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Our country will not find peace until we take responsibility for our wars

Guilt, shame, slaughter without purpose, alienation from homeland and life itself—this was the legacy that Günter passed on to his son Walt from his World War II combat service in Hitler’s Wehrmacht. Walt, “the only child born in freedom,” was born in the United States shortly after his parents emigrated here from Germany. Growing up in the Cold War 1950s, Walt longed to be an all-American boy, but was always the Indian to his friends’ cowboys and the “Kraut” to their G.I. Joes.

When he turned 18, Walt enlisted and volunteered for Vietnam. “I wanted to finally be one of the good guys,” Walt said. “Service in the American military in a righteous cause would expunge my family’s past and earn our place in society.” He could not know that, instead, he would return with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), feeling less than ever like “one of the good guys.”

The Warrior’s Path

Our troops do not enlist because they want to destroy or kill. No matter the political climate, most troops seek to serve traditional warrior values: to protect the country they love, its ideals, and especially their families, communities, and each other. If they must kill or be killed, they need transcendent reasons to do so. Throughout history, the only reason for fighting that has survived moral scrutiny is a direct attack with real, immediate threat to one’s people. PTSD is, in part, the tortured conscience of good people who did their best under conditions that would dehumanize anyone.

Almost all cultures, past and present, have had warriors. They have also had complex stories and rituals to help them recover from combat and guide them through the life cycle. The occurrence of warriors is so universal that depth psychologists understand Warrior to be one of our foundational psycho-spiritual archetypes.

In traditional cultures, boys and men studied a “warrior’s path.” In these societies a warrior was not the same as a soldier; not merely a member of a huge, anonymous military institution used for the violent execution of political ends. Rather, warrior was one of the foundational roles that kept societies whole and strong. Warriors were fundamentally protectors, not destroyers.

People respond to the same call today. Michael, a Marine who served in Afghanistan, proudly declares that at age 18 he was the first in his state to enlist after 9/11. Nick, an army officer who served in Iraq, enlisted because of a lifelong desire “to be like Hector defending the gates of Troy.”

Warriorhood, however, is not so valued or nurtured in modern society. “Warrior” is not even a recognized social class. A veteran, especially one with disabilities, appears to many, and sometimes to him or herself, as a failure in terms of normal civilian identity. Michael fears that, as an experienced combat veteran, the only place on the planet he now fits is in the French Foreign Legion.

The Echoes of War

War abroad fosters war at home. When we go to war, we inevitably bring its violence and horror back to our homes and streets. We cannot help it.

Rather than feeling that he had restored his family’s honor, Walt spent years ravaged by nightmares, homeless, abusing drugs and alcohol, and sitting with a shotgun in his mouth trying to find the will to end it all. He married and had children, then divorced and neglected his kids. He could not keep a job. He could not come home.

War echoes down the generations. Known or hidden, we all carry the wounds of war. Walt was wounded by his father’s history. His children were wounded by his.

When a veteran has PTSD, his or her entire family and community are inevitably affected. The individual symptoms of PTSD—sleep disturbances, substance abuse, depression, and problems with intimacy, employment and authority—are the same symptoms that are epidemic in our society. When we take a close and unprotected look, we see: We are a nation and a planet of wounded warriors, their offspring, and their neighbors.

Cleansing the Warrior

War poisons the spirit, and warriors return tainted. This is why, among Native American, Zulu, Buddhist, ancient Israeli, and other traditional cultures, returning warriors were put through significant rituals of purification before re-entering their families and communities. Traditional cultures recognized that unpurified warriors could, in fact, be dangerous. The absence of these rituals in modern society helps explain why suicide, homicide, and other destructive acts are common among veterans.

In Viet Nam Walt had exhumed bodies of enemy dead from mass graves and reburied them. He felt like he had dirtied and damaged his soul. Nick declared that, though he had wished to be a great champion of his people, “all they gave me was this dirty stinking little Iraq War.”

In traditional cultures, warrior cleansing was often guided by shamans, and particular shamans presided over “warrior medicine.” Among his many offices and honors, for example, Sitting Bull served as Medicine Chief of the Hunkpapa Warrior Society, responsible for overseeing the spiritual lives and well-being of the society’s warriors. Sitting Bull considered this to be the most important of all the offices he held.

Walt entered individual and group psychotherapy for combat veterans. It helped to tell his stories, have his feelings and losses confirmed by other vets, and receive honor as part of a brotherhood. But he was in search of more cleansing, blessing, and soul healing than traditional therapy could provide. He eventually partnered with a Native American woman. He studied her culture, and participated in sweat lodges and other traditional rituals. He attended a Pow Wow where he was honored as a returned warrior. He was accepted by the Native community far more than he had been by mainstream America.

