Topic: Iraqi, US Mothers Who Lost Sons in War Embrace
Dragoness's photo
Sun 09/26/10 05:01 PM

Iraqi, US Mothers Who Lost Sons in War Embrace
Updated: 1 hour 54 minutes ago

Yahya Barzanki
AP
SULAIMANIYAH, Iraq (Sept. 26) -- Nine American mothers whose children died fighting in Iraq were embraced Sunday by dozens of Iraqi women who lost their own children during decades of war and violence in a meeting participants said brought them a measure of peace.

The gathering in Iraq's mostly peaceful northern Kurdish region was far from the sites of the roadside bombings or battlefields that accounted for the vast majority of the more than 4,400 U.S. military deaths since the 2003 invasion, but it was still a powerful experience for some mothers to even step foot in Iraq.

Some kissed the ground during their arrival Saturday.

An Iraqi Kurdish woman, who lost her son in a chemical attack, left, and an American woman, right, embrace during a meeting of U.S. and Iraqi mothers in Sulaimaniyah, Iraq, Sunday, Sept. 26, 2010. Nine American mothers whose children died fighting in Iraq were embraced Sunday by dozens of Iraqi women who lost their own children during decades of war and violence in a meeting participants said brought them a measure of peace.
Khalid Mohammed, AP
An Iraqi Kurdish woman, left, and an American woman, right, embrace in Sulaimaniyah, Iraq, on Sunday during a meeting of U.S. and Iraqi mothers whose children were killed in battle.

"I was overwhelmed at touch down. We were really on the ground in Iraq. I was almost in disbelief that it was real. This is where my son spent the last days of his life, and now, I was there," said a blog entry by Amy Galvez of Salt Lake City, whose son, Cpl. Adam Galvez, was killed in 2006.

In another web post she said she would return home a "different person."

"I will be in the country where my son spent the last days of his life," she wrote. "I'll have visited the land where a piece of my heart will remain forever."

The beginning of the Americans' three-day trip - organized by a Virginia-based women's aid group, Families United Toward Universal Respect - was attended by officials from State Department and Kurdish regional government.

Nawal Akhil, deputy chief of the group's Baghdad office, said the goal was to "talk about their suffering to find a way to ease it."

"We share the same ordeals and suffering - the American mothers who lost their children and the Iraqi mothers who lost their loved ones during the Saddam Hussein-era and in the violence since 2003," said Akhil.

Elaine Johnson, of Cordova, South Carolina, said the trip allowed her to come to terms with the loss of her son, Spc. Darius Jennings, killed in November 2003 in Fallujah as the insurgency that went on to rip the country apart gained strength.

"Before making this trip, I was angry for my child's death," she said. "But after making this trip, I feel peace, peace, peace."

The dozens of Iraqi mothers included Kurds whose family members were killed in Saddam's 1980s scorched-earth campaign to wipe out a Kurdish rebellion in the north that claimed at least 100,000 lives, including thousands in poison gas attacks.

"When I hugged an American woman we couldn't express ourselves in words, but what helped us to express our feelings and understand each other were our tears. We found them as a true expression to our grief and suffering," said Peroz Nasser, a 55-year-old Kurdish woman who lost her parents and two brothers and two sisters during Saddam's attacks.

While the mothers met in northern Iraq, other parts of the country were hit by violence as insurgents attempt to regain lost footholds near Baghdad and continue to pursue an ongoing campaign against public servants in effort to undermine government institutions.

Near the former insurgent stronghold of Fallujah, about 40 miles (65 kilometers) west of Baghdad, a car packed with explosives blew up, killing four policemen including a lieutenant colonel, Iraqi officials said.

In Baghdad, militants flagged down the car of an employee of the country's anti-corruption commission and shot him dead. A Culture Ministry employee died of wounds in a separate shooting.


http://www.aolnews.com/world/article/iraqi-us-mothers-who-lost-sons-in-war-embrace/19649075

The commonalities of being someone's child no matter which side should mean more than it does.

