(PHOTO Iraqi baby in Fallujah. Credit: Donna Mulhearn)
(December 18, 2012) It was like walking through a nightmare: drifting in an out of hospital rooms, down the long hallways, her contact with shock-ravaged Iraqi parents interrupted only by glimpses of their physically deformed and terminally sick babies who in many cases, would never see the outside of Fallujah's main hospita. Ever.
Then, the more than vague sense that she must apologize. The words thick like molasses were hard to form. "I felt inadequate," said Donna Mulhearn. "What was so hard was, what do you say to these people other than saying sorry, which I said over and over again. You just wanted to offer more."
Donna Mulhearn is a name we need to remember, as she is one of a small but dedicated group of citizen activists who, after most of us have said the long goodbye to Iraq in the rear-view mirror, are taking on the environmental and humanitarian legacy of the Iraq War as a personal cause.
Right now, she is doing what the western mainstream has so far failed to do, which is report on the horrifying number of miscarriages, deaths, birth defects and congenital illnesses among babies in urban Fallujah, the site of some of the most intense U.