The horrifying
instant-ness of the attacks,
the violent explosions, the crowds of people
running and screaming in the street to escape
the falling debris, the sickening sight of
people jumping from the burning buildings,
the sense of dread as the towers, one after
another, collapsed, the gruesome excavation
of bodies from the rubble, the wrenching grief
of those looking for missing relatives and
friends and the acrid smoke that still hangs
over the cityall
of this was not only monstrous but previously
unknown in American history.
For
most of the world, however, terror raining from
the sky has been a horrific and familiar sight
for the last sixty-five years. It began with
the bombing of the small Basque village of Guernica
by Nazi warplanes on April 27, 1937. Guernica
had been chosen for bombing practice by Hitlers
Luftwaffe, which pounded the village with incendiary
bombs for three hoursvirtually eradicating
it. Later that year, the atrocities committed
there became the subject for Guernica,
an anti-war painting by Picasso.
With the
Nazi invasion of Poland in 1939, the systematic
bombing of European cities began, along with
the ruthless massacre of civilians. By the end
of the war, every city in Europe was in ruins,
with millions dead from the bombing raids. Everyone
in every town, village, and city had lost a friend
or relative in the wholesale devastation.
As
a child in London, I used to play in bombsites
with my friendsmuch to the dismay of my parents.
Wed find headless dolls, Mickey Mouse gas
masks, mangled games of Snakes & Ladders,
the odd shoe or hat, toy soldiers, torn baby
pictures and other grisly mementos of the former
occupantsthe startling and poignant reminders
of someone elses life now gone. Not that
we dwelt too long on reflections of this kind.
Our thoughts were then far more morbid, exulting
in the idea of colossal explosions (and treasures
that were now ours). In fact, when I first came
to New York, I was so used to seeing bombed-out
buildings in London that when I saw the collapsing,
abandoned buildings of the Lower East Side, with
their wallpapered bedrooms exposed to the elements,
my first thought was that theyd been bombed.
Then
one morning I woke up, and the bombed-out buildings
were here. Even civilians were at risk. It was
no longer "over there," and everything
we thought safe and solid had evaporatedas
if our very sense of reality has been shaken.
The unimagineableness of this disaster and our
inability to make the pieces fit have brewed
a lethal ferment of surreal images and true horrors.
Time sheets and actuarial tables drift down into
Brooklyn backyards, a Brooks Brothers store is
converted into a morgue, the ash-covered figures
emerging from the wreckage resemble walking mummies
from Pompeii.
Disorientation
is brought on by serial cultural shocks. Terrorist
attacks familiar to us from TV news are alarmingly
brought home, yet most of America is still experiencing
the tragedy via TV. The most horrifying imagesbodies
falling from the buildings, close-ups of people
inside looking out their windowsare kept
from us as too ghoulish. What is constantly shownpeople
running and looking over their shouldersis
eerily familiar to us from Japanese grade-b movies,
which, oddly, also take place against a Wall
Street setting. Adding to the sense of unreality
is the lack of survivorsnone since the
day after the disasternot to mention the
lack of bodies, only a hundred or so out of 5,000.
Even in the worst of earthquakes, there are bodies.
But
the most disturbing image of all is that of a
band of medieval fanatics with inflexible beliefs
and state-of-the-art weapons. The gulf between
them and us is time itself. Like some apocalyptic
nightmare, they come from our pasta feudal
culture of absolute beliefs, a theocratic society
the West emerged from over 500 years ago, a society
in which any atrocity against another human being
could be justified in the name of religion.
We
would no more be able to reason with our own
ancestors than we can with Osama bin Laden. In
the name of our own fanatic beliefs we murdered
Jews through periodic pogroms; we massacred women
and children who did not believe in our particular
sect of Christianity; we led our own holy wars,
the Crusades, against the Arabs looting, raping and pillaging
the infidel along the way. We virtually eradicated
the indigenous peoples of the Americasall
in the name of our God.
Ironically,
in those days it was Islam that practiced religious
toleranceallowing Christians and Jews to
live peacefully in their domains. The virulent
form of Islamic fundamentalism espoused by the
followers of bin Laden is actually a perversion
of Muhammads teachings, which, like Christianity,
forbids both murder and suicide. Terrorism is
the fanatic ideology of the dispossessed who
hate both the corrupt, greedy and autocratic
leaders of their own countries and the Americans
who made them so powerful, drenching the Middle
East in the petro-dollars that bring in their
wake the moral uncertainties of the modern world.
Political
radicalism, empowered by fanatical faith and
fear of change, creates a moral certainty that
dissolves any shadow of doubt, an absolutism
that permits any act of terror as long as it
is in the name of their holy war. What they condemn
in Americanslicentiousness, corruption,
tolerance for the sexual choices of others, liberalism,
moral laxity, permissiveness and godlessnessare
the qualities that Christian fundamentalists
such as Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson feel
have brought on this tragedy.
"I
really believe," Falwell said last week, "that
the pagans and the abortionists and the feminists
and the gays and the lesbians who are actively
trying to make an alternative lifestyle, the
ACLU, People for the American Way
I point
the finger in their face and say, You helped
this happen."
The
power of absolute belief over its converts is
that it eliminates the nagging doubts that plague
a relativistic society like our own. Absolute
belief also silences reason and compassion for
others. As we know from four millennia of holy
warswars against the infidel, the pagan,
the savage, the Otherin the sleep of reason,
atrocities flourish.