In his book Stick
Soldiers, poet and war veteran Hugh Martin brings a solemn vividness to war
in Iraq. One of the poems that particularly stood out to me was the titular “Stick
Soldiers.” At Christmas, the soldiers are given cards drawn by American
schoolchildren. The cards are cheerful, colored in crayon, and depict common
Christmas iconography. Martin mentions one, however, that is decidedly less
jubilant: a crude crayon drawing of an American soldier hurling a bomb at three
“Irakis.” This image particularly affects me because this war occurred when I
was around the ages of the schoolchildren Martin is writing about. I remember
hearing about the war as a child, not understanding anything except for pointed
hostility towards “Irakis.” Of course, I emulated this hostility that
surrounded me with absolutely no grasp on what it all really meant. I
obliviously spouted hateful comments about America’s supposed foes, and at one
point in time I distinctly remember wondering why President Bush didn’t just
nuke the country into oblivion. Looking back on that time today, I am horrified
that a child could be taught to blindly hate like that, just from growing up in
a wartime society. What terrifies me even more is that I know I was not the
only child to pick up on this mindless animosity, and I also know that not all
of those children eventually grew out of it. Martin shows that this wartime
molding of children is not a purely American phenomenon, as he talks about
finding chalk pictures drawn by Iraqi children of an American soldier with an
RPG aimed at his head. This, Martin says, is what the Iraqi children wanted for
Christmas.
Another poem that stood out to me was the “First Engagement”
poem. In this poem, some American soldiers shoot down a strange looking vehicle
only to find that its occupants were not actually threats. Martin showcases the
fear that the soldiers felt in the hostile environment: “All you know: an hour
ago, three mortars fell from the sky for you, this vehicle with sparks is for
you.” Fear can make a man do strange and terrible things, particularly in war,
and this poem beautifully illustrates one such occasion.
Hmm. I never thought to think about Stick in that way. I personally don't remember anyone around me showing extreme hatred towards Iraq, just the a lot of anger towards the people that blew up the Twin Towers. However, I do remember being afraid of a man wearing a turban, but I guess that fear came from what was on T.V. This just shows how the government or any authority figure can manipulate people to serve personal goals. The more a group of people is seen as something to be feared or upset by the easier it is to see them as a problem.
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