Hadji Girl
If you want to understand why the war is going so badly in Iraq, it may help to examine the recent reaction to "Hadji Girl," the videotaped song about killing Iraqis by U.S. Marine Corporal Joshua Belile. The song became controversial when the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) discovered it on the internet and objected to its lyrics. "Hadji Girl" tells the story of a soldier "out in the sands of Iraq / And we were under attack":
Then suddenly to my surprise
I looked up and I saw her eyes
And I knew it was love at first sight.And she said…
Dirka Dirka Mohammed Jihad
Sherpa Sherpa Bak Allah
Hadji girl I can’t understand what you’re saying.
The girl says that she "wanted me to meet her family / But I, well, I couldn’t figure out how to say no. / Cause I don’t speak Arabic." They visit her home, a "side shanty" down "an old dirt trail," and as soon as they arrive,
Her brother and her father shouted…
Dirka Dirka Mohammed Jihad
Sherpa Sherpa Bak Allah
They pulled out their AKs so I could see... So I grabbed her little sister and pulled her in front of me.
As the bullets began to fly
The blood sprayed from between her eyes
And then I laughed maniacallyThen I hid behind the TV
And I locked and loaded my M-16
And I blew those little fuckers to eternity.And I said…
Dirka Dirka Mohammed Jihad
Sherpa Sherpa Bak Allah
They should have known they were fucking with a Marine.
The song is gruesome, to be sure, and CAIR complained that it celebrated the killing of Iraqi civilians. The video shows Belile performing the song before a laughing, applauding audience of fellow soldiers at their base in Iraq. Recognizing that the song could only bring bad publicity, U.S. military officials promptly issued a statement saying that it was "clearly inappropriate and contrary to the high standards expected of all Marines." Belile also apologized, saying the song was intended as "a joke" and that he didn't intend to offend anyone.
Pro-war pundits, however, actually rallied to the song's defense. The conservative Little Green Footballs weblog thought news reports about the video controversy were the "mainstream media disgrace of the month." There's nothing wrong with the song, the Footballs said, because it doesn't actually describe a soldier killing civilians: "the people who kill the 'little sister' in this darkly humorous song are — not the Marines — but her father and brother, as they attempt to perpetrate an ambush." Some of the comments on LGF even called it "a wonderful song," and attacked the "nutless Pentagon star-chasing bastards" for their "capitulation." Here are some of the other comments about the song, from Little Green Footballs and elsewhere:
- "Damn it, we are in a fucking war! Nobody whined about 'insensitivity' to the fucking Japs and Jerries."
- "I expect more from the Pentagon. The State Dept & the CIA are just a bunch of cucumber sandwich eating fools. The Pentagon USED to be about waging war on our enemies. Now they just want to kiss up to them."
- "I'm Proud of my fellow Marines in that video. That is EXACTLY the espirit de corps needed, the HIGH MORALE needed in the middle of a combat zone where those self-same jihadists are trying to kill those Marines every single day.
- "Insensitive? Marines insensitive? God I hope so. We need them to kick ass and follow orders but we don’t need them to be particularly sensitive. A sensitive Marine Corps will be the death of this country."
- "One of the things CAIR didn't like was the phrase 'Durka Durka Mohammed Jihad, Sherpa Sherpa Bak Allah' which makes fun of the Arab language. To hell with CAIR and to hell with the Arab language. ... And the Islamist pigs can keep going to hell."
As these comments illustrate, defense for the song quickly turns into traditional conservative anger at what they see as censorious "political correctness." They have a right, they insist, to be insensitive and hostile to Arabs and Muslims. I would argue, in fact, that this cultural xenophobia is the main theme of the song and that the violence in it is a secondary byproduct.
Let's start with the title, "Hadji Girl." The term "hadji" (also sometimes spelled "haji" or "hajji") is the Arabic word for someone who has made the pilgrimage to Mecca. In Iraq and Afghanistan, it has become a common slang term used to describe the locals. According to a dictionary of war slang compiled by GlobalSecurity.org, the term is "used by the American military for an Iraqi, anyone of Arab decent, or even of a brownish skin tone, be they Afghanis, or even Bangladeshis" and is also "the word many soldiers use derogatorily for the enemy." Related terms include "haji mart" (a small store operated by Iraqis) or "haji patrol" (Iraqi soldiers).
