The Theatre of Good and Evil
By Eduardo Galeano
La Jornada September 21, 2001 Translated by Justin Podur
In the struggle of Good against Evil, it's always the people who get killed.
The terrorists killed workers of 50 countries in NYC and DC, in the name of Good
against Evil. And in the name of Good against Evil President Bush has promised vengeance:
"We will eliminate Evil from the world", he announced.
Eliminate Evil? What would Good be without Evil? It's not just religious fanatics
who need enemies to justify their insanity. The arms industry and the gigantic war
machine of the US also needs enemies to justify its existence. Good and evil, evil
and good: the actors change masks, the heroes become monsters and the monsters heroes,
in accord with the demands of the theatre's playwrights.
This is nothing new. The German scientist Werner von Braun was evil when he invented
the V-2 bombers that Hitler used against London, but became good when he used his
talents in the service of the US. Stalin was good during World War Two and evil afterwards,
when he became the leader of the Evil Empire. In the cold war years John Steinbeck
wrote: "Maybe the whole world needs Russians. I suppose that even in Russia
they need Russians. Maybe Russia's Russians are called Americans." Even the
Russians became good afterwards. Today, Putin can add his voice to say: "Evil
must be punished."
Saddam Hussein was good, and so were the chemical weapons he used against the Iranians
and the Kurds. Afterwards, he became evil. They were calling him Satan Hussein when
the US finished up their invasion of Panama to invade Iraq because Iraq invaded Kuwait.
Father Bush that particular war against Evil upon himself. With the humanitarian
and compassionate spirit that characterizes his family, he killed more than 100 000
Iraqis, the vast majority of them civilians.
Satan Hussein stayed where he was, but this number one enemy of humanity had to step
aside and accept becoming number two enemy of humanity. The bane of the world is
now called Osama bin Laden. The CIA taught him everything he knows about terrorism:
bin Laden, loved and armed by the US government, was one of the principal 'freedom
fighters' against Communism in Afghanistan. Father Bush occupied the Vice Presidency
when President Reagan called these heroes 'the moral equivalents of the Founding
Fathers.' Hollywood agreed. They filmed Rambo 3: Afghani Muslims were the good guys.
Now, 13 years later, in the time of Son Bush, they are the worst of the bad guys.
Henry Kissinger was one of the first to react to the recent tragedy. "Those
who provide support, financing, and inspiration to terrorists are as guilty as the
terrorists themselves," he intoned, words that Son Bush would repeat hours later.
If that's how it is, the urgent need right now is to bomb Kissinger. He is guilty
of many more crimes than bin Laden or any terrorist in the world. And in many more
countries. He provided 'support, financing, and inspiration" to state terror
in Indonesia, Cambodia, Iran, South Africa, Bangladesh, and all the South American
countries that suffered the dirty war of Plan Condor.
On September 11 1973, exactly 28 years before the fires of last week, the Presidential
Palace in Chile was stormed. Kissinger had written the epitaph of Allende and Chilean
democracy long before when he commented on the results of the elections: "I
don't see why we have to stand by and watch a country go communist because of the
irresponsibility of its own people."
A contempt for the people is one of many things shared by state and private terror.
For example, the ETA, an organization that kills people in the name of independence
in Basque Country, says through one of its spokespeople: 'Rights have nothing to
do with majorities or minorities.'
There is much common ground between low- and high- tech terrorism, between the terrorism
of religious fanatics and that of market fanatics, that of the hopeless and that
of the powerful, that of the psychopath on the loose and that of the cold-blooded
uniformed professional. They all share the disrespect for human life: the killers
of the 5500 citizens under the Twin Towers that fell like castles of dry sand-- and
the killers of 200 000 Guatemalans, the majority of whom were indigenous, exterminated
without television or the newspapers of the world paying any attention. Those Guatemalans
were not sacrificed by any Muslim fanatic, but by terrorist squads who received 'support,
financing, and inspiration' from successive US governments.
All these worshipers of death are in agreement as well on the need to reduce social,
cultural, and national differences to military terms. In the name of Good against
Evil, in the name of the One Truth, they resolve everything by killing first and
asking questions later. And by this method, they strengthen the enemy they fight.
It was the atrocities of the Sendero Luminoso that gave President Fujimori the popular
support he sought to unleash a regime of terror and sell Peru for the price of a
banana. It was the atrocities of the US in the Middle East that prepared the ground
for the holy war of terrorism of Allah.
Although the leader of the Civilized World is pushing a new Crusade, Allah is innocent
of the crimes committed in his name. At the end of the day, God did not order the
Holocaust against the followers of Jehovah, nor did Jehovah order the massacres of
Sabrah and Shatila or the expulsion of Palestinians from their land. Aren't Allah,
God and Jehovah are, after all, three names for the same divinity?
A tragedy of errors: nobody knows any more who is who. The smoke of the explosions
forms part of the much larger curtain of smoke that prevents all of us from seeing
clearly. From revenge to revenge, terrorism obliges us to walk to our graves. I saw
a photo, recently published, of graffiti on a wall in NYC: "An eye for an eye
makes the whole world blind."
The spiral of violence creates violence and also confusion: pain, fear, intolerance,
hatred, insanity. In Porto Alegre, at the beginning of this year, Ahmed Ben Bella
warned: 'This system, that has already made mad cows, is making mad people too."
And these mad people, mad from hate, act as the power that created them.
A three year old child, named Luca, told me: "The world doesn't know where its
house is." He was looking at a map. He could have been looking at a reporter.
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