Archive for the ‘City on a Hill Press’ Category

The USA Is Not My Enemy: Coming to America after Operation Iraqi Freedom

Thursday, April 8th, 2004

Luma Ateyah loves America, so much so that when the Army rolled through her hometown in Bradley fighting vehicles and Abrams tanks last year, she made a flag to wave as they passed.

But Ateyah is not from the United States. She is an Iraqi from Baghdad, and the flag she waved had 51 stars.

“I tried to welcome the troops in my own way,” she says. “I wanted Iraq to join the United States, you see.” (more…)

Forgotten Wars: A Journey Through the Remains of Yugoslavia

Thursday, January 15th, 2004

Where it all started

The plaque reads: From this place on 28 June 1914 Gavrilo Princip assassinated the heir to the Austro-Hungarian thrown Franz Ferdinand and his wife Sofia.

When I first told people that I was going to Belgrade, I expected the most common response to be, “Why?”

Why are you going to a country we fought a war with less than five years ago? Why do you want to see a city your country’s Air Force bombed while you were in high school? Why do you so desperately want to see hollowed-out buildings and the ruins of a Chinese embassy that was “accidentally” destroyed? Why on earth are you going to Belgrade?

I was over-generous in my expectations.

The most common question was, “Belgrade. Where is that again?”

We have forgotten another war. A decade of genocidal conflict has disappeared from American memory. While all eyes are focused on Iraq, we have forgotten another war from just five years ago. We have forgotten Yugoslavia. (more…)