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da "il manifesto" 06 March
2005
My truth
Giuliana Sgrena
I'm still in the dark.
Friday was the most dramatic day of my life. I had been in captivity for many
days. I had just spoken with my captors. It had been days they were telling me I
would be released. I was living in waiting for this moment. They were speaking
about things that only later I would have understood the importance of. They
were speaking about problems "related to transfers."
I learned to understand what was going on by the behavior of my two guards, the
two guards that had me under custody every day. One in particular showed much
attention to my desires. He was incredibly cheerful. To understand exactly what
was going on I provocatively asked him if he was happy because I was going or
because I was staying. I was shocked and happy when for the first time he said,
"I only know that you will go, but I don't know when." To confirm the
fact that something new was happening both of them came into my room and started
comforting me and kidding: "Congratulations they said you are leaving for
Rome." For Rome, that's exactly what they said.
I experienced a strange sensation because that word evoked in me freedom but
also projected in me an immense sense of emptiness. I understood that it was the
most difficult moment of my kidnapping and that if everything I had just
experienced until then was "certain," now a huge vacuum of uncertainty
was opening, one heavier than the other. I changed my clothes. They came back:
"We'll take you and don't give any signals of your presence with us
otherwise the Americans could intervene." It was confirmation that I didn't
want to hear; it was altogether the most happy and most dangerous moment. If we
bumped into someone, meaning American military, there would have been an
exchange of fire. My captors were ready and would have answered. My eyes had to
be covered. I was already getting used to momentary blindness. What was
happening outside? I only knew that it had rained in Baghdad. The car was
proceeding securely in a mud zone. There was a driver plus the two captors. I
immediately heard something I didn't want to hear. A helicopter was hovering at
low altitude right in the area that we had stopped. "Be calm, they will
come and look for you...in 10 minutes they will come looking for." They
spoke in Arabic the whole time, a little bit of French, and a lot in bad
English. Even this time they were speaking that way.
Then they got out of the car. I remained in the condition of immobility and
blindness. My eyes were padded with cotton, and I had sunglasses on. I was
sitting still. I thought what should I do. I start counting the seconds that go
by between now and the next condition, that of liberty? I had just started
mentally counting when a friendly voice came to my ears "Giuliana, Giuliana.
I am Nicola, don't worry I spoke to Gabriele Polo (editor in chief of Il
Manifesto). Stay calm. You are free." They made me take my cotton bandage
off, and the dark glasses. I felt relieved, not for what was happening and I
couldn't understand but for the words of this "Nicola." He kept on
talking and talking, you couldn't contain him, an avalanche of friendly phrases
and jokes. I finally felt an almost physical consolation, warmth that I had
forgotten for some time.
The car kept on the road, going under an underpass full of puddles and almost
losing control to avoid them. We all incredibly laughed. It was liberating.
Losing control of the car in a street full of water in Baghdad and maybe wind up
in a bad car accident after all I had been through would really be a tale I
would not be able to tell. Nicola Calipari sat next to me. The driver twice
called the embassy and in Italy that we were heading towards the airport that I
knew was heavily patrolled by U.S. troops. They told me that we were less than a
kilometer away...when...I only remember fire. At that point, a rain of fire and
bullets hit us, shutting up forever the cheerful voices of a few minutes
earlier.
The driver started yelling that we were Italians. "We are Italians, we are
Italians." Nicola Calipari threw himself on me to protect me and
immediately, I repeat, immediately I heard his last breath as he was dying on
me. I must have felt physical pain. I didn't know why. But then I realized my
mind went immediately to the things the captors had told me. They declared that
they were committed to the fullest to freeing me but I had to be careful,
"the Americans don't want you to go back." Then when they had told me
I considered those words superfluous and ideological. At that moment they risked
acquiring the flavor of the bitterest of truths, at this time I cannot tell you
the rest.
This was the most dramatic day. But the months that I spent in captivity
probably changed forever my existence. One month alone with myself, prisoner of
my profound certainties. Every hour was an impious verification of my work,
sometimes they made fun of me, and they even stretch as far as asking why I
wanted to leave, asking me stay. They insisted on personal relationships. It was
them that made me think of the priorities that too often we cast aside. They
were pointing to family. "Ask your husband for help," they would say.
And I also said in the first video that I think you all saw, "My life has
changed." As Iraqi engineer Ra'ad Ali Abdulaziz of the organization A
Bridge For [Baghdad], who had been kidnapped with the two Simones had told me
"my life is not the same anymore." I didn't understand. Now I know
what he meant. Because I experienced the harshness of truth, it's difficult
proposition (of truth) and the fragility of those who attempt it.
In the first days of my kidnapping I did not shed a tear. I was simply furious.
I would say in the face of my captors: "But why do you kidnap me, I'm
against the war." And at that point they would start a ferocious dialogue.
"Yes because you go speak to the people, we would never kidnap a journalist
that remains closed in a hotel and because the fact that you say you're against
the war could be a decoy." And I would answer almost to provoke them:
"It's easy to kidnap a weak woman like me, why don't you try with the
American military." I insisted on the fact that they could not ask the
Italian government to withdraw the troops. Their political go-between could not
be the government but the Italian people, who were and are against the war.
It was a month on a see-saw shifting between strong hope and moments of great
depression. Like when it was a first Sunday after the Friday they kidnapped me,
in the house in Baghdad where I was kept, and on top of which was a satellite
dish they showed me the Euronews Newscast. There I saw a huge picture of me
hanging from Rome City Hall. I felt relieved. Right after though the claim by
the Jihad that announced my execution if Italy did not withdraw the troops
arrived. I was terrified. But I immediately felt reassured that it wasn't them.
I didn't have to believe these announcements, they were "provocative."
Often I asked the captor that from his face I could identify a good disposition
but whom like his colleagues resembled a soldier: "Tell me the truth. Do
you want to kill me?" Although many times there have been windows of
communications with them. "Come watch a movie on TV" they would say
while a Wahabi roamed around the house and took care of me. The captors seemed
to me a very religious group, in continuous prayer on the Koran. But Friday, at
the time of the release, the one that looked the most religious and who woke up
every morning at 5 a.m. to pray incredibly congratulated me shaking my hand, a
behavior unusual for an Islamic fundamentalist -- and he would add "if you
behave yourself you will leave immediately." Then an almost funny incident.
One of the two captors came to me surprised both because the TV was showing big
posters of me in European cities and also for Totti. Yes Totti. He declared he
was a fan of the Roma soccer team and he was shocked that his favorite player
went to play with the writing "Liberate Giuliana" on his T-shirt.
I lived in an enclave in which I had no more certainties. I found myself
profoundly weak. I failed in my certainties; I said that we had to tell about
that dirty war. And I found myself in the alternative either to stay in the
hotel and wait or to end up kidnapped because of my work. We don't want anyone
else anymore. The kidnappers would tell me. But I wanted to tell about the
bloodbath in Fallujah from the words of the refugees. And that morning the
refugees, or some of their leaders would not listen to me. I had in front of me
the accurate confirmation of the analysis of what the Iraqi society had become
as a result of the war and they would throw their truth in my face: "We
don't want anybody why didn't you stay in your home. What can this interview do
for us?" The worse collateral effect, the war that kills communication was
falling on me. To me, I who had risked everything, challenging the Italian
government who didn't want journalists to reach Iraq and the Americans who don't
want our work to be witnessed of what really became of that country with the war
and notwithstanding that which they call elections. Now I ask myself. Is their
refusal a failure?
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