Roatan and Bay Islands Discussion List Archive


    Posted On: 18-Apr-2005
    From: "Marco" [hondopost.....com]
    Subject: [roatan] Marla Ruzicka



    Good morning everyone,

    I woke up this morning at 4 o'clock to write an article that I'd been
    putting off for a week. I was in the kitchen preparing lunch for my
    children when I heard on television that Marla Ruzicka had been killed
    in a car bombing in Baghdad on Saturday. I must tell you that the
    death of this young woman (28 years old) has hit me like a ton of bricks.

    During the past few months, I've been communicating with Marla by
    e-mail and we spoke by phone... we'd been trying to set up a time to
    meet for coffee and exchange stories. Marla's brother works on a farm
    in Honduras, and so I thought there were some networking opportunities
    here that would benefit both of us.

    Just last week I received an e-mail from my friend Jonathan Giesen of
    Global Nomads (http://www.gng.org). I had introduced Jonathan to
    Marla, and they had finally gotten together for lunch. Turns out they
    discovered much common ground (as I suspected they would) and were
    enthusiastic about the possibilities for doing some projects together.

    Marla was one of those individuals who was determined to change the
    world through the power of her personality and pure grit. Whether or
    not she was afraid, she sure didn't show it. She was not timid, and
    it's these kind of individuals who make a difference.

    Never accept "no" for an answer. Never be afraid to speak up and
    lead... even when institutions and the "mainstream" tell you to accept
    and just go along. Life is too short to stay quiet and accept the
    status quo.

    I had spoken to Marla's mother just a few months ago, and obviously as
    a parent I feel for her. I ask that all of you keep Marla's family in
    your thoughts and(or) prayers. I ask all of you to remember Marla by
    getting to know her work. Marla's website is at
    http://www.civicworldwide.org

    Best,
    Marco
    projecthonduras.com

    Iraq Car Bomb Kills American Activist

    By BRIAN SKOLOFF, Associated Press Writer

    SAN FRANCISCO - Marla Ruzicka died Saturday in a car bombing in Iraq,
    where she had been on and off since the March 2003 invasion began,
    conducting door-to-door surveys to determine the number of civilian
    casualties, friends and family said.

    Ruzicka dedicated her life to helping others.

    At 28, she had traveled to Africa to work on AIDS issues, to Cuba to
    protest the U.S. embargo and to Afghanistan after the U.S.-led war
    there. The blond-haired activist with a cherubic face and infectious
    smile was a one-woman campaign against human suffering who was
    instrumental in securing millions of dollars in aid for distribution
    in Iraq.

    "It's a terrible tragedy and a tragic irony that somebody who devoted
    her life to helping the victims of war would herself become a victim
    of war," said Medea Benjamin, director of the San Francisco-based
    human rights group Global Exchange, where Ruzicka got her start a
    decade ago in the world of non-governmental organizations.

    Ruzicka, of Lakeport, Calif., founded the Campaign for Innocent
    Victims in Conflict, or CIVIC, to help families of civilians killed
    and injured in Iraq. Her parents were notified of her death on
    Saturday, just hours after the blast in Baghdad. U.S. Embassy
    officials publicly released Ruzicka's name Sunday.

    "We've been very worried about her, but we know better than to tell
    our children not to do anything. We were supportive and just reminded
    her to be careful," said her mother, Nancy Ruzicka.

    She said her daughter had left her a telephone message the night
    before her death, saying, "Mom and dad, I love you. I'm OK."

    "She cared about people and gave people her love and help," she said.
    "I'll remember the love she spread around the world and the good
    ambassador that she was for her country."

    Ruzicka helped acquire millions of dollars from the federal government
    for distribution in Iraq.

    "She came to us with the idea of putting a special fund in the foreign
    aid bill to take care of projects to help people whose businesses had
    been bombed by the U.S by mistake or collateral damage of some sort,"
    Democratic Sen. Patrick Leahy (news, bio, voting record) of Vermont
    said Sunday.

    "Just from the force of her personality, we decided to take a chance
    on it," said Leahy, who planned to speak about Ruzicka on the Senate
    floor Monday and possibly help organize a memorial service for her in
    Washington.

    "She was constantly calling us to say they're moving too slowly," he
    said. "She was kind of a one-person department over there ... moving
    the money around."

    Benjamin recalled that Ruzicka walked into the Global Exchange office
    10 years ago as a "pretty, peppy, vivacious young woman who wanted to
    learn about the world."

    "She had this real thirst to learn and always had a tremendous sense
    of compassion," Benjamin said. "She was quite remarkable in her
    ability to absorb different issues, quickly learn about other cultures
    and become an ally to people all over the world."

    Ruzicka was set to leave Iraq within a week, according to the New
    York-based group Human Rights Watch.

    "Everyone who met Marla was struck by her incredible effervescence and
    commitment," Kenneth Roth, the group's executive director, said in a
    statement. "She was courageous and relentless in pursuit of accurate
    information about civilians caught up in war."

    In an essay Ruzicka sent to Human Rights Watch a few days before her
    death, she explained the significance of her work assessing casualties.

    "A number is important not only to quantify the cost of the war, but
    to me each number is also a story of someone whose hopes, dreams and
    potential will never be realized, and who left behind a family,"
    Ruzicka wrote.

    When President Bush announced in March 2003 that the invasion of Iraq
    had begun, Ruzicka was already in Baghdad with Code Pink, said Jodi
    Evans, the co-founder of the women's anti-war group.

    "Bush came on television saying the game is over, we're invading
    Iraq," Evans recalled. Other activists decided to return to the United
    States to talk about how the Iraqi people were affected by the
    invasion, but Ruzicka made a commitment to stay. She founded the group
    CIVIC that year.

    "Marla thought she would be more effective staying, because once the
    bombs started falling, people would be hurt and she needed to help
    them get their lives back together," Evans said.

    Even as fighting continued to rage in sections of Baghdad in mid-April
    2003, Ruzicka arrived back in the Iraqi capital, set up office in an
    unprotected hotel and soon was a regular visitor to the city's
    makeshift newsrooms, encouraging media interest in the
    civilian-casualty story.

    Ruzicka is among several foreign aid workers killed in Iraq. Others
    included Margaret Hassan, a British aid worker who was abducted in
    Baghdad in October and later shown on video pleading for her life, and
    four workers for a Southern Baptist missionary group who were trying
    to find a way to provide clean water to people in the northern city of
    Mosul.

    A funeral service was scheduled for Saturday in Lakeport.



    http://www.roatanet.com
    To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/roatan/


    roatan-

    :




    Click Here to Go Back

    Search Archive:

RoatanRoatanRoatanRoatanRoatanRoatanRoatanRoatanRoatanRoatanRoatanRoatanRoatanRoatanRoatanRoatanRoatanRoatanRoatanRoatanRoatanRoatanRoatanRoatanRoatanRoatanRoatanRoatanRoatan


Roatanet.com - Travel Guide to Roatan and the Bay Islands
Find hotels, resorts, diving, real estate, maps, news, photos,
chat, tours and weather in Honduras.
Roatan and the Bay Islands are the place to visit!
© 2008 Roatanet.com, All Rights Reserved.