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'There is No Enemy Greater Than Ourselves'
Monica Benderman, AlterNet
August 12, 2005
http://www.alternet.org/story/24010/
[Editor's Note: On Tuesday, Amnesty International declared Kevin
Benderman a "prisoner of conscience" and is seeking his immediate
release.]
I have learned from first hand experience that war is the destroyer of
everything that is good in the world, it turns our young into soulless
killers and we tell them that they are heroes when they master the
"art" of killing.
- Kevin Benderman
I cannot tell anyone else how to live his or her life but I have
determined how I want to live mine -- by not participating in war any
longer...
- Monica Benderman
Dear Sirs:
As I am certain you are all aware, my husband, Sgt. Kevin Benderman,
was sentenced to 15 months confinement, loss of rank, forfeiture of pay
and a dishonorable discharge last week, the charge being "Missing
Movement" or failure to get on a plane.
In actuality, the charge was "filing a Conscientious Objector packet
against the recommendation of his commander, who had no intention of
allowing my husband to follow his conscience, and therefore serving
notice to the rest of our military that they should not follow suit."
I need to assure you that I do not make this statement out of anger,
but rather by simply pointing to the facts. Not only did my husband's
commander address this in a public comment to the media, the prosecutor
used this in his closing statements, and the military representative
was adamant about this in his public comments to the media immediately
following my husband's court martial.
I am not writing out of anger. I am writing to request the opportunity
to meet with one of you to discuss my husband's case from our point of
view, as this has not been allowed to this point. Even in my husband's
court martial, he was not allowed to discuss his beliefs, his reasons,
or the fact that he has given 10 years of honorable service to his
country, including a combat tour in Iraq, for which he received two
Army commendation medals for meritorious service.
My husband's case for Conscientious Objection was brushed aside and
mishandled so that his entire career of service came down to a meeting
with his Command Sgt. Major that lasted less than one hour. My
husband's testimony regarding this meeting has remained unchanged, as
has my witness to that meeting. The Command Sgt. Major's testimony was
re-written and sworn to on at least 5 separate occasions, each
testimony contradicting another, even as they were presented in my
husband's court martial.
In fairness to each of you, to the U.S. Army, to the people of this
country and mostly to my husband, who is paying the price for being
falsely charged, I am respectfully requesting that the appeal process
for his case be allowed to proceed without delay, and that he be given
fair treatment not only in a re-presentation of the facts surrounding
his court martial, but that he also be given the opportunity to have
his application for Conscientious Objector status reconsidered as well.
We are all living in difficult times. My husband served in this war,
and the effects it had on him will live with him for the rest of his
life. We do not intend to dishonor the service of all the military
personnel still serving, each will have to make the choice for
themselves of how to live with their beliefs and their conscience. We
will not say that the beliefs of those still fighting are wrong. We can
only say for certain that what my husband was ordered to continue to
believe, by his command, is very wrong for him.
This is the United States of America, the land of the free and the home
of the brave. Sirs, my husband freely volunteered to serve in the
United States Army because he believed it was right. He gave ten years
of honorable service because he believed it was right for him. After
seeing war firsthand, he knew that he could not participate any longer;
because he knew war was the wrong choice for him. The stand he has
taken, to say no to war and to lay down his weapon in the face of so
many who do not understand, is what I believe gives him the right to
live in this "home of the brave," as one of the bravest.
I have never met any of you. I hear what others say about you, but I
cannot say the same. I do not know you. I would like the opportunity to
know you, so that I could know what to believe. I would like the
opportunity to sit with each of you and discuss what my husband
believes, as people who care about our country and those who serve it.
Our country needs to heal. War has divided our country, our families
and our world. I would like the opportunity to present our views for a
different approach to lasting peace. We believe that we can make this
country strong on our shores, that we can develop ways to defend our
country without taking the fight to foreign lands. We believe that we
can work together to provide adequate means to secure our land so that
we will not have to "get to them before they can get to us." It will
involve more than just coffee table discussions, and we make no
illusion, no doubt there will be loss.
As we work through the process and remain firm in our commitment to not
allow ourselves to be drawn into violence, we know that some will try
to force us against our will, to show us to be weak by daring us to
lose control. But the loss incurred will be far less than what we have
already faced, and the innocents who now suffer will not be so openly
in harm's way.
Taking a stand for what we believe, for a commitment to seeing that
peace happens and that those who threaten this peace are neutralized
does not have to involve weapons meant for killing. Animals on this
earth were given their weapons; teeth, claws and a savage tenacity to
protect what is theirs and keep "enemies" at bay. Humanity was given
something much different, a far more significant weapon. Humanity was
given a mind. Somewhere along the way, we have forgotten the power of
our mind and what it can be used for. It became easy to create weapons
of destruction, far easier than to use our minds to think and create
strong principles for preventing the use of these weapons.
We believe that we should take pride in our abilities to use our mental
strength. We believe that we should develop this asset and work with
courage toward peace by drafting positive resolutions, knowing that
while the implementation of these resolutions will result in some loss,
it will be far less than the loss we face with weapons of destruction
in our hands, no different than "the enemy" facing us.
We believe we should stand strong and confident in knowing that we have
the courage of heart and strength of intellect to overcome the basest
animalistic tendencies that so easily drive us to forget that we are
human. We believe it is time to rise up from a position of strength
knowing that there is no "enemy" greater than ourselves, when we lose
respect for our God-given abilities and resort to violence as an answer.
Our world is divided because of war. We see children dying who will
never have the chance to grow to use their talents to help our world.
We see children who have lost their fathers. How will they grow? Will
there be resentment, or will they come to believe that they must become
strong in saying no to war? We see mothers crying as they reach out to
find a noble cause for their sons' deaths. Wouldn't the cause be far
nobler if the solution were to lay down our guns and say, "not one more
person should have to die when we have the strength to resolve our
problems without violence?" We see homes destroyed, a country laid
waste to, and people struggling to survive. Will they one day say
"thank you" for making my world better because of war? Or will they
find forgiveness and reach out in hope when we put our weapons away and
give them the freedom to do what they must to heal their country and
their homes?
This world is great and we are all part of it. War only creates chaos,
it will never bring lasting peace, and fighting with killing machines
to keep the turmoil from reaching our shores will only prolong the
agony. We believe we must work together to strengthen us, to secure us,
and to use our strength wisely to show the world that we mean business
when we say that no one will control us, our actions or our way of life.
To take the stand of strength, to honor those who have served this
country with their sacrifices, we believe we must rise above the
violence and say "no more," we will not allow ourselves to be drawn to
a position of having to use their methods to resolve our differences.
Sirs, nothing that results in such massive destruction can ever be
counted as success on the way to lasting peace.
Please consider my request. Please understand that I mean no
disrespect, nor does the stand that my husband has taken. We care about
our country, we care about healing the wounds we all now feel. We know
that our country stands for human rights, for respecting others and for
leading others to their personal freedom by giving them the right to
make the choices that are best for them, as long as they bring no
intentional pain to anyone else. We believe it is time to reach out for
what makes us truly strong and to leave the way of violence behind.
I look forward to the opportunity to discuss my husband's case with
you. Mostly, I look forward to the opportunity to work together in
strength, to bring lasting peace to our world, and to see our country
represented by the confidence of a principled stand for conscience that
all people deserve.
In Peace,
Monica Benderman
© 2005 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/24010/
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