Come September

 

by Arundhati Roy; Lensic Performing Arts Center; September 29,
 2002

 Thank you. I wish I could see you all better but it's quite dark
 out there. I'm so delighted to be here, and I'm so delighted
 that Howard Zinn is here to introduce me because I've never met
 him before but I think he's such a magical human being. Thank

 you, Howard. [Applause]

 Just now, Howard asked me how do you decide what event or
 lecture you say yes to and how do you decide what you say no to?
 And I said I think it's perhaps one out of fifty on the average
 that I agree to do and I am very happy and proud to be doing
 this one because I know that those who have gone before me are
 people that I really admire and respect. So thank you to the
 Lannan Foundation for inviting me.

 I have so many things to say and I hope I don't take too long to
 say them to you. I'm a writer, and so I've actually written what
 I want to say, for two reasons. One, because I'm sure that you
 are much more interested in the way I write than in the way I
 speak. And, second, because the things I have to say are
 complicated, dangerous things in these dangerous times and I
 think we have to be very, very precise about what we're saying
 and how we say them and the language that we use. So I hope it's
 okay if I read it out to you.

 My talk today is called "Come September."

 Writers imagine that they cull stories from the world. I'm
 beginning to believe that vanity makes them think so. That it's
 actually the other way around. Stories cull writers from the
 world. Stories reveal themselves to us. The public narrative,
 the private narrative - they colonize us. They commission us.
 They insist on being told. Fiction and nonfiction are only
 different techniques of story telling. For reasons that I don't
 fully understand, fiction dances out of me, and nonfiction is
 wrenched out by the aching, broken world I wake up to every
 morning.

 The theme of much of what I write, fiction as well as
 nonfiction, is the relationship between power and powerlessness
 and the endless, circular conflict they're engaged in. John
 Berger, that most wonderful writer, once wrote: "Never again
 will a single story be told as though it's the only one." There
 can never be a single story. There are only ways of seeing. So
 when I tell a story, I tell it not as an ideologue who wants to
 pit one absolutist ideology against another, but as a
 story-teller who wants to share her way of seeing. Though it
 might appear otherwise, my writing is not really about nations
 and histories; it's about power. About the paranoia and
 ruthlessness of power. About the physics of power. I believe
 that the accumulation of vast unfettered power by a State or a
 country, a corporation or an institution - or even an
 individual, a spouse, a friend, a sibling -regardless of
 ideology, results in excesses such as the ones I will recount
 here.

 Living as I do, as millions of us do, in the shadow of the
 nuclear holocaust that the governments of India and Pakistan
 keep promising their brain-washed citizenry, and in the global
 neighborhood of the War Against Terror (what President Bush
 rather biblically calls "The Task That Never Ends"), I find
 myself thinking a great deal about the relationship between
 Citizens and the State.

 In India, those of us who have expressed views on Nuclear Bombs,
 Big Dams, Corporate Globalization and the rising threat of
 communal Hindu fascism - views that are at variance with the
 Indian Government's - are branded 'anti- national.' While this
 accusation doesn't fill me with indignation, it's not an
 accurate description of what I do or how I think. Because an
 'anti-national' is a person who is against his or her own nation
 and, by inference, is pro some other one. But it isn't necessary
 to be 'anti-national' to be deeply suspicious of all
 nationalism, to be anti-nationalism. Nationalism of one kind or
 another was the cause of most of the genocide of the twentieth
 century. Flags are bits of colored cloth that governments use
 first to shrink-wrap people's brains and then as ceremonial
 shrouds to bury the dead. [Applause] When independent- thinking
 people (and here I do not include the corporate media) begin to
 rally under flags, when writers, painters, musicians, film
 makers suspend their judgment and blindly yoke their art to the
 service of the "Nation," it's time for all of us to sit up and
 worry. In India we saw it happen soon after the Nuclear tests in
 1998 and during the Cargill War against Pakistan in 1999. In the
 U.S. we saw it during the Gulf War and we see it now during the
 "War Against Terror." That blizzard of Made-in-China American
 flags. [Laughter]

 Recently, those who have criticized the actions of the U.S.
 government (myself included) have been called "anti-American."
 Anti-Americanism is in the process of being consecrated into an
 ideology.

 The term "anti-American" is usually used by the American
 establishment to discredit and, not falsely - but shall we say
 inaccurately - define its critics. Once someone is branded
 anti-American, the chances are that he or she will be judged
 before they are heard, and the argument will be lost in the
 welter of bruised national pride.

