
When the terrorist attack on the World Trade Center killed 2977 American civilians and injured more than 6000, I was among many around the world who happened to watch the horrors of initial Live pictures on television. Nine years since, 9/11 has become a signpost that marks coming of an era where we are reminded every day that we live in a “Post 9/11 World”. But what is the significance of 9/11? Does the history of 9/11 stretch only as far as the ruins of Ground Zero and the lives of the victims and the mourning families and friends they left behind? Well, that’s what we would believe or should I say “are expected to believe”. Gone are the days when might was the power. Power, today is defined by what it chooses to illuminate and what it hides in the cold dark corners of the history that has seen rise of an unparalleled global Superpower in the last six decades. But the history of September goes further.
It was a fateful day in September of 1493, when Columbus led his army of soldiers and priests from Europe to colonize the New World that he had discovered in his first voyage. Does anybody ask the Native Americans if the 500 Septembers have healed the scarred memories of millions of unaccounted deaths of their forefathers? Again the might of the history makers casually chooses to limit the count to “countless”. But the human history had seen bloody Septembers before. It must have been several long Septembers of deaths and starvation for the Carthaginians (Modern Tunisia) after the mighty Roman Empire declared Third Punic war in Africa (150 BC-146 BC). After burning and plundering Carthage for more than two weeks, the surviving population was taken as slaves and thus expanded the might y white Europe in “the Dark Continent”. Centuries later, the September of 1857 saw a similar carnage in India. The demands of the rebelling Indian soldiers were turned down on August 30 by the colonial British and hence began the brutal suppression of all rebelling voices. Delhi was completely looted and plundered by the East India Company’s troops and similar carnage was orchestrated by the British in Awadh,Kanpur and Jhansi. It’s been more than 150 Septembers and no official and authentic records of the casualties are available. No annual memorials are held for the faceless and nameless thousands who died that September. But those were centuries gone by and 21st century does not wish to stand accountable for the civilizations lost or cultures uprooted; for 21st century is the century of one civilization, the Globalization and of one culture the liberal democracy. The parts of this global village that are still living in denial of this reality are being woken up to them Iraq and Afghanistan are only the latest. From Latin America to Africa and East Asia to Central Asia and the Middle East, the campaign of “Freedom and Democracy” has shaped the “ New World Order” that has been an utterance without much elaboration. From George Bush Senior and Henry Kissinger to George Bush Junior and Donald Rumsfeld; the declaration of the New World Order gives us indication of what it means without us knowing what it amounts to or what is of consequence. The power to define it is indeed of as much significance as the power to limit the understanding of it.
When Samuel Huntington proposed his Clash of the Civilization theory in 1992, what he did was that he forecasted what the coming September holds for humanity. What he chose not do was that he did not sum up the burdens of past Septembers which would lead to that clash. There is little room for disagreement that the unforgettable September of 1923 when the British Mandate came into effect in Palestine was the direct result of the Balfour declaration of 1917 in which the British had promised the Zionists of a homeland in Palestine. This was much before the plight of the Jews began under Nazism. Winston Churchill had brought out a White Paper claiming that it was an “….exaggerated interpretations of the meaning of the [Balfour] Declaration favoring the establishment of a Jewish National Home in Palestine, made on behalf of His Majesty's Government on 2 November 1917”; a white lie that only served to convince the League of Nation to award the Palestinian mandate to the British. Two and half decade later, the British fulfilled their promise as the State of Palestine was declared in 1948. Tens of thousands of Palestinians have been killed in direct and indirect combat operations since 1948 and millions have been displaced. There is no official and authentic data of the casualties and refugees. According to B’tselem, the Israeli Information Centre for Human Rights; around 1491 Palestinians were killed by Israeli Defense Force (IDF) and Israeli civilians in the first Intifada from 1987-2000 of which 304 were children. But since September 2000, 6404 Palestinians have lost their lives and ten years on the terror of September has yet to cease in Palestine.
