Ok, so it never really went anywhere, but it hasn't seemed as important of late. Not so with today's story: "Iraqis May Experience Sadness When Friends, Relatives Die." The best bit:
"Contrary to conventional wisdom, it seems that Iraqis do indeed experience at least minor feelings of grief when a best friend or a grandparent is ripped apart by a car bomb or shot execution style and later unearthed in a shallow mass grave," Prytzal said. "Last December's suicide-bomb killing of 71 Shiites in Baghdad, for example, produced unexpected reactions ranging from crumpled, sobbing despair to silent, dazed shock."Iraqis have often been observed weeping and wailing in apparent anguish, but the study offers evidence indicating this may not be exclusively an outward expression of anger or a desire for revenge. It also provocatively suggests that this grief can possess an American-like personal quality, and is not simply a tribal lamentation ritual.
Said Pryztal: "When trying to understand the psychology of the Iraqi citizenry after four years of war, think of a small American town roiled by the death of a well-known high school football player."
According to Pryztal, the intensity of the grief does not diminish if the mourner experiences multiple bereavements over time. "If a woman has already lost one child, the subsequent killings of other children will evoke similar responses," he said. "In the majority of cases we studied, it appeared as though those who lost multiple kids never actually got used to it."
Though Pryztal expects the results of the study may be of some interest to students of Arab psychology, he did concede that the data may not be entirely accurate because it was gathered directly from Iraqis themselves.
If a solution exists to the current crisis of conscience in foreign policy, it is in understanding the shared vulnerability that gives substance to the very concept of humanity. The comic frame seems as much a means of doing this as any. Nice job, Onion.
Comments (1)
Hey - just saying hello! I had your old RSS feed lodged in my reader, so it looked like you stopped writing in 2006, but in reality you just upgraded server software!
How are things?
- mark
Posted by Mark Madsen | August 18, 2007 3:00 PM
Posted on August 18, 2007 15:00