 But what does the term "anti-American" mean? Does it mean you
 are anti-jazz? Or that you're opposed to freedom of speech? That
 you don't delight in Toni Morrison or John Updike? That you have
 a quarrel with giant sequoias? Does it mean that you don't
 admire the hundreds of thousands of American citizens who
 marched against nuclear weapons, or the thousands of war
 resisters who forced their government to withdraw from Vietnam?
 Does it mean that you hate all Americans?

 This sly conflation of America's culture, music, literature, the
 breathtaking physical beauty of the land, the ordinary pleasures
 of ordinary people with criticism of the U.S. government's
 foreign policy (about which, thanks to America's "free press",
 sadly most Americans know very little) is a deliberate and
 extremely effective strategy. It's like a retreating army taking
 cover in a heavily populated city, hoping that the prospect of
 hitting civilian targets will deter enemy fire.

 But there are many Americans who would be mortified to be
 associated with their government's policies. The most scholarly,
 scathing, incisive, hilarious critiques of the hypocrisy and the
 contradictions in U.S. government policy come from American
 citizens. When the rest of the world wants to know what the U.S.
 government is up to, we turn to Noam Chomsky, Edward Said,
 Howard Zinn, Ed Herman, Amy Goodman, Michael Albert, Chalmers
 Johnson, William Blum and Anthony Amove to tell us what's really
 going on.

 [Applause]

 Similarly, in India, not hundreds, but millions of us would be
 ashamed and offended if we were in any way implicated with the
 present Indian government's fascist policies which, apart from
 the perpetration of State terrorism in the valley of Kashmir (in
 the name of fighting terrorism), have also turned a blind eye to
 the recent state-supervised progrom against Muslims in Gujarat.
 It would be absurd to think that those who criticize the Indian
 government are "anti-Indian" - although the government itself
 never hesitates to take that line. It is dangerous to cede to
 the Indian government or the American government or anyone for
 that matter, the right to define what "India" or "America" are
 or ought to be.

 To call someone "anti-American", indeed to be anti-American, (or
 for that matter, anti-Indian or anti-Timbuktuan) is not just
 racist, it's a failure of the imagination. An inability to see
 the world in terms other than those the establishment has set
 out for you. If you're not a Bushie you're a Taliban. If you
 don't love us, you hate us. If you're not Good, you're Evil. If
 you're not with us, you're with the terrorists.

 Last year, like many others, I too made the mistake of scoffing
 at this post- September 11th rhetoric, dismissing it as foolish
 and arrogant. But I've realized it's not foolish at all. It's
 actually a canny recruitment drive for a misconceived, dangerous
 war. Everyday I'm taken aback at how many people believe that
 opposing the war in Afghanistan amounts to supporting terrorism,
 of voting for the Taliban. Now that the initial aim of the war -
 capturing Osama bin Laden (dead or alive) - seems to have run
 into bad weather, the goalposts have been moved. It's being made
 out that the whole point of the war was to topple the Taliban
 regime and liberate Afghan women from their burqas, we are being
 asked to believe that the U.S. marines are actually on a
 feminist mission [laughter, applause]. (If so, will their next
 stop be America's military ally Saudi Arabia?) [Laughter] Think
 of it this way: in India there are some pretty reprehensible
 social practices against "untouchables", against Christians and
 Muslims, against women. Pakistan and Bangladesh have even worse
 ways of dealing with minority communities and women. Should they
 be bombed? Should Delhi, Islamabad and Dhaka be destroyed? Is it
 possible to bomb bigotry out of India? Can we bomb our way to a
 feminist paradise? [Laughter] Is that how women won the vote in
 the U.S? Or how slavery was abolished? Can we win redress for
 the genocide of the millions of Native Americans upon whose
 corpses the United States was founded by bombing Santa Fe?
 [Applause]

 None of us need anniversaries to remind us of what we cannot
 forget. So it's no more than co-incidence that I happen to be
 here, on American soil, in September - this month of dreadful
 anniversaries. Uppermost on everybody's mind of course,
 particularly here in America, is the horror of what has come to
 be known as 9/11. Nearly three thousand civilians lost their
 lives in that lethal terrorist strike. The grief is still deep.
 The rage still sharp. The tears have not dried. And a strange,
 deadly war is raging around the world. Yet, each person who has
 lost a loved one surely knows secretly, deeply, that no war, no
 act of revenge, no daisy-cutters dropped on someone else's loved
 ones or someone else's children, will blunt the edges of their
 pain or bring their own loved ones back. War cannot avenge those
 who have died. War is only a brutal desecration of their memory.