The September still traumatizes Latin America when they recall Chile’s 1973 military coup of General Pinochet under whose regime 40,000 were arrested at least 3,197 people were killed and 29,000 tortured, says a Chilean government’s data testified by over 30,000 witness. From the recently declassified US government documents related to the Coup, after Salvador Allande won the election in September 1970, the Nixon government passed National Security Council’s decision in its Memorandum 93 signed by Henry Kissinger, the then National Security Adviser and the US Secretary of the State. The document titled “Policy towards Chile” called for “maximizing pressure on the Chilean government to it from doing things that goes against American Interests in Chile” and “to convey the other Latin American governments that US opposes the communist state in Chile which might influence other Latin American States to adopt similar posture”. Kissinger has publicly summed up his policy saying "I don’t see why we need to stand by and watch a country go communist due to the irresponsibility of its own people. The issues are much too important for the Chilean voters to be left to decide for themselves." Salvador Allande was found dead in his palace after the coup. Military government said he committed suicide and thus materialized American policy on Chile. The campaign for promoting American “Freedom and Democracy” in Latin America has continued to this day with several failed and exposed Coup attempts on countries like Cuba and Venezuela which have declared their own path to progress.
The last decade of the 20th century will be remembered for its yet another fateful September 11 when George Herbert Walker Bush declared in Joint Session of US congress "[The war in Iraq is] a rare opportunity to move toward an historic period of cooperation. Out of these troubled times...a new world order can emerge." When Saddam used chemical weapons against the Iranians with American aid money, the whole world had stood silent including the US. But the same Saddam was declared threat to humanity when his rhetorics against western imperialism began to echo in the Arab world. By putting conditions like Israel’s withdrawal from occupied territories as a precondition to his withdrawal from Kuwait, Saddam was getting too much of Arab world’s attention for President Bush’s liking. Besides, the Gulf region was lifeline for the US and with American economy totally dependent on oil from the region, Bush administration decided that threat of Saddam had to be eliminated before it became detrimental to American interests. But Saddam survived the father’s regime only to be brought down by his son as a first trophy in his “War on Terror”, the war that promised to bring “freedom and democracy” to the Iraqis but on September 1 2010 after the last American combat troops had left, Iraq woke up to everything but “Freedom and Democracy”.
Septembers have gone by but wars continue to be wedged and the number of graves grow . If at all, the clash of the civilization has been brought home to our communities and to our locality. Wars are being fought in our streets, temples, churches and mosques. Stabbing of the Muslim Cab driver and Florida pastor’s threat to burn copies of Quran over construction of an Islamic center 2 blocks away from Ground Zero are not just two isolated incidents. The rise in random incidences such as these also point towards the direction we are heading, an overall rise in intolerance in the society. And this is something we should worry more about. Recently, there has been enormous pressure put on North Korea and Iran to release American citizens who had managed to travel thousands of miles to “accidentally” cross into their territory while hundreds of innocent Muslims including children who were simply picked off their own streets, airports, and from other countries were tortured, humiliated and kept in inhuman conditions for several years in Guantanamo Bay and Abu Gharib. Who will account for the Septembers lost for the likes of Muhammad Jawad a 12 year old boy picked off his streets in Afghanistan, detained and tortured illegally for 6 years at Guantanamo Bay? Who will pay for the rape and molestation of innocent Iraqi women and children whose pictures have been withheld by President Obama from being made public stating “These pictures show torture, abuse, rape and every indecency.” ? Is there any imaginable compensation for the lives lost, innocence betrayed and faith maimed? Until when will the white world look down upon Black, Brown and Yellow or bearded faces with suspicion? When will their discomfort with the Red and the Green flags end? When will they learn that peace, democracy and freedom are relative terms that mean different thing to different people, that each society has its own ways of appreciating and appropriating them? How many September will it take for the world to accept that there are hundreds and thousands of unmarked graves beyond Ground Zero? Shreds of bleeding humanity still hinges on a faint hope as I sing to the tune of Greenday’s “Wake me up when September ends”.