MiddleEarthling's photo
Sun 09/26/10 05:19 PM


Iraqi, US Mothers Who Lost Sons in War Embrace
Updated: 1 hour 54 minutes ago

Yahya Barzanki
AP
SULAIMANIYAH, Iraq (Sept. 26) -- Nine American mothers whose children died fighting in Iraq were embraced Sunday by dozens of Iraqi women who lost their own children during decades of war and violence in a meeting participants said brought them a measure of peace.

The gathering in Iraq's mostly peaceful northern Kurdish region was far from the sites of the roadside bombings or battlefields that accounted for the vast majority of the more than 4,400 U.S. military deaths since the 2003 invasion, but it was still a powerful experience for some mothers to even step foot in Iraq.

Some kissed the ground during their arrival Saturday.

An Iraqi Kurdish woman, who lost her son in a chemical attack, left, and an American woman, right, embrace during a meeting of U.S. and Iraqi mothers in Sulaimaniyah, Iraq, Sunday, Sept. 26, 2010. Nine American mothers whose children died fighting in Iraq were embraced Sunday by dozens of Iraqi women who lost their own children during decades of war and violence in a meeting participants said brought them a measure of peace.
Khalid Mohammed, AP
An Iraqi Kurdish woman, left, and an American woman, right, embrace in Sulaimaniyah, Iraq, on Sunday during a meeting of U.S. and Iraqi mothers whose children were killed in battle.

"I was overwhelmed at touch down. We were really on the ground in Iraq. I was almost in disbelief that it was real. This is where my son spent the last days of his life, and now, I was there," said a blog entry by Amy Galvez of Salt Lake City, whose son, Cpl. Adam Galvez, was killed in 2006.

In another web post she said she would return home a "different person."

"I will be in the country where my son spent the last days of his life," she wrote. "I'll have visited the land where a piece of my heart will remain forever."

The beginning of the Americans' three-day trip - organized by a Virginia-based women's aid group, Families United Toward Universal Respect - was attended by officials from State Department and Kurdish regional government.

Nawal Akhil, deputy chief of the group's Baghdad office, said the goal was to "talk about their suffering to find a way to ease it."

"We share the same ordeals and suffering - the American mothers who lost their children and the Iraqi mothers who lost their loved ones during the Saddam Hussein-era and in the violence since 2003," said Akhil.

Elaine Johnson, of Cordova, South Carolina, said the trip allowed her to come to terms with the loss of her son, Spc. Darius Jennings, killed in November 2003 in Fallujah as the insurgency that went on to rip the country apart gained strength.

"Before making this trip, I was angry for my child's death," she said. "But after making this trip, I feel peace, peace, peace."

The dozens of Iraqi mothers included Kurds whose family members were killed in Saddam's 1980s scorched-earth campaign to wipe out a Kurdish rebellion in the north that claimed at least 100,000 lives, including thousands in poison gas attacks.

"When I hugged an American woman we couldn't express ourselves in words, but what helped us to express our feelings and understand each other were our tears. We found them as a true expression to our grief and suffering," said Peroz Nasser, a 55-year-old Kurdish woman who lost her parents and two brothers and two sisters during Saddam's attacks.

While the mothers met in northern Iraq, other parts of the country were hit by violence as insurgents attempt to regain lost footholds near Baghdad and continue to pursue an ongoing campaign against public servants in effort to undermine government institutions.

Near the former insurgent stronghold of Fallujah, about 40 miles (65 kilometers) west of Baghdad, a car packed with explosives blew up, killing four policemen including a lieutenant colonel, Iraqi officials said.

In Baghdad, militants flagged down the car of an employee of the country's anti-corruption commission and shot him dead. A Culture Ministry employee died of wounds in a separate shooting.


http://www.aolnews.com/world/article/iraqi-us-mothers-who-lost-sons-in-war-embrace/19649075

The commonalities of being someone's child no matter which side should mean more than it does.


Touching...made me think of this lady who lost her son.


TonkaTruck3's photo
Sun 09/26/10 07:53 PM
Does'nt phase me one bit.
Its sad that Mothers here have lost their AMERICAN sons, but I have no sympathy for any Mothers over there who lost their terrorist loving sons.