 To fuel yet another war - this time against Iraq - by cynically
 manipulating people's grief, by packaging it for TV specials
 sponsored by corporations selling detergent and running shoes,
 is to cheapen and devalue grief, to drain it of meaning. What we
 are seeing now is a vulgar display of the business of grief, the
 commerce of grief, the pillaging of even the most private human
 feelings for political purpose. It is a terrible, violent thing
 for a State to do to its people. [Applause]

 It's not a clever-enough subject to speak of from a public
 platform, but what I would really love to talk to you about is
 Loss. Loss and losing. Grief, failure, brokenness, numbness,
 uncertainty, fear, the death of feeling, the death of dreaming.
 The absolute relentless, endless, habitual, unfairness of the
 world. What does loss mean to individuals? What does it mean to
 whole cultures, whole people who have learned to live with it as
 a constant companion?

 Since it is September 11th we're talking about, perhaps it's in
 the fitness of things that we remember what that date means, not
 only to those who lost their loved ones in America last year,
 but to those in other parts of the world to whom that date has
 long held significance. This historical dredging is not offered
 as an accusation or a provocation. But just to share the grief
 of history. To thin the mists a little. To say to the citizens
 of America, in the gentlest, most human way: "Welcome to the
 World." [Applause]

 Twenty-nine years ago, in Chile, on the 11th of September 1973,
 General Pinochet overthrew the democratically elected government
 of Salvador Allende in a CIA-backed coup. "Chile should not be
 allowed to go Marxist just because its people are
 irresponsible," said Henry Kissinger, Nobel Peace Laureate, then
 the U.S. Secretary of State.

 After the coup President Allende was found dead inside the
 presidential palace. Whether he was killed or whether he killed
 himself, we'll never know. In the regime of terror that ensured,
 thousands of people were killed. Many more simply "disappeared".
 Firing squads conducted public executions. Concentration camps
 and torture chambers were opened across the country. The dead
 were buried in mine shafts and unmarked graves. For seventeen
 years the people of Chile lived in dread of the midnight knock,
 of routine "disappearances", of sudden arrest and torture.
 Chileans tell the story of how the musician Victor Jara had his
 hands cut off in front of a crowd in the Santiago stadium.
 Before they shot him, Pinochet's soldiers threw his guitar at
 him and mockingly asked him to play.

 In 1999, following the arrest of General Pinochet in Britain,
 thousands of secret documents were declassified by the U.S.
 government. They contain unequivocal evidence of the CIA's
 involvement in the coup as well as the fact that the U.S.
 government had detailed information about the situation in Chile
 during General Pinochet's reign. Yet, Kissinger assured the
 general of his support: "In the United States as you know, we
 are sympathetic to what you're trying to do," he said. "We wish
 your government well."

 Those of us who have only ever known life in a democracy,
 however flawed, would find it hard to imagine what living in a
 dictatorship and enduring the absolute loss of freedom means. It
 isn't just those who Pinochet murdered, but the lives he stole
 from the living that must be accounted for too.

 Sadly, Chile was not the only country in South America to be
 singled out for the U.S. government's attentions. Guatemala,
 Costa Rica, Ecuador, Brazil, Peru, the Dominican Republic,
 Bolivia, Nicaragua, Honduras, Panama, El Salvador, Peru, Mexico
 and Colombia - they've all been the playground for covert - and
 overt - operations by the CIA. Hundreds of thousands of Latin
 Americans have been killed, tortured or have simply disappeared
 under the despotic regimes that were propped up in their
 countries. If this were not humiliation enough, the people of
 South America have had to bear the cross of being branded as
 people who are incapable of democracy - as if coups and
 massacres are somehow encrypted in their genes.

 This list does not, of course, include countries in Africa or
 Asia that suffered U.S. military interventions - Vietnam, Korea,
 Indonesia, Laos, and Cambodia. For how many Septembers for
 decades together have millions of Asian people been bombed, and
 burned, and slaughtered? How many Septembers have gone by since
 August 1945, when hundreds of thousands of ordinary Japanese
 people were obliterated by the nuclear strikes in Hiroshima and
 Nagasaki? For how many Septembers have the thousands who had the
 misfortune of surviving those strikes endured that living hell
 that was visited on them, their unborn children, their
 children's children, on the earth, the sky, the water, the wind,
 and all the creatures that swim and walk and crawl and fly? Not
 far from here, in Albuquerque, is the National Atomic Museum
 where Fat Man and Little Boy (the affectionate nicknames for the
 bombs that were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki) were
 available as souvenir earrings. Funky young people wore them. A
 massacre dangling in each ear. But I'm straying from my theme.
 It's September that we're talking about, not August.

