mar
2004
Numair, It is good to hear from you ? After the attacks of
September 11, 2001, there was much bad feeling here about Moslem people. When
the war on Iraq started there was confusion because many people could not
believe that Iraq was the cause of the attacks-they wondered why we should go
to war in Iraq. Our students are also confused. Some of them think that all
Iraqi people hate us. I hope that this project will help both my students and
your students get a better understanding of each other. Hopefully, Bruce
Wallace
19 Mar 2004 09:42:56
Dear Mr. Wallace, First of all I want
to express my deep sorrow for you, and all the families who lost their sons
fathers mothers in the attack of September 11. Be sure that we in Iraq felt
sadness when the attack happened, and lots of people had changed their mind
about the attackers. We were feeling sympathy about them, but when they
attack the civilian people, we realized that they are criminals whatever they
are, dear sir. With my regards, Numair
In May, as the Abu Ghraib
scandal broke and fighting intensified in Iraq, responses from the Iraqi
students grew less frequent.
20 June 2004
Dear Mr Bruce, My
students are on vacation these days, so they are at home. I see them by
chance when I go shopping. They help me in carrying, and sometimes they
accompany me to the buses, which go to my farm. Now I'm working to help my
family and others including myself about the situation in the future. I think
it will be very good when they capture your president BUSH and put him in the
jail to eat one bread every six hours and to drink a salty water with a bad
smell, and a dark cell, not to shave for months, not to wash his clothes and
not to clean his place which will be full of his shit and if I'm the jailer,
I would celebrate with him at night on the Iraqi way and show him the stars
at noon, and the sun at night, so as make him feel the misery that we are
living in.
Love & peace, Numair
A little more than a year
after the war in Iraq began on March 20, 2004, the first emails from students
were sent to the two school in Baghdad. They were translated into Arabic by
the Iraqi teachers, responses were collected from students and translated
into English, and the first replies came back a week or so later. By the
timeschools in both countries let out for summer, some students hadwritten
more than half a dozen letters to their counterparts in Iraq. Replies were
sometimes delayed by logistics. Internet connections are scarce in Iraq, and
one teacher had to make a trip of several dangerous miles to an Internet cafe
in Baghdad to send his students' letters.
Most early emails read like
teen personal ads: "i could describe myself a little hard working however
take school very seriously I really hope that someday i could be a lawyer or
journalist to really have and make a difference or play in a orchestra
because i play the violin for the past 2 years its very hard to get in a
college due to SAT scores you do not want to take if you decide to come to
the U.S."
Early responses indicate nothing so much as excitement to hear
from the outside world: "i'm so happy to be in touch with you i hope to see
you one day you come to my country or i go to yours thank you american."
Food, music, school and sports were popular subjects. American students were
often amazed at the good cheer of their Iraqi counterparts, even when
leavened with caution: "hello student of U.S. ? i think baghdad is very
beautiful if it has some peace."
SALIMA & RASHID
Early
April 2004
Hi, My name is Salima. I am 15 years old. I am a student in
10th grade. The reason why I joined this program to interact with the people
in Iraq and Afghanistan is because I am really curious to know what is going
on in these countries, especially in this war. It's really something for us
to be able to communicate with you guys. I really am sorry for the things
that are happening around the world today. Even though I haven't suffered in
my life like you guys I could understand your pain. All we can do is hope for
it to be over. I forgot to tell you my interests. Well, I love to listen to
music, help people in need and read sometimes. What are your interests? Well
what is it that you really want? I don't really have anything else to say as
of right now. Bye for now, hoping for a better tomorrow. Sincerely,
Salima
5 April 2004
Hi, my name is Rashid. My age is 16 years. I'm
a student at the second year in a high school. My hobby is to play football
and I like to help people. Here in the Arabic homeland, life is so beautiful
and simple, it is built on the bases of love and co-operation, we would love
to be in touch with you and talk with everybody to express our ideas and
thoughts. So what are your conditions there? You should tell me about it! In
Iraq we are suffering from a very hard situation, what do you think?
Goodbye.
5 April 2004
Hi Rashid, I am not sure if you have heard
of this game called Cricket that's my favorite sport. Life in America is
great. I mean you get a lot of freedom. It's really safe here in New York. I
am really lucky to live in a place like New York. It's very beautiful here. I
understand that you are suffering right now. I know how hard it is for you.
All we could do is hope that everything turns out alright. I would like to
know more about your family, your school life, and your everyday life, etc. I
am really glad and excited, very excited to be able to communicate with a
person like you in Iraq. I would really love to stay in touch as long as
possible and know all about you and your thoughts Waiting to hear back from
you, Salima
18 April 2004
Hi Salima, How are you? I'm too happy,
to hear your reply. Yes I have heard about the cricket. I love it too. The
situations in Iraq are getting more quiet day by day, the beautiful capital
Baghdad, started to be more peaceful. I have two brothers, they are more
young than me. I'm too old! I want to be a professor one day and teach the
students in my country, in Iraq. Thanks very much. Please send your picture
if you can.
20 April 2004 09:27:00
Hi, Rashid
I am glad to
hear everything is getting peaceful. One time I had a goal similar like yours. Well, I wanted to be a doctor and treat the sick poor people in my
village. But later on I realized I couldn't do that. Now I have a life here
in U.S.A. I can't move from New York even if I wanted to. It's not like I
don't like it here. It's a very beautiful place nice buildings, etc. But I
want to move someplace quiet or go back to Bangladesh. Let's get back to the
whole purpose of this thing. It's to get to know you better and the
situations in Iraq and what's happening there right now. Well, I have two
sisters and one brother. It seems to me that you don't have a sister and only
two brothers. It's a very small family, which is good. Email me back, okay?
