Factors such as
concern that their loved ones died for no tangible purpose, as well
as the mystery surrounding the circumstances of some of the deaths,
weave a common theme among family members taking a stand against the
US’s continuing operations in Iraq."It was just so unnecessary,
and that hurts me," Zappala said. "He died doing his assigned job,
but he never had any idea of how to really do it. He just did his
duty because they told him it was what he had to do. The government
has completely failed to prepare our troops, or give them the proper
equipment or ensure their safety.
"They still haven’t told me how he really died," she added.
Bill Mitchell of Atascadero, California, lost his son, 25
year-old Staff Sergeant Michael W. Mitchell, on April 4, 2004 when
fighting broke out in Sadr City. Michael was scheduled to return
home in five days.
Mitchell says he experienced early, short-lived success with the
coping process. "Right after my son died it was the anger that
really kept me going," Mitchell said. "But the anger wore off and I
had to say to myself, ‘My son is still dead no matter what I do. I
have to move on with my life and get over this.’ You know what? I
really haven’t moved on that much. Now I have bad days and good
days, instead of all bad days. But the pain still keeps coming up
and it’s even worse now after I have a day where I thought I
almost forgot about it."
The seemingly constant stream of bad news coming out of Iraq
keeps Mitchell’s grief fresh. "I have a new pain every time some
other family loses a child, and I feel their pain mixed with mine.
Ah! It gets so agonizing, it’s just so bad and just seems like
there is no relief."
Cindy Sheehan lost her son, Specialist Casey Austin Sheehan, 24,
the same spring day Michael Mitchell died. Their bodies returned
home on the same flight to Dover Air Force Base. The Sheehans live
in Vacaville, California.
"Casey was [killed in action] after he had been over there for
two short weeks," Sheehan said. "He had no idea how soon he would be
coming home. He was killed instantly and he didn't suffer, but we
are suffering enough for everybody.
"It’s been three months and I don’t really know how I’m
feeling. I have panic attacks every day," Sheehan continued. "I
returned to work and I have to act like everything is all right,
that I’m doing okay. It’s very exhausting and stressful, the
daily mourning of your children. Then when you have to pretend all
day that you’re fine, that’s really hard. I have two or three
panic attacks a day, I cry every day, I just break down all the
time.
"I miss my son so much, I just keep crying, I don’t know if I’ll
ever stop," Sheehan said. "I think it doesn’t get any better --
its gets worse. The reality sets in that you’re never gonna see
him, and its just keeps getting worse. I still feel like he could
walk in the door at any time. It’s just hard to accept the fact
that he’s never coming home. I mean, he’s already come home, but
he’ll never really come back to us they way we want him to."
Sue Niederer’s son, Lieutenant Seth Dvorin, died on February 7,
2004. He was 24 years old. Niederer reported that familiar kind of
difficulty recovering from her loss. Seth had married his wife,
Kelly Harris, just prior to leaving for Iraq last summer.
"Time isn’t making this go away or making it easier to cope
with," she said. "Months have gone by. You tell me if I sound like I
am getting over his death. I don’t think so! Not as long as our
government sends our children to be sacrificed."
Niederer, who lives in Pennington, New Jersey, is insistent that
Seth’s death served no purpose. "I’ll say it again. As many
times as I have to just so people understand. My son died for
absolutely nothing! Absolutely nothing! Am I still angry? You bet I
am! Am I still hurting worse than ever? You better believe it!"
Unprepared for the Mission
Celeste Zappala blames her own lack of healing on her assessment
that the military failed to adequately prepare her son Sherwood’s
unit for the policing role it was ordered to carry out.
"How can you get over your son’s death when you know he died
because he didn’t have the proper training?" Zappala asked. "He
was never trained for the job of an MP; he was not a policeman. How
can I accept his death when it was so unnecessary and such a waste
of a good life? He is gone now," she said vehemently, "because they
neglected his needs."
Sue Niederer also believes her son Seth’s unit was unprepared
for the mission it was assigned. "My son died because he didn’t
have the right equipment for himself or his men," she said. "When he
was home on leave he was on the phone to his commander at Fort Drum.
He was demanding [global positioning system technology] and
computers to protect the safety of his men. Did he get them? You
figure it out!"
Neiderer said Seth, a platoon leader, died from an improvised
explosive device while at the front of his unit trying to keep his
men safe. Seth was the first to die in his platoon of just eighteen.
Two others have died since, and three have been severely wounded.
"His camaraderie made him go back to Iraq and ended up getting him
killed. And the men he was trying desperately to keep safe are dead
and his courage couldn’t even stop it."
The Pentagon has acknowledged that many units now serving in Iraq
are under-equipped, but says it is producing and shipping
safety-related materials at the fastest pace possible. Such
assurances are little consolation to the families of men and women
who have already died overseas, in some cases because the military
failed to issue them appropriate equipment.
Speaking Out, Making a Difference
Jane Bright defiantly insists on her prerogative to speak out
against the war as a way of dealing with her pain. "Bush wants us to
just move on like nothing happened," Bright said. "No," she replied
defiantly. "I won’t be quiet until everyone knows how bad it
hurts. I won’t be able to ‘get over it’ as long as more of our
children are dying in Iraq."
Sue Niederer expressed concern that the complicity of other
soldiers’ families is prolonging the healing process for those
whose loved ones have already died. "How can the people stand for
this to happen?" she asked. "Do they want their child to die like
mine? What is it going to take to stop this? I can’t start healing
and getting over my pain as long as there are more of our loved ones
dying. It makes my son’s death pointless."
Celeste Zappala said the killing "must be stopped, before we lose
our entire future." She added, "What about all the others who have
died since then and will keep on dying? I want to see it stop for
all the families and the soldiers most of all.
"How sad," Zappala continued. "How sad that we are still letting
this go on. Our voices must make an impression on the people. They
have to hear us because we are the ones suffering the most."
Niederer’s defiance is palpable. "Face me, President Bush," she
taunted as if the president might be listening in. "You are a
coward! Come on, look me in the eye and tell me my son’s death was
worth it! Tell me this war was right and necessary and I’ll deck
you! You send our children to die and then have the nerve to say
they made the ultimate sacrifice for their country. You don’t even
have the courage to face me or any of the other families! How
cowardly! How cowardly!"
Each of the families echoed very similar sentiments and
heart-rending grief. They have chosen to speak out because they want
the public to know about and intimately understand their pain. They
believe that only by having a story to connect with the grief will
it hammer home the ongoing loss of life. Only by knowing about the
families’ pain, they suggest, can people really know the true cost
of the war.
While more and more families grieve, units of National Guard,
Reserves, and active duty are being called up and notified of the
dates they will be sent off to Iraq. The military has even told some
troops they are expected to ship out next February or later,
confirming most analysts’ predictions that the Pentagon and Bush
administration have plans to keep troops deployed well into 2006.
Compounding families’ losses is their suspicion that their
fellow Americans would prefer to ignore the costs of war, if the
alternative means facing even part of the pain others cannot avoid.
"Is anyone really paying attention?" Cindy Sheehan asked during the
interview. "Is this really making a difference? I just don’t see
it having much impact watching all the people keep going on like
nothing is happening. Is this really going to make a difference?"