 September 11th has a tragic resonance in the Middle East, too.
 On the 11th of September 1922, ignoring Arab outrage, the
 British government proclaimed a mandate in Palestine, a
 follow-up to the 1917 Balfour Declaration which imperial Britain
 issued, with its army massed outside the gates of Gaza. The
 Balfour Declaration promised European Zionists a national home
 for Jewish people. (At the time, the Empire on which the Sun
 Never Set was free to snatch and bequeath national homes like a
 school bully distributes marbles.)

 How carelessly imperial power vivisected ancient civilizations.
 Palestine and Kashmir are imperial Britain's festering,
 blood-drenched gifts to the modem world. Both are fault lines in
 the raging international conflicts of today.

 In 1937, Winston Churchill said of the Palestinians, I quote, "I
 do not agree that the dog in a manger has the final right to the
 manger even though he may have lain there for a very long time.
 I do not admit that right. I do not admit for instance, that a
 great wrong has been done to the Red Indians of America or the
 black people of Australia. I do not admit that a wrong has been
 done to these people by the fact that a stronger race, a
 higher-grade race, a more worldly wise race to put it that way,
 has come in and taken their place." That set the trend for the
 Israeli State's attitude towards the Palestinians. In 1969,
 Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir said, "Palestinians do not
 exist." Her successor, Prime Minister Levi Eschol said, "What
 are Palestinians? When I came here (to Palestine), there were
 250,000 non-Jews, mainly Arabs and Bedouins. It was a desert,
 more than underdeveloped. Nothing." Prime Minister Menachem
 Begin called Palestinians "two-legged beasts." Prime Minister
 Yitzhak Shamir called them "grasshoppers" who could be crushed.
 This is the language of Heads of State, not the words of
 ordinary people.

 In 1947, the U.N. formally partitioned Palestine and allotted 55
 per cent of Palestine's land to the Zionists. Within a year,
 they had captured 76 per cent. On the 14th of May 1948 the State
 of Israel was declared. Minutes after the declaration, the
 United States recognized Israel. The West Bank was annexed by
 Jordan. The Gaza strip came under Egyptian military control, and
 formally Palestine ceased to exist except in the minds and
 hearts of the hundreds of thousands of Palestinian people who
 became refugees. In 1967, Israel occupied the West Bank and the
 Gaza strip.

 Over the decades there have been uprisings, wars, intifadas.
 Tens of thousands have lost their lives. Accords and treaties
 have been signed. Cease-fires declared and violated. But the
 bloodshed doesn't end. Palestine still remains illegally
 occupied. Its people live in inhuman conditions, in virtual
 Bantustans, where they are subjected to collective punishments,
 twenty-four hour curfews, where they are humiliated and
 brutalized on a daily basis. They never know when their homes
 will be demolished, when their children will be shot, when their
 precious trees will be cut, when their roads will be closed,
 when they will be allowed to walk down to the market to buy food
 and medicine. And when they will not. They live with no
 semblance of dignity. With not much hope in sight. They have no
 control over their lands, their security, their movement, their
 communication, their water supply. So when accords are signed,
 and words like "autonomy" and even "statehood" bandied about,
 it's always worth asking: What sort of autonomy? What sort of
 State? What sort of rights will its citizens have?

 Young Palestinians who cannot control their anger turn
 themselves into human bombs and haunt Israel's streets and
 public places, blowing themselves up, killing ordinary people,
 injecting terror into daily life, and eventually hardening both
 societies' suspicion and mutual hatred of each other. Each
 bombing invites merciless reprisal and even more hardship on
 Palestinian people. But then suicide bombing is an act of
 individual despair, not a revolutionary tactic. Although
 Palestinian attacks strike terror into Israeli citizens, they
 provide the perfect cover for the Israeli government's daily
 incursions into Palestinian territory, the perfect excuse for
 old-fashioned, nineteenth-century colonialism, dressed up as a
 new fashioned, twenty-first century "war".

