Maria
Ruzicka
The Agony of War
by Bob Herbert
"Nothing is so beautiful and wonderful,
nothing is so continually fresh and surprising, so full of sweet and perpetual
ecstasy, as the good."- Simone Weil
"There's no doubt in my mind
that the good Lord has his hands full right now." - The Rev. Ted Oswald at
the funeral Mass for Marla Ruzicka
In a horrifying incident that
occurred in the spring of 2003, an Iraqi woman threw two of her children, an
infant and a toddler, out the window of a car that had been hit accidentally in
an American rocket attack. The woman and the rest of her family perished in the
black smoke and flames of the wreckage. The toddler, whose name was Zahraa, was
severely burned. She died two weeks later.
The infant, named Harah, was not
badly hurt. She was photographed recently on the lap of Marla Ruzicka, a young
humanitarian-aid worker from
The vast amount of suffering and
death endured by civilians as a result of the U.S.-led invasion of
As for the press, it has better
things to cover than the suffering of civilians in war. The aversion to this
topic is at the opposite extreme from the ecstatic journalistic embrace of the
death of one pope and the election of another, and the media's manic obsession
with the comings and goings of Martha, Jacko, et al.
There's been hardly any media
interest in the unrelieved agony of tens of thousands of innocent civilians in
So the public doesn't even hear about
the American bombs that fall mistakenly on the homes of innocent civilians,
wiping out entire families. We hear very little about the frequent instances of
jittery soldiers opening fire indiscriminately, killing and wounding men, women
and children who were never a threat in the first place. We don't hear much
about the many children who, for one reason or another, are shot, burned or
blown to eternity by our forces in the name of peace and freedom.
Out of sight, out of mind.
This stunning lack of interest in
the toll the war has taken on civilians is one of the reasons Ms. Ruzicka, who
was just 28 when she died, felt compelled to try to personally document as much
of the suffering as she could. At times she would go from door to door in the
most dangerous areas, taking down information about civilians who had been
killed or wounded. She believed fiercely that Americans needed to know about
the terrible pain the war was inflicting, and that we had an obligation to do
everything possible to mitigate it.
Her ultimate goal, which Senator
Patrick Leahy of
War is
always about sorrow and the deepest suffering. Nitwits try to dress it up in
the finery of half-baked rationalizations, but the reality is always wanton
bloodshed, rotting flesh and the lifelong trauma of those who are physically or
psychically maimed.
More than 600 people attended Ms.
Ruzicka's funeral on Saturday in her hometown of
He told the mourners: "Marla
demonstrated that an individual can make a profound difference in this world.
Her life was dedicated to innocent victims of conflict, exactly what she ended
up being."
From the
New York Times