Friday, June 23, 2006

Humanity Revisited

Long story short: I'm on an internship in Aceh, Indonesia. More on that later, i promise to post my rantings about my arrival and the first few days soon. Now, i just want to get out what I feel while it's still warm...
I just got home from a 'field trip' which involved travelling to villages, talking to the villagers about the new project we are implementing with the government, blablabla.
As expected, in most villages, the immense majority of the villagers attending the meeting (5o on average) was masculine. In one meeting, we had 1 woman. (and our team leader, Ella, who is an indonesian lady as well). Funnily, Ella was doing most of the talking, first because Cliff and I had a language handicap (Cliff speaks average Indonesian, and I, well.. don't) but also because she outbrains us both. Anyways.
The last village, however, was different: the audience was almost exclusively feminine. Wow, I thought, if they didn't have both breasts I would have thought I landed in an Amazones camp (review your greek mythology if you're missing my joke. I know what you're thinking: 'geek'. Yep.)

Turned that there were so few men present in the meeting because... most men in the village were killed during the war that ravaged Aceh during the last 3 months. Bam. Reading statistics is something - hearing the women tell you that they have land but they have to go hungry because there is no one to work the land is insane. "If I have lunch, then I won't have dinner", said one lady, 70 years old +.

I asked Ella about who was doing the killings, the Indonesian government or the GAM (the separatist movement which was the other party to the war). And she told me that the army (the government, therefore) was pretty cruel to people.. take this example: the army forced people to denounce their own children when they got home. The army would then go in and kill the son.
Now how the army pulled that? Well, by threatening the people that if they didnt denounce their children, they (the army) would kill their grandchildren.
Talk about a dilemma. If you had the choice, who would you have killed, your son or his own children?
You know that they're going to get him anyway. And you know that they would actually kill your grandchildren.
And you know that if your son was given the choice, this is what he'd choose too.
And those motherfuckers of the army knew it, too.

Now the way they carried the execution was pretty innovative, too. They may have outsmarted the israeli army in cruelty (though i'm not sure).

First, the execution would be carried in the house, in front of the parents.
Second, it wasnt by gunshot, or by a blow from a machette. No. They'd get young people armed with bamboo sticks and have them all hit the victim -- so the mother ends up picking up the pieces of her son, literally.

This makes me sick. I can't believe that someone could do that to another human being.. I don't think any other species in the animal kindgom is capable of such insanity...

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Ca c'est vraiment tres impressionnnt..!! Travaillant dans le domaine de develop en Egypt, j'ai eu l'impression que nos problemes - en comparant avec ce qui est ecrit ici- sont vraiment du li3b 3iyal!. On ne souffre pas de foce majeure " Guerre, tsunami, etc.." mais tu sais quoi ya dahshanion, c'est nous meme qui se causons la force majeure..( avec cette insistance de gaspillage d'argent and as such keeping people illitrate poor and unhealthy)! c'est vraiment dommage..!

Mohamed said...

Hey Nouja, tu n'as pas signe ton commentaire sur le blog mais tu es la seule personne au monde qui m'appelle Dahshanion :)

You are totally right, i couldnt agree more! Je me pose la question, par rapport a l'egypte -- est-ce que c'est fait expres (keeping ppl illeterate or unhealthy), ou bien est-ce veritablement juste a cause d'un immense gaspillage de ressources?

Anonymous said...

Let's adress the question to our graet USAID..!!:) Adamaha Allah zokhran lel bashareya..!


PS:j'ai beaucouuuuuuuup aime ton site..it's totally you:)

Ingy