In Tacoma, WA, on New Year's Eve 2006, members of United for Peace of Pierce County and Veterans for Peace Chapter 134 of Tacoma gathered at Associated Ministries for a reading of the names of the 3,000 U.S. servicemen and servicewomen who have been killed in Iraq. -- The reading lasted for two hours and forty-five minutes, from 6:15 p.m. till 9:00 p.m. -- Maggie Kelly of Tacoma read the following poem, which she wrote for the occasion.[1] -- Thanks to Maggie Kelly for permission to post....
1. Poem THE READING OF THE 3,000 NAMES By Maggie Kelly The pages stick together soaked, made sacred by so much blood the tinny smell of it fills our nostrils its stain remains like Lady Macbeth's curse. How shall we get past minute body fragments, smell of gun powder, murderous mortar dust, tortured cries, blast of bomb and evil oily smoke of so-called holy self-immolation that also ravages these, our fathers, our sisters, our mothers, our brothers our lovers torn limb from limb into potential oblivion that can be overcome only by our remembering by our rendering each and every syllable of their precious names that set them apart even more definitely than DNA. The wanton waste, we here define in lines of letters and sound, sends gigantic groans into all the homes of a citizenry that knows complicit guilt while counting all the dead whom we the people sent in our name to raze homes, destroy land, turn into rubble what had been grand while in the process the soul of this great nation can no longer bear the burden that brings it to its knees in heartfelt pleas to end such murderous madness we now grieve. Brothers and sisters whose names we shall read may you rest in eternal peace knowing that we honor you, each and every precious life you have given. —December 28, 2006 |