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In Afghanistan, A Call for Peace

By John Dear
BAY ISMOYO/AFP/GettyImages
An Afghan girl looks out from the entrance of her mud hut at a refugee camp in Kabul. BAY ISMOYO/AFP/GettyImages
Dec 13, 2012
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We call upon the United Nations to negotiate an immediate cease-fire to the war in Afghanistan, and to start talks aimed at ending the war and beginning the long road to healing and recovery. 

That’s what the Afghan youth said on Tuesday afternoon in Kabul, along with Nobel Peace Prize winner Mairead Maguire of Ireland, as they launched their “Two Million Friends for Afghanistan” campaign and presented their petition to a senior United Nations official.

For me, it was the climax of a heart-breaking, astonishing eight days in one of the poorest, most violent, most war-torn, most corrupt, and most polluted places on the planet — and because of the amazing “Afghan Peace Volunteers,” the 25 Afghan youth who live and work together in a community of peace and nonviolence — one of the most hopeful.

All these Afghan youth have suffered from war and poverty, but as they point out, 2 million people have been killed in war in Afghanistan over the past four decades. After 10 years of Soviet war and occupation in the 1980s, then the Civil War in the early 1990s led by the corrupt warlords, then the years of oppression under the Taliban, and now 11 years of American war and occupation, they are sick of war. Their message is the same message we heard everywhere — from a women’s cooperative, a children’s school, a refugee camp, and even in Parliament — “Stop the Killings. End the war. We want peace.”

Here is what they said on Tuesday afternoon in Kabul:

"We strongly urge the United Nations to broker a ceasefire in Afghanistan. We ask the United Nations to call on all the parties in the conflict, including competing warlords and the Taliban, the Karzai government, regional players and NATO, to lay down their weapons.
 
"Each day the violence continues means a continuing humanitarian disaster for the people of Afghanistan. It is time for the parties in conflict to seek non-military alternatives and to work cooperatively to allocate the funds and resources necessary for a full reconstruction campaign in Afghanistan. The people of Afghanistan, especially Afghan mothers, cry out for the wars to cease and for their children to be fed and educated. We ask for their cries to be heard.
 
"We believe that a negotiated ceasefire initiated by the United Nations will greatly assist Afghans in their wish to end the war. A ceasefire will pave the way for negotiations, reconciliation and the important responsibility to meet the humanitarian and socio-economic needs of 30 million Afghans." [See: www.2millionfriends.org]

Mairead Maguire spoke from her experience of 30 years of warfare and division in Northern Ireland to call for an end to the killings and U.S. drone attacks and the start of dialogue and reconstruction, for a nonviolent solution to the horrific wars and divisions that have destroyed the country, and urgent work to relieve the terrible suffering among tens of millions of impoverished, starving, hopeless Afghans, especially the women and children.

This call for a ceasefire and peace talks was the best response to the pain and suffering we heard from the hundreds of people we met throughout our visit.

“Who will hear the voice of the suffering people?” one woman from a sewing cooperative asked us through her tears. “We have so much pain in our hearts because no one will hear us, no one will end this war.”

“Afghanistan is a big hospital,” another woman told us. “We see death every day and we’re becoming numb to it. The U.S. is running a slaughterhouse, an abbatoir, where sheep are being slaughtered. When will this war end?”

“Finish this war,” the leader of one of the refugee camps said to us as we sat on the ground under a United Nations’ tent. “We don’t want anyone else killed. No one in this camp wants this war to continue. After three decades of war, nothing has been gained. Nothing is being built. Everything is being destroyed. We are sick of war.”

Parliamentarian and presidential candidate Dr. Ramazan Bashardost told us.“This war has been a disaster for us, but also for the American people. It’s a tragedy. Your own country is losing money and the lives of soldiers through it. You’re only providing security for our warlords, the war criminals of Afghanistan. You are not with the Afghan people. You are with the enemy of the Afghan people. It’s time to stop the killing, to stop supporting the killers.” 

We need schools, homes, food and basic resources to clean up and rebuild our country, he said.

“We are all the same, all human beings, all living under the same blue sky,” 15-year-old Ghulami of the Afghan Peace Volunteers said. “We should all be friends and learn to live in peace together.”

Another teen echoed Ghulami. 

“We want to be friends with the people of the world, with the youth of America,” 16-year-old Abdulhai, who lost his father in the war, told me. “Tell everyone, if you don’t know about us, or think we are terrorists, come meet us. Learn about us. We don’t want war. We want to be at peace with everyone.”

I urge people to join with the Afghan Peace Volunteers by pushing for an end to the U.S. war in Afghanistan.

The people of Afghanistan don’t want to wait any longer, they told us. They want peace now.

Rev. John Dear is a long time peace activist, the author of 30 books on peace and nonviolence, who has been arrested in more than 75 protests, most recently as a member of the Creech 14, the first group to commit civil disobedience against the drones. He was recently nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize by Archbishop Desmond Tutu. See: www.johndear.org

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An Afghan girl looks out from the entrance of her mud hut at a refugee camp in Kabul. BAY ISMOYO/AFP/GettyImages
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