The term seems to have come into usage even before the war began in Iraq. Its use was noted following a U.S. military investigation into the 2002 murder of two prisoners at the Bagram Collection Point in Afghanistan, by some of the same soldiers who later oversaw abuses at Abu Ghraib. ''We were pretty much told that they were nobodies, that they were just enemy combatants,'' said one of the soldiers at Bagram. ''I think that giving them the distinction of soldier would have changed our attitudes toward them. A lot of it was based on racism, really. We called them hajis, and that psychology was really important.''
One of the prisoners beaten to death at Bagram was an innocent taxi driver named Dilawar whose only offense was that he happened to drive his taxi past the American base at the wrong time. According to Corey E. Jones, one of the MPs who guarded him, the beatings intensified when "He screamed out, 'Allah! Allah! Allah!' and my first reaction was that he was crying out to his god. Everybody heard him cry out and thought it was funny. ... It became a kind of running joke, and people kept showing up to give this detainee a common peroneal strike just to hear him scream out 'Allah.' It went on over a 24-hour period, and I would think that it was over 100 strikes."
The term "haji" is not simply an ethnic slur, like "gook," "jap," "jerry" or "nigger." All ethnic slurs entail hostile stereotypes, but "haji" is a specifically religious stereotype based on hostility toward Muslims. In our 2003 book, Weapons of Mass Deception, John Stauber and I described the efforts that the Bush administration has undertaken to rebrand America in the eyes of Arabs and Muslims, spending hundreds of millions of dollars on projects including Radio Sawa, Al Hurra, a "Shared Values" campaign, and the Council of American Muslims for Understanding. Through glossy brochures, TV advertisements and websites, the United States has sought to depict America as a nation of religious tolerance that respects and appreciates Islam. These words, however, are constantly being undermined by the actual deeds and attitudes of the Bush administration's most ardent supporters, including soldiers in the field in Afghanistan and Iraq. While the White House has tried to frame the war in Iraq as a "war on terror," its own supporters keep reframing it as a war against Islam. This is a serious, if not fatal error. Rather than fighting a few thousand actual terrorists, the United States is positioning itself in opposition to one of the world's major religions, with more than a billion adherents worldwide.
Culture Shock and Awe
"Hadji Girl" also refers to another aspect of soldiers' experiences in Iraq: the language barrier that prevents them from communicating effectively. The refrain, "Dirka dirka Mohammed Jihad / Sherpa Sherpa Bak Allah," is borrowed from the movie "Team America: World Police." According to filmmaker Matt Stone, the phrase is not real Arabic but a parody of "Arabic gibberish which they just go, you know, 'Dirka-dirka, Muhammad, Muhammad Ali.' ... And that, to me, is what terrorists sound like when I look at their little tapes that they release." This inability to comprehend the local language contributes to the soldiers' inability to distinguish between friend or foe, forcing them to suspect that anyone — including the beautiful girl you just met, or her family — might be a terrorist.
These facts began to shape the relationship between U.S. soldiers and Iraqis early in the war, as Associated Press reporter Andrew England noted in September 2003:
Young American soldiers — many carrying out operations they have little training for — find themselves in a hostile environment, unable to speak the local language or distinguish "the good guys from the bad guys."
Most just want to survive and return home. Some have grown to despise Iraqis, whom they call "Hajis," scowling rather than waving as they pass locals along highways and dirt roads. ...
"I hate the Hajis. All of them are liars. They injured one of my soldiers," said one.
"You don't want to know what I think about them, they shot at me one too many times," said another.
It is worth noting that one of the few conscientious objectors who have actually served with the military in Iraq, Aidan Delgado, had a very different perspective of Iraqis because he did know how to speak the language:
It was tough for me to see brutality coming out of my own unit. I had lived in the Middle East. I had Egyptian friends. I spent nearly a decade in Cairo. I spoke Arabic, and I was versed in Arab culture and Islamic dress. Most of the guys in my unit were in complete culture shock most of the time. They saw the Iraqis as enemies. They lived in a state of fear. I found the Iraqis enormously friendly as a whole. One time I was walking through Nasiriyah with an armful of money, nadirs that were exchanged for dollars. I was able to walk 300 meters to my convoy -- a U.S. soldier walking alone with money. And I thought: I am safer here in Iraq than in the states. I never felt threatened from people in the South.
