Kathy Kelly's Chispa

Authors

  • Vijay Prashad

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14452/MR-057-07-2005-11_7

Keywords:

Imperialism

Abstract

Kathy Kelly, Other Lands Have Dreams: From Baghdad to Pekin Prison (Oakland and Petrolia, Calif.: Counterpunch and AK Press, 2005), 168 pages, paper $14.95.For almost ten years Kathy Kelly has walked the wards of Iraq's hospitals. She sits beside the beds of ailing children and tells them that she is sorry that her country has brought them such pain. She then gathers their family and apologizes to them as well. Her letters from Iraq, many published on the Internet during the late 1990s and into the 2000s, carried tales of these victims of the long U.S. war on Iraq. From her we got their names and fragments of their stories: we read of the tragic death of seven-month-old Zayna who was emaciated by nutritional marasmus, of Shehadah who might get heart surgery but no time in the hospital to recover, and of Miladh and Zaineb who had to fashion their imaginations around the daily bombardments that brought them "freedom." From Kathy Kelly we learned about this long war, about its impact on the ordinary people of Iraq, about the embargo's victims, the war's victims, and the occupation's victims. Her new book is a collection of her antiwar journalism (with a long excursus on her time in jail for her antiwar activism)

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Published

2005-12-07

Issue

Section

Articles