[Mb-civic] The human face of tragedy - James Carroll - Boston Globe Op-Ed

William Swiggard swiggard at comcast.net
Mon Jan 23 04:29:26 PST 2006


  The human face of tragedy

By James Carroll  |  January 23, 2006  |   The Boston Globe

JILL CARROLL is no relation to me, yet it seems wrong to say that. I 
have followed the news of her plight as if she were my daughter, and for 
the weeks of her imprisonment, I have carried her in my heart. Now the 
clock is run out on the threat of those who hold her, and by the time 
you read this she may be dead. Yet, until word is final, hope remains. 
Meanwhile, what to make of the fate of Jill Carroll?

There is the revelation of the routine nobility of reporters in Iraq, 
the extreme jeopardy they accept to gather information about the war. 
Except for them, the world public would depend on the manipulations of 
interested parties, from the ''coalition" to the Iraqi government to 
networks of thugs, for all of whom the distinction between propaganda 
and news matters little. If Pentagon briefers were the only source of 
knowledge about events in that boiling cauldron, Americans would think 
it a warm bath. Reckoning with this war is the most urgent duty of US 
citizenship now, and Jill Carroll epitomizes the heroism of those who 
make that possible.

If it were not for the disastrous policies of George W. Bush, Jill 
Carroll would be fine today, but it would be wrong to turn her 
kidnapping into yet another cudgel with which to bang against the war. 
The people who took her hostage are depraved, but the contemptible 
methods of the insurgency must not become the point either. There must 
be no ''using" Jill Carroll's dilemma as a way of advancing an argument. 
But its drama, whatever the conclusion, puts a human face on a tragedy 
that is inevitably abstract for those at some remove.

And what a face. The glimpses we have been shown of this young woman, 
the snapshots taken in happier times, and even the grim footage provided 
by her captors, hint at an irresistible depth of personality. One 
photograph showing a broad smile beneath her darkly veiled head speaks 
volumes about her respectful ease in a culture that others might find 
only oppressive. Reports point to her combination of seriousness of 
purpose, delighted curiosity, and raw courage. The stories she wrote for 
The Christian Science Monitor revealed a rare sensitivity. Last April 
18, for example, Jill Carroll published an account of the death of an 
American aid worker, a report much noted last week because of 
similarities to her own situation.

Marla Ruzicka was a Californian, attached to an NGO, attending to the 
needs of desperate Iraqis. She and her driver were killed when they were 
caught in a crossfire between a suicidal insurgent and US soldiers. 
Marla Ruzicka was Jill Carroll's friend, and her story is infused with 
grief. But the story also takes careful note of Ruzicka's driver, who, 
in Carroll's account, is no mere anonymous Iraqi functionary, another 
unnamed fatality. Carroll gives his name, Faiz, hints at his history as 
an airline pilot, and establishes her own connection with him by noting 
his work as an interpreter for journalists. To Jill Carroll, the death 
of this Iraqi man weighed as much as the death of her American friend. 
If Jill Carroll were filing the report of her own kidnapping two weeks 
ago, we would know the name of her murdered driver, and his death, too, 
would have grave importance to us -- because it surely did to her.

What to make of the fate of Jill Carroll? Even if the worst outcome 
follows, this young writer, with a poignant directness that is as rare 
as it is precious, has already suggested a way to take it in. Equally, 
in noting what was special about human rights organizer Marla Ruzicka, 
she makes clear what is special about herself. She wrote about her dead 
friend: ''The only thing we can say now is at least she died doing what 
she wanted, doing what she really, really believed in. If she were still 
here, she'd be most worried now about her driver's family, and who will 
take care of all the other Iraqi families she was working with. She 
would point out, this happens to Iraqis every day, and no one notices or 
even cares. There are no newspaper articles or investigations into what 
happens to them. For most of them, there was only Marla."

And also Jill Carroll. Iraqis and Americans are alike in being in her 
debt. And we are alike in that heaviness of heart, where we still carry her.

http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2006/01/23/the_human_face_of_tragedy/
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