I annually lead healing journeys back to Viet Nam, and there, too, vets report feeling more welcomed and honored by their former foes than they have ever felt at home.

A Double Wound

Sitting Bull and his warriors, and other bands from innumerable traditional cultures, were never plagued with self-doubt about the value of their mission, as many of our soldiers are today. In order to do battle with a whole heart, the danger and threat to one’s home must be real, and the people must experience it as immediate and about to threaten their total existence; there must be no alternative. A people and their warriors must be in unity.

The effect of that unity shows in Nguyen Van Tam, known as Mr. Tiger, a robust, friendly, and serene man of 87 living in Viet Nam’s Mekong Delta. He is a veteran of wars against the Japanese, French, and Americans. Though at war for a quarter century, he has no disturbing symptoms. “We Vietnamese,” he says, “do not have PTSD because we never hated Americans. We only fought to protect our families and homes from invaders.”

When, to the contrary, wars are based on false pretenses, a moral vacuum results. As Martin Luther King Jr. observed, troops then experience “not simply the brutalizing process that goes on in any war,” but also “cynicism to the process of death, for our troops must know after a short time that none of the things we are fighting for are really involved.”

Walt explained, “I didn’t realize until it was too late that I was just like my father—a good man fighting on the wrong side for the wrong cause.” Moral trauma is at the core of PTSD. An idealistic and sincere young soldier discovering that he is in fact fighting for false or distorted political, economic, or historical agendas can experience deeper and more complicated psychic wounds than those traditional warriors experienced.

The severity and extent to which veterans suffer with Post-traumatic Stress Disorder is a direct response to our culture’s blindness about war’s true cost. PTSD is the expression of the anguish, dislocation, and rage of the self as it attempts to cope with its loss of innocence, reformulate a new personal identity and cultural role, and awaken from massive denial. Veterans with PTSD are people whose belief systems have been shattered. We can better understand PTSD as an identity disorder and soul wound rather than a stress and anxiety disorder, as it is presently classified. War dehumanizes anyone it touches, but especially a veteran who questions the cause he served.

Most conventional therapies teach healers to avoid talk of morality. But war is inherently a moral enterprise and veterans in search of healing are on a profound moral journey. Healers and communities must walk with them. As a society, we must honor those wounds in ways that recognize their depth and degree of psychic suffering.

Lifting the Burden

Warriors in traditional societies served the need for protection, and all that was done was done in the tribe’s name. They had rituals transferring responsibility for actions during warfare from veterans to the entire culture. Ultimately leaders, not ordinary troops, were held responsible for the results of battle and for the deaths that occurred.

Our veterans cannot heal unless society accepts responsibility for its war making. To the veteran, our leaders and people must say, “You did this in our name, because you were subject to our orders, and because we put you in untenable and even atrocity-producing situations. We lift the burden of your actions from you and take it onto our shoulders. We are responsible for you, for what you did, and for the consequences.”

Walt received this acceptance from Native American communities. In my seven trips to Viet Nam, and with every veteran and civilian I have met who has visited Viet Nam since the war, the Vietnamese people have offered such acceptance and forgiveness to any American returning to the country to reconcile. In contrast, since Afghanistan, Michael says, “I still love America, but America does not love me.”

Without this transfer of responsibility, the veteran carries war’s secret grief and guilt for us all. Too many veterans collapse into a silent suffering disability and thus serve as our broken scapegoats while the rest of us proceed with “business as usual.” In contrast, during my healing retreats, veterans tell their stories, civilians speak of their lost loved ones, and everyone shares their damaged values and broken dreams. Finally, our vets enter the center of our circle and civilians pledge to accept responsibility for any harm done in their name and to help carry the veterans’ stories for the rest of their lives. By sharing this burden we become a community united in service to war-healing.

Healing for All

We wish, as the gospel song says, “to study war no more.” But scholars count over 14,600 wars in the last 5,600 years of recorded history. War is so epidemic in its occurrence, devastating in its impact, and lasting in its aftermath, that we must study it and tend to it and treat it. If we are to return war to its proper place as a last defense when absolutely necessary, we must heal the wounds of our soldiers and communities. We cannot achieve peace-making without first achieving true and comprehensive war-healing.

Walt finally put away his shotgun and quit drinking. He enjoyed a successful relationship with his new partner and was adopted by her tribe and its warrior society. He took up a spiritual path that restored his belief in the goodness of life and order of the universe. He volunteered with more disabled veterans, visiting the infirm at his regional V.A. hospital and helping create annual veteran reunions. Both in therapy and beyond, we created rituals that allowed this soldier to find healing. The Native American and veteran communities helped support and bring this warrior’s wandering spirit home. In turn, Walt became a devoted advocate for other veterans more wounded than he. The disabled veteran became an elder warrior.