Salima
April 2004 saw an uprising among the followers of Shia cleric
Moqtada el-Sadr, an May brought the Abu Ghraib scandal. Letters from Iraq
slowed to a trickle, and many Brooklyn students wondered where the responses
to their emails were. My father's explanation was that fighting had
intensified in Iraq, and this was probably what was holding up the
letters.
28 May 2004
Hi Rashid, I haven't been sending you
emails because you haven't replied my email yet. Well now I know why. It's
because of the war and everything. I know, and I understand. I'm sorry I
didn't email you even after I knew the reason why the mails were slow. I
guess I was busy. That's my only excuse. I just wanted to see what is going
on in Iraq at this time. I know you can't write to me right now but you could
write to me all about it once everything cools down. I hope everything is all
right with you. Keep your hopes open. Insh'Allah, Allah will do something
about all this. Just don't give up your hopes. Next time you email me, don't
forget to write to me all about it.
Waiting for your email,
Salima
FAIZAH, 15 & BARSHAD, 14
30 Mar 2004
As-Salamo
Alaikom, Hello, my name is Faizah. Mr. Wallace, a teacher in my school, told
me that I have the opportunity to write to an Iraqi teenager, and I was very
happy to hear that. I would like to briefly introduce myself. I am
Palestinian, and I was born in Saudi Arabia (and, yes, I can speak Arabic!).
I moved to America a little more than five years ago. I never went back to
Palestine or Saudi Arabia since, but I hope to go back to Palestine this
summer. I am 15 years old and I am in the tenth grade. I would like to know
more about you. Please write me back, because I would love to talk to you.
Salaam.
5 April 2004
In the name of God most gracious most
merciful, al salam alaikum, my name is Bashad, I'm 14 years old. I'm a
student at the second year at the secondary school. I would love to know you,
and I would love to wish you all the best. I love the Palestinian people as
well as the people of Saudi Arabia. I hope that you will be back to Palestine
your home. I like your way in speaking in spite of I have never heard you
speaking! I'm a Kurdish Iraqi. Thank you Faizah, I love you.
6 April
2004 10:08:14
In the name of Allah most Gracious, most Merciful, Dear
Bashad, Thank you so much for replying back. I love the Iraqi people, too. I
think that we share a lot of things in common, because we are both of
oppressed people struggling for freedom and human rights. May Allah protect
us from harm and grant us eternal peace and happiness. I don't know if I'll
be able to go to Palestine this summer. It's going to be really hard, and I'm
very upset. Insh'Allah I can go as soon as possible. Thank you again for
writing back, Bashad. Please keep in touch and stay same. May Allah be with
you. Salaam. Love, Faizah
18 April 2004
In the name of God most
gracious most merciful, Dear Faizah, I love your words, and I love the
Palestinian people. We will struggle as you said for their human rights. I
hope that you will send me your picture. I want to ask you some questions. Do
you watch the Star Academy program, or another Arabic programs? With my
love, Bashad
20 April 2004
In the name of Allah, Most Gracious,
Most Merciful, Dear Bashad, I'm so glad that you write back to me. I think
this is wonderful that I am able to communicate with an Iraqi youth, because
I've never had an Iraqi friend before, so I feel blessed. I watch the news
all the time these days and it frustrates me a lot. When I see what's going
on in our countries I feel so upset and give up in everything. However,
yesterday (Sunday April 18, 2004) I went to a demonstration against the
occupation in Palestine. We chanted "Free Palestine" and we also chanted
"Free Iraq" as well as other countries. I was on the news and expressed my
feelings towards this issue. But anyway, I don't watch Star Academy. What
channel is it on? I have Arabic TV but I don't have all the channels ? Keep
in touch and be safe. Love and Peace to you and all your people,
Faizah
With the help of a software program, Faizah and Bashad begin
exchanging letters in Arabic.
8 May 2004
Faizah, Thank you
Faizah for your worry about us, I want to tell you that we feel the same
thing towards the people in Palestine, we think about you and we pray to God
to keep and protect you, your Palestinian dialect was really nice and soft, I
think it has more taste than the classical Arabic, all the students were
jealous of me because your message which needs no translation to be read, and
all the students are too excited to participate in the project but not every
one is as lucky as me. Hope to talk to you again.
12 May 2004
In
the name of Allah, Most Gracious, Most Merciful, Dear brother Bashad, Thank
you for replying to me. Praise be to Allah for you and your friends and
family are well I hope. I follow your news constantly. I swear when I heard
about the Iraqi prisoners, I lost my mind. I was reading the newspaper and I
was crying.
Thank you for the commentary on the Palestinian dialect. I
wish I could write in classical Arabic. I was born in Saudi Arabia and stayed
there ten years before I came here, so I forgot most of the language. I want
to ask, what do you think about changing the Iraqi flag? Say hi to
everyone. Faizah
Though the project is on hold for the summer, my
father expects it to resume once school starts again in the fall. "I thought
this project was all about logistics and getting the mail in and out and
keeping track of who's writing who and making sure that people have letters,"
he told me recently. "What I didn't expect was to feel the same things the
students feel. Their feeling about the war has changed drastically. When they
hear about a car bombing in Baghdad, they know that the people they're
writing to may be directly affected by this any day, and this moves them a
great deal in a way that was unexpected to them, and also unexpected to
me."
Bruce Wallace can be reached through www.peacefultomorrows.org. Mark
Wallace is a freelance writer based in New York City. His work has appeared
in The New York Times Magazine and The New Yorker.
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