 Israel's staunchest political and military ally is and always
 has been the U.S. The U.S. government has blocked, along with
 Israel, almost every U.N. resolution that sought a peaceful,
 equitable solution to the conflict. It has supported almost
 every war that Israel has fought. When Israel attacks Palestine,
 it is American missiles that smash through Palestinian homes.
 And every year Israel receives several billion dollars from the
 United States - taxpayers money.

 What lessons should we draw from this tragic conflict? Is it
 really impossible for Jewish people who suffered so cruelly
 themselves - more cruelly perhaps than any other people in
 history - to understand the vulnerability and the yearning of
 those whom they have displaced? Does extreme suffering always
 kindle cruelty? What hope does this leave the human race with?
 What will happen to the Palestinian people in the event of a
 victory? When a nation without a state eventually proclaims a
 state, what kind of state will it be? What horrors will be
 perpetrated under its flag? Is it a separate state that we
 should be fighting for or, the rights to a life of liberty and
 dignity for everyone regardless of their ethnicity or religion?

 Palestine was once a secular bulwark in the Middle East. But now
 the weak, undemocratic, by all accounts corrupt but avowedly
 nonsectarian P.L.O., is losing ground to Hamas, which espouses
 an overtly sectarian ideology and fights in the name of Islam.
 To quote from their manifesto: "we will be its soldiers and the
 firewood of its fire, which will burn the enemies."

 The world is called upon to condemn suicide bombers. But can we
 ignore the long road they have journeyed on before they have
 arrived at this destination? September 11, 1922 to September 11,
 2002 - eighty years is a long time to have been waging war. Is
 there some advice the world can give the people of Palestine?
 Should they just take Golda Meir's suggestion and make a real
 effort not to exist?

 In another part of the Middle East, September 11th strikes a
 more recent cord. It was on the 11th of September 1990 that
 George W. Bush, Sr., then President of the U.S., made a speech
 to a joint session of Congress announcing his government's
 decision to go to war against Iraq.

 The U.S. government says that Saddam Hussein is a war criminal,
 a cruel military despot who has committed genocide against his
 own people. That's a fairly accurate description of the man. In
 1988, Saddam Hussein razed hundreds of villages in northern
 Iraq, used chemical weapons and machine guns to kill thousands
 of Kurdish people. Today we know that that same year the U.S.
 government provided him with $500 million in subsidies to buy
 American farm products. The next year, after he had successfully
 completed his genocidal campaign, the U.S. government doubled
 its subsidy to $1 billion. It also provided him with high
 quality germ seed for anthrax, and helicopters and dual-use
 material that could be used to manufacture chemical and
 biological weapons. So it turns out that while Saddam Hussein
 was carrying out his worst atrocities, the U.S. and the U.K.
 governments were his close allies.

 So what changed? In 1990, Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait. His sin
 was not so much that he had committed an act of war, but that he
 had acted independently, without orders from his master. This
 display of independence was enough to upset the power equation
 in the Gulf. So it was decided that Saddam Hussein be
 exterminated, like a pet that has outlived its owner's
 affection.

 The first Allied attack on Iraq took place on January '91. The
 world watched the prime-time war as it was played out on T.V.
 (In India in those days you had to go to a five-star hotel lobby
 to watch CNN.) Tens of thousands of people were killed in a
 month of devastating bombing. What many do not know is that the
 war never ended then. The initial fury simmered down into the
 longest sustained air attack on a country since the Vietman War.
 Over the last decade American and British forces have fired
 thousands of missiles and bombs on Iraq. In the decade of
 economic sanctions that followed the war, Iraqi civilians have
 been denied food, medicine, hospital equipment, ambulances,
 clean water - the basic essentials.

 About half a million Iraqi children have died as a result of the
 sanctions. Of them, Madeleine Albright, then U.S. ambassador to
 the United Nations, famously said, "It's a very hard choice, but
 we think the price is worth it." "Moral equivalence" was the
 term that was used to denounce those of us who criticized the
 war on Afghanistan. Madeleine Albright cannot be accused of
 moral equivalence. What she said was just straightforward
 algebra.