Dragoness's photo
Sun 09/26/10 07:57 PM
noway noway noway noway noway

TonkaTruck3's photo
Sun 09/26/10 08:41 PM
:banana:

no photo
Sun 09/26/10 08:44 PM
“We will have peace with the Arabs when they love their children more than they hate us”
Golda Meir

TonkaTruck3's photo
Sun 09/26/10 08:45 PM
LOL...no, we'll have peace with the Arabs when we eliminate them from society.

Lpdon's photo
Sun 09/26/10 09:06 PM
If I snapped my fingers and EVERY foreign soldier in Iraq was gone, they will still want us dead because we are in Afghanistan…

If I snapped my fingers and EVERY foreign soldier in Afghanistan was gone, they will still want us dead because we have bases and people on Muslim land…

If I snapped my fingers and EVERY non-Muslim & every foreigner left Muslim land, they will still want us dead because we associate with the suppressive regimes in Muslim lands…

If I snapped my fingers and EVERY nation stopped associating with the suppressive regimes in Muslim lands, they will still want us dead because we support Israel…

If I snapped my fingers and EVERY nation in the world stopped recognizing and supporting Israel, and every Jew in Israel, and indeed, the world died, and a new Palestinian nation rises, they will STILL want us dead because the Koran says that we are infidels...and infidels must die.

Anyone who thinks otherwise will die...anyone who speaks out against this mantra will die...anyone who assists the infidels will die.

TonkaTruck3's photo
Sun 09/26/10 09:09 PM
Mothers embracing Mothers. Sounds like some of that luny Cindy Sheehan crap!!laugh

Lpdon's photo
Sun 09/26/10 09:12 PM

Mothers embracing Mothers. Sounds like some of that luny Cindy Sheehan crap!!laugh


She is a domestic terrorist too and should be tried for treason.

mightymoe's photo
Sun 09/26/10 09:13 PM

Mothers embracing Mothers. Sounds like some of that luny Cindy Sheehan crap!!laugh

or a great softcore porn....drool

mightymoe's photo
Sun 09/26/10 09:14 PM


Mothers embracing Mothers. Sounds like some of that luny Cindy Sheehan crap!!laugh


She is a domestic terrorist too and should be tried for treason.

she already had her 15 minutes...

Lpdon's photo
Sun 09/26/10 09:14 PM


Mothers embracing Mothers. Sounds like some of that luny Cindy Sheehan crap!!laugh

or a great softcore porn....drool


Not with Muzzies in it. sick

Lpdon's photo
Sun 09/26/10 09:15 PM



Mothers embracing Mothers. Sounds like some of that luny Cindy Sheehan crap!!laugh


She is a domestic terrorist too and should be tried for treason.

she already had her 15 minutes...


Yea, but she still travels to the Middle East and provides material support and comfort to terrorists, or as she calles them, "Freedom Fighters".

mightymoe's photo
Sun 09/26/10 09:37 PM




Mothers embracing Mothers. Sounds like some of that luny Cindy Sheehan crap!!laugh


She is a domestic terrorist too and should be tried for treason.

she already had her 15 minutes...


Yea, but she still travels to the Middle East and provides material support and comfort to terrorists, or as she calles them, "Freedom Fighters".

sounds like shes spitting on her sons grave...

Lpdon's photo
Sun 09/26/10 09:41 PM





Mothers embracing Mothers. Sounds like some of that luny Cindy Sheehan crap!!laugh


She is a domestic terrorist too and should be tried for treason.

she already had her 15 minutes...


Yea, but she still travels to the Middle East and provides material support and comfort to terrorists, or as she calles them, "Freedom Fighters".

sounds like shes spitting on her sons grave...


Yea, but she is to stupid to realize that.

leveller1's photo
Mon 09/27/10 03:32 AM

Does'nt phase me one bit.
Its sad that Mothers here have lost their AMERICAN sons, but I have no sympathy for any Mothers over there who lost their terrorist loving sons.


You really are a bit of a 'Tonka' - arn't you Mr Truck .....

leveller1's photo
Mon 09/27/10 03:35 AM


Mothers embracing Mothers. Sounds like some of that luny Cindy Sheehan crap!!laugh


She is a domestic terrorist too and should be tried for treason.


Is this a special place for the retarded to hang out? If so - good stuff - stay over here please where your frankly sub-kinder-garden intellect can't do as much harm ....:wink: