Having been made aware of Omran and hundreds of others like him through
a remarkable
story in the Washington Post, the Middle East Children's Alliance and Voices
in the
Wilderness joined forces to make sure young Omran did not die in vain.
They purchased a
school bus and transformed it into a forty foot long rolling billboard
and classroom about the
siege of Iraq. Complete with phone, computer, audio visual aids, and thousands
of printed
handouts, the "Remembering Omran" bus tour took to the road with the fervor
of traveling
evangelists.
From October 7 until December 1, the campaign worked its way up the west
coast making
over fifty stops at universities, colleges, seminaries, high schools, churches,
and even an
elementary school. Thanks to the growing network of people horrified by
reports of over 5000
children under the age of five being killed each month by sanctions, classes
were taught,
rallies staged, sermons preached, interviews given, and donations collected
to send the bus
along on its journey of compassion. From San Diego to Vancouver, B.C. the
nearly
universal response to the story was, "We had no idea. What can we do to
help?"
Staffed by a handful of converts who have traveled to the cradle of civilization
on numerous
occasions bringing medicine, toys, and school supplies to the children
of Iraq, the bus has
become a center of resistance to a policy that finds the United States
increasingly
marginalized on this issue. In recent months, dozens of nations have flown
into a reopened
Baghdad airport with everything from medicine and pencils to soccer teams
and artists. The
visiting prime minister of Iran , which fought a devastating war with its
neighbor to the west
during the 1980,'s declared sanctions "broken" upon his arrival in Baghdad.
In November, an international trade fair brought over 1800 representatives
from forty-five
nations all bent on reestablishing ties with Iraq. A report in the Times
(U.K.)from November
20 speaks of how, "Britain has extended an olive branch to President Saddam
Hussein" in a
move that "could cause serious friction with the United States" over sanctions
policy.
Through bellicose rhetoric and non-diplomacy, the US has found itself in
the age old
position of being stuck in a policy that is not working because there is
no way to exit and
save face at the same time. The cries of the Iraqi people are not falling
on deaf ears.
In the meantime, a chorus of voices crying in the wilderness plan to roll
on across the "one"
nation under God, carrying a ragtag collection of peacemakers giving voice
to Omran and
the hundreds of thousands of others silenced since the siege of Iraq began
ten years ago.
While the sole remaining superpower waits for its king to be crowned, shepherds,
carpenters, and the rest of the meek, are undeterred in their preparations
to inherit the
earth, just as they were two thousand years ago, under desert skies, awaiting
the
unexpected with joy in their hearts.
Mike Miles has gone to Iraq twice with Voices in the Wilderness and has
most recently
spent four weeks traveling 4000 miles with the Omran Bus Tour. The bus
is continuing the
tour after a brief stop at the Inauguration in Washington DC.