 A decade of bombing has not managed to dislodge Saddam Hussein,
 "the Beast of Baghdad". Now, almost 12 years on, President
 George Bush, Jr. has ratcheted up the rhetoric once again. He's
 proposing an all-out war whose goal is nothing short of a regime
 change. The New York Times says that the Bush administration is
 following, quote, "a meticulously planned strategy to persuade
 the public, the Congress, and the Allies of the need to confront
 the threat of Saddam Hussein." Andrew. H. Card, Jr., the White
 House Chief of Staff, described how the administration was
 stepping up its war plans for the fall, and I quote, "From a
 marketing point of view", he said, "you don't introduce new
 products in August." This time the catch-phrase for Washington's
 "new product" is not the plight of Kuwaiti people but the
 assertion that Iraq has weapons of mass destruction. "Forget the
 feckless moralizing of peace lobbies", wrote Richard Perle, a
 former advisor to President Bush, "We need to get him before he
 gets us."

 Weapons inspectors have conflicting reports of the status of
 Iraq's weapons of mass destruction, and many have said clearly
 that its arsenal has been dismantled and that it does not have
 the capacity to build one. However, there is no confusion over
 the extent and range of America's arsenal of nuclear and
 chemical weapons. Would the U.S. government welcome weapons
 inspectors? Would the U.K.? Or Israel?

 What if Iraq does have a nuclear weapon, does that justify a
 pre-emptive U.S. strike? The U.S. has the largest arsenal of
 nuclear weapons in the world and it's the only country in the
 world to have actually used them on civilian populations. If the
 U.S. is justified in launching a pre-emptive strike on Iraq,
 why, then any nuclear power is justified in carrying out a pre-
 emptive strike on any other. India could attack Pakistan, or the
 other way around. If the U.S. government develops a distaste
 for, say, the Indian Prime Minister, can it just "take him out"
 with a pre-emptive strike?

 Recently the United States played an important part in forcing
 India and Pakistan back from the brink of war. Is it so hard for
 it to take its own advice? Who is guilty of feckless moralizing?
 Of preaching peace while it wages war? The U.S., which George
 Bush has called "the most peaceful nation on earth", has been at
 war with one country or another every year for the last fifty.

 Wars are never fought for altruistic reasons. They're usually
 fought for hegemony, for business. And then of course there's
 the business of war.

 Protecting its control of the world's oil is fundamental to U.S.
 foreign policy. The U.S. government's recent military
 interventions in the Balkans and Central Asia have to do with
 oil. Hamid Karzai, the puppet President of Afghanistan installed
 by the U.S., is said to be a former employee of Unocal, the
 American-based oil company. The U.S. government's paranoid
 patrolling of the Middle East is because it has two-thirds of
 the world's oil reserves. Oil keeps America's engines purring
 sweetly. Oil keeps the Free Market rolling. Whoever controls the
 world's oil, controls the world's market. And how do you control
 the oil?

 Nobody puts it more elegantly than The New York Times columnist,
 Thomas Friedman. In an article called, "Craziness Pays", he
 said, "The U.S. has to make it clear to Iraq and U.S. allies
 that...American will use force without negotiation, hesitation
 or U.N. approval." His advice was well taken. In the wars
 against Iraq and Afghanistan as well as in the almost daily
 humiliation the U.S. government heaps on the U.N. In his book on
 globalization, The Lexus and the Olive Tree, Friedman says, and
 I quote, "The hidden hand of the market will never work without
 the hidden fist. McDonalds cannot flourish without McDonnell
 Douglas...and the hidden fist that keeps the world safe for
 Silicon Valley's technologies to flourish is called the U.S.
 Army, Air Force, Navy, and Marine Corps." Perhaps this was
 written in a moment of vulnerability, but it's certainly the
 most succinct, accurate description of the project of corporate
 globalization that I have read.

 After the 11th of September 2001 and the War Against Terror, the
 hidden hand and fist have had their cover blown - and we have a
 clear view now of America's other weapon - the Free Market -
 bearing down on the Developing World, with a clenched, unsmiling
 smile. The Task That Never Ends is America's perfect war, the
 perfect vehicle for the endless expansion of American
 imperialism. In Urdu, the word for Profit, as in "p-r-o-f-i-t",
 is fayda. Al Qaida means The Word, The Word of God, The Law. So,
 in India, some of us call the War Against Terror, Al Qaida
 versus Al Fayda - The Word versus The Profit (no pun intended.)

 For the moment it looks as though Al Fayda will carry the day.
 But then you never know...