But war completed its damage. Only in his 50s, Walt died of Agent Orange-related cancer last year.

We cannot heal from war without involving the entire community and society, and without invoking transpersonal help. We must develop modern rituals that acknowledge the additional wounds caused by war fought for non-defense reasons. Much as we might disagree with a war, our rituals must include purification, public storytelling, and community acceptance of responsibility for what the soldier has done.

These war-healing rituals and practices serve us all. They bring home to us the need to break the cycles of war-making and violence both within the individual soldier and within the society. When we return to our veterans their silenced voices, when we accept our true responsibility as individuals and communities, we will no longer see war as an adventure or a legitimate tool of power politics. Then, perhaps, we may see that all over our country and world, we share the same legacy of war-wounding. When we join together to address those wounds wherever they appear, we will finally “study war no more.”

I asked Walt’s permission to tell his story during our farewell visit in the hospital where he was dying of Agent Orange cancers. He was surprised at first, but finally said, “I was afraid my life was worthless. But please tell my story. Please make it mean something. Maybe it can help some other poor souls avoid my fate.”

Edward Tick wrote this article as part of A Just Foreign Policy, the Summer 2008 issue of YES! Magazine. Edward is author of War and the Soul and three other books. He has worked with veterans for three decades and is director and senior psychotherapist of Soldier’s Heart: Veteran’s Safe Return Initiatives.

anthony

Posted by anthony
Anthony Lappé is GNN's Executive Editor. He's written for The New York Times, Details, New York, Paper, The Fader and Vice, among many others. He has worked as a producer for MTV and Fuse. He is the co-author of GNN's True Lies and the producer of their Iraq doc,...

Disclaimer: Statements and opinions expressed in articles published on this site are those of the authors and not of the staff or editors of GNN, unless otherwise stated.

RECENT COMMENTS

anthony @ 05/26/08 11:09:04

“Our country will not find peace until we take responsibility for our wars”

I don’t believe in Legacies. They are just ways of making some-one else pay a debt for something you did or, worse, getting punished for something you opposed and got got beat-up, peppered sprayed and tazered for. I have been threatened by “American Fascist” and, in fact, been physically beaten up for opposing this war. I have seen countless hours of video showing the public torture of American citizens (Protestors) opposed to this war by police using Pepper Spray in quite inventive ways and tazers used in ways that violate the instructions giving on use of this weapon. Yes, I said weapon. A large amount of the money appropriated for this war was awarded to companies indirectly owned by these people who illegally entered our military in to this war. In summation of previous words: they payed themselves for getting our country in trouble. That’s where most of the tax dollars went. Just like the Republicans payed them selves with large amounts of U.S. Tax dollars to prosecute Bill Clinton for being naughty in the Oval Office. Every one involved with this Kabuki (including Bill) knew it would add up to nothing in the end. I would not be amazed that all these creeps sat in a bar, drank together and had a good laugh after the case was over. I would prefer that the person that introduced the fine piece of literature realize we didn’t even vote these criminals into office. So trying to condemn us for not voting them into office is ridiculous. And blaming the citizens of this country for not revolting is basically like condemning us for not starting a bloody civil war against a government that outguns us. They are evening passing laws to disarm us and they, Democrats and Republicans, have just very recently repealed “Posse Comitatus”. I would highly suggest that you look these words up. When this War is supposedly over, the atrocities will not be over in our own country until these war criminals are arrested and tried in the world court and all their corporate accounts stuffed with our tax dollars are raided and the money is used to pay out our nations debts. But I don’t see that coming because, again, we are outgunned.

I know guys like Walt and I sympathize with them but please forgive me if I don’t feel as romantic about the warrior thing as you do but the people and warriors of my country have just been bent over and shamelessly screwed. It’s not over with at all.

P.S. I’m a Vet.

Rosebud @ 05/26/08 11:49:42

Also concerning children wanting to be soldiers and cops. I really believe that the average child that says “I want to be a soldier or a cop when I grow-up” is not thinking of Patriotism at all. Look at the video games that American children are playing at this very moment (right now!). Also, maybe we should change the name of the History Channel to the War Channel or maybe the Hitler Channel since it seems to be nothing more than a Tribute to the War that Adolph Hitler and Company started. I really believe they are saying “When I grow-up, I want to wear a uniform (or some other type of gang colors), get a gun and shoot some-one”.

