Racism is just another
poison we're spreading in Iraq
If you want to understand why the war is going so badly in Iraq, it may help to examine the recent reaction to "Hadji Girl," the videotaped song about killing Iraqis by U.S. Marine Corporal Joshua Belile.
The song became controversial when the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) discovered it on the internet and objected to its lyrics. "Hadji Girl" tells the story of a soldier "out in the sands of Iraq / And we were under attack":
The term "hadji" (also sometimes spelled "haji" or "hajji") is the Arabic word for someone who has made the pilgrimage to Mecca.
In Iraq and Afghanistan, it has become a common slang term used to describe the locals.
According to a dictionary of war slang compiled by GlobalSecurity.org, the term is "used by the American military for an Iraqi, anyone of Arab decent, or even of a brownish skin tone, be they Afghanis, or even Bangladeshis" and is also "the word many soldiers use derogatorily for the enemy."
Related terms include "haji mart" (a small store operated by Iraqis) or "haji patrol" (Iraqi soldiers).
Then suddenly to my surprise
I looked up and I saw her eyes
And I knew it was love at first sight.And she said…
Dirka Dirka Mohammed Jihad
Sherpa Sherpa Bak Allah
Hadji girl I can’t understand what you’re saying.The girl says that she "wanted me to meet her family
But I, well, I couldn’t figure out how to say no.
Cause I don’t speak Arabic."
They visit her home, a "side shanty" down "an old dirt trail," and as soon as they arrive,
Her brother and her father shouted…
Dirka Dirka Mohammed Jihad
Sherpa Sherpa Bak Allah
They pulled out their AKs so I could see... So I grabbed her little sister and pulled her in front of me
As the bullets began to fly
The blood sprayed from between her eyes
And then I laughed maniacallyThen I hid behind the TV
And I locked and loaded my M-16
And I blew those little fuckers to eternity.And I said…
Dirka Dirka Mohammed Jihad
Sherpa Sherpa Bak Allah
They should have known they were fucking with a MarineHajis: The Niggers of Iraq
Cpl. Joshua Belile had a recording contract and everything, but, uh-uh. No singing Marine’s gonna be regaling America with the sadistic pleasures to be had in occupied Iraq, no sir, not with all the atrocity investigations going on these days, and the dirty truth of our Middle East adventure oozing into the coverage of even the most administration-sympathetic media outlets.
Last week I wrote a column about horror on the macro level in Iraq: the likely serious health consequences resulting from widespread use of depleted uranium munitions, constituting a crime against not just the Iraqis but the whole world, because of airborne radiation poisoning.
This week, horror on the micro level is once again making the news, with the arrest of Steven Green, a recently discharged GI, in connection with the rape and murder of a 15-year-old Iraqi girl, along with the murder of her parents and 7-year-old sister, four months ago in Mahmoudiya.
Atrocity damage control requires isolating such events, not just vertically (keep the blame as far down the chain of command as possible), but horizontally, so that journalists and the public at large don’t start thinking they see a pattern of barbarism in our mission to liberate Iraq.
A perfunctory investigation followed by widely publicized punishment needs to end each matter as it comes up.
But suddenly the embedded media aren’t so compliant. As we read about the brutal, premeditated murders in Mahmoudiya on March 12, we’re likely to get a recap of other criminal investigations under way or recently concluded: the Haditha massacre, a shooting in Fallujah (eight servicemen charged with murder), another shooting in Ramadi, the deaths of detainees here and there.
Indeed, we might even get a civilian body count thrown in. The acknowledged Iraqi dead are apparently up to 50,000 in the mainstream media (even though the British medical journal Lancet published a study putting the likely total at twice that — a year and a half ago).
All of which brings me back to Cpl. Belile’s derailed recording career. The song he’d posted on the Internet and hoped to make a splash with — “Hadji Girl” — tells the story of a GI who falls for a local girl at an Iraqi Burger King.
He accompanies her home but, oops, it’s a trap. The dad and brother, shouting “jihad,” brandish their AK-47s, so he pulls the sister in front of him as a shield and (ha ha) she’s the one who gets shot.
Then he returns fire with his M-16 and blows the rest of the family “to eternity.”
Adding to the tenderness of this song, which, according to Marine Times, the high command has apparently forbidden Belile to record, is the fact that “hadji” is a racist term, the new slur for Arabs and Muslims, Iraq war vet Aiden Delgado explained on blackcommentator.com. “It is used extensively in the military,” he said,
“. . . with the same kind of connotation as ‘gook,’ ‘Charlie’ or the n-word. Official Army documents now use it in reference to Iraqis or Arabs. It’s real common.” He also said of his Army training: “We sang in cadences. And the chants had anti-Arab themes. Like burning turbans, killing ragheads.”
I humbly submit there’s no such thing as a benign occupation — that you cannot subjugate a people without also dehumanizing them.
This is called racism. It’s the ever-present undercurrent of our mission in Iraq and it’s as insidious and life-threatening to Iraqis as DU poisoning, as the story of a real-life “Hadji Girl” in Mahmoudiya makes clear.
According to the Washington Post and other accounts, the young girl, Abeer Qasim Hamza, had the extraordinary misfortune of attracting, with her good looks, the interest of some of the GIs who manned the checkpoint she was required to pass through several times a day. They made advances at her.
She was afraid, she told her mother. Her unspeakable tragedy illustrates a basic fact of occupation: Iraqi civilians are at the mercy of immature young Americans with guns. They have no rights.
A witness “found Abeer sprawled dead in a corner, her hair and a pillow next to her consumed by fire, and her dress pushed up to her neck,” the Post said.
Unlike the Marine in the song, the boys from the 502nd Infantry Regiment weren’t lured into temptation by a femme fatale.
They were on the prowl for spoils. Pvt. Green and his buddies, accounts tell us, allegedly planned the operation in advance: rape the girl, kill her, set her on fire, kill the witnesses, blame it on the insurgents. It almost worked.
Only after an act of grotesque counter-barbarism — the torture and beheading of two American soldiers from the very same unit — did a guilt-ridden fellow soldier spill the beans about the Mahmoudiya atrocity, during a post-beheading session with a stress counselor.
John Pike, director of the think tank GlobalSecurity.org, suggests that what we’re witnessing is not necessarily a spike in GI murders of Iraqi civilians all of a sudden but, rather, a no-longer-avoidable pressure to investigate them.
“It may be,” he told the San Francisco Chronicle, “that this has been going on all along and it was just not being reported.”
I’d say these murders are an absolutely predictable form of the “collateral damage” of occupation. Its architects are the ones who belong on trial, for the rape of a nation.
My opinion is, shut the fuck up and quit crying about everything soldiers
do. Quit fucking teaching soldiers how to kill and we will stop killing. If
you want soldiers to be politically correct then teach them to be
politically correct until then shut the fuck up. Noone ever said war was
politically correct. Matter of fact one of this countries greatest military
leaders put it best, "the object of war is not to die for you country, the
object of war is to make the other bastard die for his"
Being an American, means that we all have the right to exercise freedom of
press; in order to spread knowledge, and information that Americans don’t
hear on a daily basis. Wanting to shut or censor a writer from projecting
news is not an opinion. It’s an ignorant approach on wining the war on
terror; it’s a fascist way of thinking. And it’s a disgrace to know that
these events won’t make it past 10 minutes in the news, and put aside for
celebrity updates.