 In the last ten years of unbridled Corporate Globalization, the
 world's total income has increased by an average of 2.5 percent
 a year. And yet the numbers of poor in the world has increased
 by 100 million. Of the top hundred biggest economies, 51 are
 corporations, not countries. The top 1 percent of the world has
 the same combined income as the bottom 57 percent and that
 disparity is growing. And now, under the spreading canopy of the
 War Against Terror, this process is being hustled along. The men
 in suits are in an unseemly hurry. While bombs rain down on us,
 and cruise missiles skid across the skies, while nuclear weapons
 are stockpiled to make the world a safer place, contracts are
 being signed, patents are being registered, oil pipe lines are
 being laid, natural resources are being plundered, water is
 being privatized, and democracies are being undermined.

 In a country like India, the "structural adjustment" end of the
 Corporate Globalization project is ripping through people's
 lives. "Development" projects, massive privatization, and labor
 "reforms" are pushing people off their lands and out of their
 jobs, resulting in a kind of barbaric dispossession that has few
 parallels in history. Across the world, as the "Free Market"
 brazenly protects Western markets and forces developing
 countries to lift their trade barriers, the poor are getting
 poorer and the rich richer. Civil unrest has begun to erupt in
 the global village. In countries like Argentina, Brazil, Mexico,
 Bolivia and India, the resistance movements against Corporate
 Globalization are growing. To contain them, governments are
 tightening their control. Protesters are being labeled
 "terrorists" and then being dealt with as such. But civil unrest
 does not only mean marches and demonstrations and protests
 against globalization. Unfortunately, it also means a desperate
 downward spiral into crime and chaos and all kinds of despair
 and disillusionment which as we know from history (and from what
 we see unspooling before our eyes), gradually becomes a fertile
 breeding ground for terrible things - cultural nationalism,
 religious bigotry, fascism and of course, terrorism.

 All these march arm-in-arm with corporate globalization.

 There is a notion gaining credence that the Free Market breaks
 down national barriers, and that Corporate Globalization's
 ultimate destination is a hippie paradise where the heart is the
 only passport and we all live happily together inside a John
 Lennon song. ("Imagine there's no country...") But this is a
 canard.

 What the Free Market undermines is not national sovereignty, but
 democracy. As the disparity between the rich and poor grows, the
 hidden fist has its work cut out for it. Multinational
 corporations on the prowl for "sweetheart deals" that yield
 enormous profits cannot push through those deals and administer
 those projects in developing countries without the active
 connivance of State machinery - the police, the courts,
 sometimes even the army. Today Corporate Globalization needs an
 international confederation of loyal, corrupt, preferably
 authoritarian governments in poorer countries to push through
 unpopular reforms and quell the mutinies. It needs a press that
 pretends to be free. It needs courts that pretend to dispense
 justice. It needs nuclear bombs, standing armies, sterner
 immigration laws, and watchful coastal patrols to make sure that
 it's only money, goods, patents, and services that are being
 globalized - not the free movement of people, not a respect for
 human rights, not international treaties on racial
 discrimination or chemical and nuclear weapons, or greenhouse
 gas emissions, climate change, or god forbid, justice. It's as
 though even a gesture towards international accountability would
 wreck the whole enterprise.

 Close to one year after the War against Terror was officially
 flagged off in the ruins of Afghanistan, in country after
 country freedoms are being curtailed in the name of protecting
 freedom, civil liberties are being suspended in the name of
 protecting democracy. All kinds of dissent are being defined as
 "terrorism". All kinds of laws are being passed to deal with it.
 Osama bin Laden seems to have vanished into thin air. Mullah
 Omar is supposed to have made his escape on a motorbike. (They
 could have sent TinTin after him.) [Laughter] The Taliban may
 have disappeared but their spirit, and their system of summary
 justice is surfacing in the unlikeliest of places. In India, in
 Pakistan, in Nigeria, in America, in all the Central Asian
 republics run by all manner of despots, and of course in
 Afghanistan under the U.S.-backed, Northern Alliance.

 Meanwhile down at the mall there's a mid-season sale.
 Everything's discounted - oceans, rivers, oil, gene pools, fig
 wasps, flowers, childhoods, aluminum factories, phone companies,
 wisdom, wilderness, civil rights, eco-systems, air - all 4,600
 million years of evolution. It's packed, sealed, tagged, valued
 and available off the rack. (No returns). As for justice - I'm
 told it's on offer too. You can get the best that money can buy.


 Donald Rumsfeld said that his mission in the War Against Terror
 was to persuade the world that Americans must be allowed to
 continue their way of life. When the maddened king stamps his
 foot, slaves tremble in their quarters. So, standing here today,
 it's hard for me to say this, but "The American Way of Life" is
 simply not sustainable. Because it doesn't acknowledge that
 there is a world beyond America.