To put this into a square real-life perspective: Almost every time a person in my area gets shot by a so-called “Gangster”, you can put money down on it as being a fact that the little sweetheart had just newly acquired the weapon and was itching to pull the trigger. Ahhh!! Feels like a brand new car. That is definitely Human nature.

The Humanist Manifest I, forged mainly by John Dewey (Father of Modern Education) in 1933, went on the presupposition that man was general good. The Humanist Manifesto II was written by Paul Kurtz and Edwin H. Wilson in 1973 and the assumption was changed, in light of WWII, from man being generally good to man having the ability to be good. Btw, I seem to remember, on the 1st publication back in the 70’s, that Isaac Asimov was also involved. This is my evidence of the state of human nature.

Good luck in your sincere search for truth.

Rosebud @ 05/26/08 13:00:35

Got turned on to both Yes! and Ode at the same time some years back by this cat who had a couple of Mark Ryden originals hanging on his walls, which I remember thinking was a bit paradoxical at the time. You should seek permission to republish more content from sources like that.

verisimilar @ 05/26/08 13:10:14

Our troops do not enlist because they want to destroy or kill.

The author clearly knows nothing nor many soldiers and is talking out his self-affirming hippy dippy butt.

Those Roman legionaries were really great people who needed out support… none of them thought they would be raping, looting, or pillaging… it just happened

Those soldiers who enlist in the Corp., or go for flight or sniper or S.E.A.L. or Ranger training… they know what they are doing… and anyone who has been through basic knows what is about by week six…

Kill, kill… Hu Rah (One of 107? names for Allah in arabic and of course Ra, amen ra, the God of our masters… Amen)

johnnycivil @ 05/26/08 15:18:04

Yes!, where I have contributed, sent this along to me. It’s a great magazine, which I urge everyone to subscribe to.

anthony @ 05/26/08 21:20:07

Those Roman legionaries were really great people who needed out support… none of them thought they would be raping, looting, or pillaging… it just happened

I agree with you Johnny. War can put young ones into scenarios they thought they would never be part of. The problem is when walk upon the situation it all looks surreal so you don’t know immediately how to act or react when one of you own group members decides to do the unthinkable.

——————————————————————————
Verisimilar, Thanks for the turn-on to Mark Ryden. Great stuff.
——————————————————————————
Anthony, Which Magazine? Yes! or Ode? :)

Rosebud @ 05/27/08 01:48:30

One veteran heals through a battlefield keepsake

This story originally aired Dateline NBC on May 25, 2008. It deals with PTSD and veterans from Vietnam to Iraq.

Ted @ 05/27/08 10:43:20

Our troops do not enlist because they want to destroy or kill.

That is not true. Just watch to Kristofer Goldsmith’s testimony at Winter Soldier

Ted @ 05/27/08 10:46:56

Ode is great too

anthony @ 05/27/08 13:31:09

“Our country will not find peace until we take responsibility for our wars”

Amerikans should worry more about the target on their backs than “finding” peace.
Peace will find YOU, if you take responsibility for your conquistidorial dominations. Founded on personal independences, my ass.

Bring back/sharpen up the guillotines. What worked on the aristocrats, can Shirley work on bureaucrats. Off with their frickin’ heads, I say! Cull the Herd! Do it Now.

HughMunBeane @ 05/27/08 16:01:14

The Goode book says to “forgive and forget”, but I keep a list, none the less. I’m all too tired of wankers who use apologies and “say yer sorrys” as a licence to continue bad behaviour.

HughMunBeane @ 05/27/08 16:13:22

It’s a sad comment on who controls you, when soldiering is a viable option to homelessness. You’ll probably notice that it’s only an interim solution, at best.

HughMunBeane @ 05/27/08 16:17:37
johnnycivil @ 05/27/08 21:47:47

Thanks, Anthony. I’ll check out Ode.

Rosebud @ 05/30/08 13:15:37

As a vet I believe there is a correlation between PTSD and fighting in an unjust war. Years back while having a three months stay in a VA hospital I spoke with many Vietnam era vets (my era) and WWll vets. I found the WWll vets to be much sounder emotionally than the Vietnam vets. There was less anger and alienation on their part. The WWll vets all felt like it was a just and noble cause. I would like to see a study of the two groups. Further, WWll vets did have a cleansing when they came home. My father told me of the respect and love they received by their community upon returning. When I returned from the war in 1970 I merely finished my rotation without any attention or respect. It was a bizarre feeling going from, in 48 hours, the battlefield to my suburban home back in the states.

shades @ 06/08/08 00:36:42

Welcome home shades. Hope everything works out for you in the job sector.

Rosebud @ 06/11/08 14:57:34
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