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The heart of darkness, in one boy’s story, is a human organ eaten raw.
“When you kill a Tutsi, you remove his heart and mix it with special potions, like a medicine,’’ explains Popy Matenda, rather blandly. “Other parts of the body can be eaten too but the heart is special. It gives you the strength of the person you killed, like you are sucking in his spirit. It’s a kind of magic.’’
When we got to their base, they put me in a pigsty for three days with my arms tied behind my back. Every day they would come in and beat me. They wouldn’t give me any food. On the fourth day, a man pointed his gun at me and said, you can either work for us or I can kill you — which do you choose?’’
There was no choice. Like other child soldiers, Jamarie was indoctrinated into the Mai-Mai subculture, trained on weapons and instructed on village-looting. As a rite of passage, he too was given girl slaves for sex. “They were not very good workers. Girls always cry and get sick. Then we’d leave them behind.’’
gripping story of a child’s journey through hell and back.
There may be as many as 300,000 child soldiers, hopped-up on drugs and wielding AK-47s, in more than fifty conflicts around the world. Ishmael Beah used to be one of them. He is one of the first to tell his story in his own words.
In A LONG WAY GONE, Beah, now twenty-six years old, tells a riveting story. At the age of twelve, he fled attacking rebels and wandered a land rendered unrecognizable by violence. By thirteen, he’d been picked up by the government army, and Beah, at heart a gentle boy, found that he was capable of truly terrible acts. Eventually released by the army and sent to a UNICEF rehabilitation center, he struggled to regain his humanity and to reenter the world of civilians, who viewed him with fear and suspicion. This is, at last, a story of redemption and hope.
Originally posted by AccessDenied
How is it that we can both provide foreign aid, and occupy a nation to supposedly fight for it's freedoms, yet allow this to happen?
Who chooses what we make a priority?
Originally posted by ISHAMAGI
reply to post by TruthMagnet
As far as the OP no one in power cares about dying black children they have the lowest value of life. America already raped virtually every resource from Africa, think they care about the ruins? If there isn't large profit to be made no one cares about humanitarian crises.
Originally posted by AccessDenied
The bad policy is that politics over ride basic humanity.
So those deemed not worthy by TPTB, are left by the wayside.
If that is the case than foreign Aid is a freakin' joke.