It would be a mistake to imagine that the casual brutality of "Hadji Girl" is coming from people who are simply evil or racist or cruel. The soldiers occupying Iraq are normal men and women who, in other circumstances, would never commit the abuses that have been documented in Bagram and Abu Ghraib and that are now alleged in Haditha. The situations in which this war has placed them — far from home, surrounded by a foreign language and foreign culture, carrying guns and fearful for their lives — have brought out behaviors that we would not see otherwise. If American soldiers and Iraqis could meet under different circumstances, things would be different. Here, for example, is how Iraqi blogger Salam Pax described his experience upon visiting the United States and having dinner with an American soldier:
You have no idea how strange it feels that we share so much in common. When I told him I would never actually approach an American soldier on the street in Baghdad, he told me that if we were in Baghdad he would probably be talking to me with his gun pointing at me because he would be scared shitless. Yet there we sat, drinking beers together.
America's cultural isolationism and prejudices are exposed by "Hadji Girl," but that's only part of the story. The war itself is encouraging these dark aspects of human nature, by bringing Americans and Iraqis together in an environment full of tension, fear, hatred and violence. And if the war itself is creating these evils, how can it hope to end them?
Comments
Everyone is getting too
Everyone is getting too worked up over this. It's a parody that draws from Team America and cliched events in the Iraq war, and is not meant to be taken seriously. If you're going to take this seriously, then you also need to start condemning other comedians who use music as their medium since they definitely don't fall under the politically correct banner either.
Iraq
We already have enough problems in Iraq and now this guy.
if you have never been
if you have never been there, then you should have nothing to say. i served in iraq and afghanistan and this is how we keep ourselves from thinking about all the bad shit we see day to day, shit that you can think of in your starbucks world of cable tv and warm showers. And still we are judged by thouse like you how dont have the stones to do what we do, or even try to understand the lives we lead and that is sad. its a song thats it, fuck relations over there its about you and the guy next to you. if you dont like it dont watch it hippies and the only thing we should hear from you people is a "thank you for all that you do for us" because your to uneducated to really know what is going on over there, rather you are spoon feed you views by the TV and vomit the infomation back to us online as if you thought of it yourself. I leave you with this quote
War is an ugly thing, but not the ugliest of things. The decayed and degraded state of moral and patriotic feeling which thinks that nothing is worth war is much worse. The person who has nothing for which he is willing to fight, nothing which is more important than his own personal safety, is a miserable creature and has no chance of being free unless made and kept so by the exertions of better men than himself.~John Stuart Mill's
"Hadji Girl"
I remember hearing the term "hadji" as a kid, watching the cartoon "Johnny Quest." (It was the name of the Indian, I think, character on the show).
As for the reasons for the cruel conduct of some U.S. soldiers in Iraq, I have two comments:
First, many of these servicemen wanted war, and many pro-Iraq war Americans cheer the idea of a war against Muslims, both to "pay back" the Islamic world for 9/11, and to assert American supremacy in the world after years of supposed humiliation after Vietnam and the Iranian hostage crisis. So, why do so many soldiers and civilians complain about conditions in Iraq? It seems people want war just so long as the U.S. enjoys an easy victory with few American casualities and spectacular successes. If the native people fight back, then the situation becomes intolerable. Of course, racism plays a role, as it has done in most of America's wars. This is the deeper danger of racism. Conservatives grow tired of hearing about racism, but this is exactly what happens when people are ridiculed and demonized simply because of their religion, color, or ancestry. TV shows like "South Park" and "Family Guy" are making ethnic and racial humor popular and acceptable among younger people. Not coincidentally, many of these soldiers grew up on movies and television programs that celebrate "politically incorrect" (or more accurately, racist) comedy. For a soldier or cop who was raised by racist parents and educated by racist friends and neighbors, it's only a short leap from making sick jokes about Iraqis and Arabs (or Jews or blacks or Mexicans...) and then murdering someone when he's drunk or afraid.
Second, I don't understand why more conservatives won't condemn conduct like this. At one time, patriotism meant more than waving the flag. It entailed a certain values system. While never perfect, patriotism, and service in the military, officially demanded that Americans proved the nobility and honor of democracy and freedom by conducting themselves at a higher level of morals. Ironically, now that racial and sex discrimination is against the law, Americans seem to be abandoning all commitment to a higher value system. Blame it on the excesses '60s, if you want, or on Reagan's "greed decade," or whatever, but today's patriotism is a sham. Just shout "U.S.A! U.S.A!" and promise to vote Republican, and scream against Obama, and you're a real patriot. At this point, American patriotism doesn't seem all that different than the fanaticism that drives most of the insurgents and militants in Iraq and elsewhere. When an army invades a country, at least some of the population will resist. If you can't deal with that, don't join the military. If you can't be angry without murdering someone, or writing poetry about it, then you don't reflect American national values- you need hospitalization.
