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Memorial Day: Counting Lives Lost to Stop Inflicting Grief upon Others

by Sharat G. Lin Tuesday, May. 26, 2009 at 9:39 PM
San José

Memorial Day honors war dead. Unlike most U.S. war memorials, a stunning exhibit at De Anza College dramatizes not only American lives lost in the war in Iraq, but Iraqi lives lost as well. There is one figure for each confirmed fatality. But the ratio of 1:22 American to Iraqi deaths is extremely conservative.

Memorial Day: Counti...
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While Americans pay homage to U.S. soldiers who have sacrified their lives in war, it remains difficult to conceptualize the true meaning of the vast numbers who have died. Still more rare is an attempt to place American war fatalities in the context of all deaths in a particular war. Even antiwar memorials tend to omit or minimize representations of non-American war dead.

“Counting Lives Lost: Making Tangible an Abstract Measure of Grief” is an art exhibit currently on display in the main quad of De Anza College in Cupertino. It consists of nearly 99,000 independent clay figures lined up in rows – one row of white figures each bearing a folded star-and-stripes flag followed by 22 unpainted figures representing Iraqi fatalities officially acknowledged by the Iraq government. Unofficial estimates range from hundreds of thousands to over a million.

The artist, Kathleen Crocetti, admits that the ratio of 1:22 is very conservative, since the true number of Iraqis who have died is not known. When the exhibit was first conceived and displayed, the ratio was 1:10. For several years the ratio was held at 1:16 until the beginning of 2009.

Crocetti, whose son is serving in the Middle East, is a member of Blue Star Mothers of America. She is a resident of Watsonville.

On this Memorial Day 2009, according to icasualties.org, an independent website that tracks U.S. and Coalition casualties, the number of U.S. soldiers killed in Iraq has touched 4,300 and the number of U.S. troops killed in Afghanistan has reached 687. Owing presumably to the absence of reliable data, the website does not tally Iraqi and Aghani deaths.

A monumental undertaking, over 300 people had been involved in making clay figures and installing them in sand. At De Anza College, students, faculty, and administrators joined in the labor of aligning the figures within a vast rectangular wooden frame, spending up to 500 people-hours completing it. The figures collectively weigh over 4.5 tons (9000 pounds or 4000 kilograms).

“The aim of this work is to honor those who have died as respectfully as possible while making the growing abstract number visible and tangible,” Crocetti explained. “This memorial is also a call to measure the true cost of war. It is time that we, as a nation, recognize not just our losses, but the losses we have caused.”

“War memorials are usually constructed after the cessation of violence. Honoring those who have died on both sides of the battlefield while the battle continues to rage makes this work political. War is war. This installation is not about how and why we got into this situation, rather how and when we will get out of it.”

Sensing that the U.S. as a nation is still in denial about the casualties of current wars, Crocetti reflected, “We need to start the grieving process now because it is painful and uncomfortable, and the the sooner we start acknowledging our culpability and responsibility, the sooner we will stop inflicting grief upon others.”
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Counting Lives Lost

by Sharat G. Lin Tuesday, May. 26, 2009 at 9:39 PM
San José

Counting Lives Lost...
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A sea of clay figures representing American and Iraqi fatalities in the Iraq War.
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Counting Lives Lost

by Sharat G. Lin Tuesday, May. 26, 2009 at 9:39 PM
San José

Counting Lives Lost...
ll-3.jpg, image/jpeg, 1500x1000

Blocks of clay figures: each American war dead is shadowed by 22 Iraqi figures. The real number of Iraqis is likely much higher.
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Counting Lives Lost

by Sharat G. Lin Tuesday, May. 26, 2009 at 9:39 PM
San José

Counting Lives Lost...
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Clay figures illuminated at night: silent reminders of the human cost of an unnecessary war.
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Eyes Wide Open

by Sharat G. Lin Tuesday, May. 26, 2009 at 9:39 PM
San José

Eyes Wide Open...
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Travelling exhibit by the American Friends Service Committee originally consisted of pairs of boots representing fallen U.S. soldiers. Civilian shoes symbolizing a small fraction of Iraqi civilian deaths were added later. Palo Alto City Hall, May 3, 2008.
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Lafayette War Memorial

by Sharat G. Lin Tuesday, May. 26, 2009 at 9:39 PM
San José

Lafayette War Memori...
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Crosses on a hillside representing the continuously-updated number of U.S. soldiers killed in the Iraq War. Iraqi deaths are not represented.
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Ms

by Barby Ulmer Thursday, May. 28, 2009 at 8:00 PM
odw@magiclink.net 408 379-4431 13004 Paseo Presada

The photos of these moving memorials strikes deeply in the heart.
When will we learn that it is both much more effective and much less
expensive to wage peace than war.
People become sympathetic when they have the food, clothing, shelter and pure water that they need, not when they see their families killed and homes destroyed.
Security comes when people can live together in peace. And peaceful means are the only means toward peace.
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heh

by Lord Locksley Thursday, May. 28, 2009 at 10:47 PM
armigerous@earthlink.net

Next thing you know,Barby will be trying to tell us that all Hitler,Tojo,and Mussolini were trying to do was to make the world safe for peace,love,and little girl gumdrops....but they were just 'misunderstood'...and as a result we had to grind their asses into the dirt and bring democracy to Germany,Japan,and Italy for the first time....but don't confuse her with facts
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don't confuse her with facts

by not a self centered adolescent Thursday, May. 28, 2009 at 11:50 PM

But...but...but...they're the smartest people in the room, and they'll always let you know it! So how can the smartest people on Gaia not have a basic grasp of human nature via their DNA?

Aren't the smartest people on Gaia smart enough to understand that what they babble about would take a major mutation to our DNA, and that even "minor" mutations are more likely to be fatal than not?
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