 [Applause]

 But fortunately, power has a shelf life. When the time comes,
 maybe this mighty empire will, like others before it, overreach
 itself and implode from within. It looks as though structural
 cracks have already appeared. As the War Against Terror casts
 its net wider and wider, America's corporate heart is
 hemorrhaging. For all the endless, empty chatter about
 democracy, today the world is run by three of the most secretive
 institutions in the world: The International Monetary Fund, the
 World Bank, and the World Trade Organization, all three of
 which, in turn, are dominated by the U.S. Their decisions are
 made in secret. The people who head them are appointed behind
 closed doors. Nobody really knows anything about them, their
 politics, their beliefs, their intentions. Nobody elected them.
 Nobody said they could make decisions on our behalf. A world run
 by a handful of greedy bankers and C.E.O.'s whom nobody elected
 can't possibly last.

 Soviet-style communism failed, not because it was intrinsically
 evil but because it was flawed. It allowed too few people to
 usurp too much power. Twenty-first century market-capitalism,
 American style, will fail for the same reasons. Both are
 edifices constructed by the human intelligence, undone by human
 nature.

 The time has come, the Walrus said. Perhaps things will become
 worse and then better. Perhaps there's a small god up in heaven
 readying herself for us. Another world is not only possible,
 she's on her way. Maybe many of us won't be here to greet her,
 but on a quiet day, if I listen very carefully, I can hear her
 breathing.

 Thank you. [Applause]

 Thank you.

 I just want to say that, you know, I was so terrified of coming
 to America, because, when you read the papers and when you watch
 whatever you get to see on TV, which is Fox News, you know, in
 India [laughter], you know... this corporate media just makes
 out as if everybody in America is, you know, a clone of George
 Bush. [laughter] I'm just so glad that I came because it just
 reaffirms my faith in humanity to see you here and to not have
 tomatoes thrown at me.

 Thank you. [Applause]

 CONVERSATION
 -------------

 Howard Zinn: We're just going to sit up here. [Laughter]
 Arundhati just said to me, Well, we can talk about the things I
 left out. [Laughter] Well, I guess. . .. what did you leave out?
 [Laughter] I was sitting there, listening to you, and thinking:
 there it was. There it is.

 Arundhati Roy: OK. Let's go. [Laughter]

 Zinn: You don't want me to say anything nice about? OK. But
 really, what I thought as I was sitting there, is there is this
 mastery of detail, all expressed in the most poetic and
 beautiful way. That combination is so hard to achieve. I know
 this is not a lead-in to a conversation, it's a final statement.
 [Laughter] [Applause]

 Let me ask you this, Arundhati. How did you come to decide,
 after writing The God of Small Things, that you were not going
 to immediately sit down and write another novel?

 Roy: Well, actually, I would have had to decide to sit down and
 write another novel. In that I've never believed in this thing
 of having a single profession and doing it, doing the same thing
 all your life. It's like your brain is growing in one direction,
 like some tumor. I never...a lot of people keep saying to me
 that you must be under a lot of pressure from your publishers to
 write another book. Well, I think that's, I mean, it's a bit
 dishonest to put it that way for me because no one can
 pressurize me, you know. They don't have a handle on me. It's a
 relief. If I wanted to accept that pressure, it would be a
 pressure.

 And I just think that very soon, actually, very soon after I
 finished writing The God of Small Things, and it came out, India
 did, you know, it's nuclear tests, and I recognized the fact
 that here was, you know, the papers, and lots of public people,
 and writers and painters, and everybody was standing up and
 applauding this horrible act. And I realized then that, you
 know, staying quiet was as political an act as speaking out. and
 I had this space to make a statement And if I didn't, it was
 something that I couldn't live with. Which was when I wrote The
 End of Imagination.

 And also, I think being involved in the kinds of things I've
 been involved in in the last few years have been wonderful for
 me because I've met the most extraordinary people. I've been
 close to the most extraordinary political happenings. And I also
 know that when I'm ready to write another book, if l'm ready to
 write? I keep saying The God of Small Things was a collaboration
 between me and a little bit of magic. And you have to know how
 to wait, you know. It'll come. If it doesn't, that's all right,
 but if it does, it will come. You can't, you can't just
 force...you know it's not some factory product.

 Zinn: No one would accuse that of being a factory product.

 Roy: No. [Laughter] No, I mean the next.

 Zinn: It was interes