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War’s Chilling Reality
BOB HERBERT, New York Times
August 21, 2007
Bryan Anderson, a 25-year-old Army sergeant who was wounded in Iraq,
was explaining, on camera — to James Gandolfini, of all people
— what happened immediately after a roadside bomb blew up the
Humvee that he was driving.
“I was like, ‘Oh, we got hit. We got hit.’ And then I
had blood on my face and the flies were landing all over my face. So I
wiped my face to get rid of the flies. And that is when I noticed that
my fingertip was gone. So I was like, ‘Oh. O.K.’
“So that is when I started really assessing myself. I was like,
‘That’s not bad.’ And then I turned my hand over, and
I noticed that this chunk of my hand was gone. So I was like,
‘O.K., still not bad. I can live with that.’
“And then when I went to wipe the flies on my face with my left
hand, there was nothing there. So I was like, ‘Uh, that’s
gone.’ And then I looked down and I saw that my legs were gone.
And then they had kind of forced my head back down to the ground,
hoping that I wouldn’t see.”
HBO’s contribution to an expanded awareness of the awful
realities of war continues with a new documentary, “Alive Day
Memories: Home From Iraq.”
Mr. Gandolfini, one of the executive producers of the film, steps out
of his Tony Soprano persona to quietly, even gently, interview 10
soldiers and marines who barely escaped death in combat.
The interviews are powerful, and often chilling. They offer a portrait
of combat and its aftermath that bears no relation to the sanitized,
often upbeat version of war — not just in Iraq, but in general
— that so often comes from politicians and the news media.
Dawn Halfaker, a 28-year-old former Army captain, is among those
featured in the documentary. She lost her right arm and shoulder in
Iraq, along with any illusions she might have had about the glory of
war.
“I think I was a little bit naïve to what combat was really
like,” she told me in an interview on Sunday. “When
you’re training, you don’t really imagine that you could be
holding a dying boy in your arms. You don’t think about what
death is like close up.
“There’s nothing heroic about war. It’s very tragic.
It’s very sad. It takes a huge emotional toll.”
Still, she said, there was much about her experience in Iraq that she was grateful for.
“Nobody in the film is asking for pity or sympathy,” she
said. “We’re just saying we had this experience and it
changed our lives, and we’re coping with it.”
The term “alive day” is being used by G.I.’s to refer
to the day that they came frighteningly close to dying from war wounds,
but somehow managed to survive. There are legions of them.
Miraculous advances in emergency medicine, communication and
transportation are enabling 90 percent of the G.I.’s wounded in
Iraq to survive their wounds, although many are facing a lifetime of
suffering.
It’s become a cliché to talk about the courage of the
soldiers and marines struggling to overcome their horrendous injuries,
but it’s a cliché embedded in the truth. Sergeant
Anderson, a chatty onetime athlete, is doing his best to put together a
reasonably satisfactory life without his legs or his left hand, and
with a damaged right hand
He told Mr. Gandolfini, “If I didn’t have my hand, if I
lost both my hands, I’d really think, you know, it wouldn’t
be worth it to be around.”
He has a wry take on the term “alive day.”
“Everybody makes a big deal about your alive day, especially at
Walter Reed,” he said. “And I can see their point, that
you’d want to celebrate something like that. But from my point of
view, it’s like, ‘O.K., we’re sitting here
celebrating the worst day of my life. Great, let’s just remind me
of that every year.’ ”
Last year HBO produced a harrowing documentary called “Baghdad
E.R.” that showed the relentless effort of doctors, nurses and
other medical personnel to save as many lives as possible from what
amounted to a nonstop conveyor belt of G.I.’s wounded in combat.
At the time, Shelia Nevins, the head of documentary programming at the
network, said, “We tried to put a human face on the war.”
They’ve done it again with “Alive Day Memories,” which is scheduled to premiere Sept. 9.
There are no politics in either production. They are neither pro- nor anti-war.
But the intense focus on the humanity of the men and women caught up in
the chaos of Iraq, and the incredible sacrifices some of them have had
to make, is an implicit argument in favor of a more thoughtful,
cautious, less hubristic approach to matters of war and peace.
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