My view
Couple observations that I noticed. My initial reaction from the responses were extremely confrontational. I went back up and read the authors dissection and came to the conclusion that I would explain my perception instead of justifying or hammering someone else. First point I would like to make is that I have served in Afghanistan. I was out and about everyday meeting people and talking with them. With that said, I would like to say that I think there are a couple distractions that many Muslims like to use to their benefit. The first is cultural understanding - this is a two way street. Second, is the understanding of the Islamic religion. I have got to say Islam has been around a long time so I don't think there are any excuses there. Third, is the notion that we will be blinded by political correctness. This is a true assumption because many level headed people perceive our world is gray - not black and white. We tend to give people the benefit of the doubt as developed nations should. My perception of Islam is that there is no gray hence "Honor killings" and/or killing in general... if you do not submit you die or pay tribute. Lastly, I would like to say that it is my opinion that this song illustrates our naive nature as Americans in the trusting people (Nation States) who intend to do us harm. Of course this problem is complicated but I think the facts and evidence are extremely visible. Just my thoughts.
artistic death
I'm not a pacifist, neither a warmonger. However, the nature of man is clear. Most artists are on the left side - live and let live. Dead people cannot receive art. When a soldier ie; "puppet of the warmongering regime in question" creates something, it has to reflect his experience. That is art. Bottom line, this song is a symptom. How do we treat it? With a band aid? Rap talks of drive bys all the time. Same type of environment = same type of people. WAR. It's ugly. So stop it.
Bleeding Heart Liberals?
"My country. America! That is it. We have been so intent on death that we have forgotten life. And now suddenly life faces us. I swear to myself that I will measure up to it. I may be branded by war, but I will not be overcome by it. Gradually it becomes clear. I will go back. I will find the kind of girl of whom I once dreamed. I will learn to look at life through uncynical eyes, to have faith, to know love. I will learn to work in peace as in war. And finally - finally, like count-less others, I will learn to live again."
- Audie Murphy
Hadji Girl
All you bleeding heart liberals need to take a damn tour along with our Armed Forces brothers and sisters out there in the Middle East.
Personally, I'm sick of all the liberal views. CAIR can just as well kiss my you-know-what. These young men and women risk and sacrifice their lives to keep us here at home as safe as possible. Perhaps a little too safe, if you ask me.
The war dogs are becoming extinct...and are being fast replaced by flower-picking, everyone-can-get-along-if-we-respect-them daisies.
Man up and open your ******* eyes. Hate is hate...and it's gonna be around for a long damned while. I want to see what their reaction is gonna be the first time they're shot at while on tour. Are you gonna lay down your damned rifle and say "wait! we can solve this!"? Get real.
You can be liberal all you ******* want in the afterlife...cause that's where you're gonna be heading right quick and in a hurry.
Leave our boys alone, for crying out loud. Obviously, you f-ing liberals have way too much time and have life way too damned easy if you're gonna get your skirts in a bunch and your panties in a wad over a silly song.
Tanker, Dirk...I thank you from the bottom of my heart for your sacrifices and service. Semper Fi.
Sheldon, you have thus far been quite deft at your wordplay with Tanker...but what sacrifices have YOU made for your country? Please tell me that you have done more than author books.
Perhaps I am killing the messenger, but I am just SICK of hearing of how many liberals our boys have to deal with. In my honest opinion, they should round up all of them and send them on tour. I'm sure that they will have more to be concerned with/about than a song.
Minor edits
The war itself is encouraging these dark aspects of human nature, by bringing Americans and Iraqis together in an environment full of tension, fear, hatred and violence. And if the war itself is creating these evils, how can it hope to end them?
The first sentence could/should be re-written.
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War itself encourages dark aspects of human nature by bringing different people together in an environment full of tension, fear, hatred, and violence.
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And is a good reason to oppose starting one on general principals.
The ends needed to justify these means must be astronomical to make sense. The only ends that are, IMHO, justifiable are survival, survival, and survival.
innocently made
I think that the marine was just bored and wanted to write a humorous song to pass the time and give himself and his buds somthing to laugh about. Nothing is wrong with the song, cause its just that a song. Dont take it too seriously, it's not that big of a deal.