Posted Sunday, April 20, 2003; 14.23 BST
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JOHN COGILL
for TIME |
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| TAKING A STAND:
Butterly survived a bullet in the West Bank; now she's on a
hunger strike for peace |
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Her message is pure: Stop the killing, all of it, now. Her
tactics are drawn from King and Gandhi. And her commitment is vast
and deep. These days you'll find Caoimhe Butterly — a striking
presence at 1.85 m, with long red hair and mournful blue eyes —
outside the Irish parliament in Dublin or at any antiwar protest in
Ireland. In years past you could find her working with AIDS victims
in Zimbabwe, homeless in New York, Zapatistas in Mexico. Last
November, you could find her in the Jenin refugee camp on the West
Bank. That's where a bullet fired by an Israeli soldier found her,
hitting her thigh as she tried to lead a group of Palestinian
children to safety. The 24-year-old Dubliner was luckier than
British peace activist Ton Hurndall who, in similar circumstances
this month in Gaza, was shot in the head and now lies in a coma.
Seven months earlier, Butterly spent 16 days inside Yasser Arafat's
besieged compound in Ramallah. She had gone in as an ambulance
volunteer, to give first aid to a man who had been shot, but she
refused to leave.
Since then she has been campaigning against the war in Iraq — where
she visited for the first time a year ago. "Human rights is the
language I was raised in," says the daughter of a U.N. economist and
a family therapist. Many will disagree with her stances. But anyone
can envy her passion and drive. To finance her activism and travels
she does waitressing or house painting. "It's like chipping away at
a coal face, but what I have seen has been seared upon my heart and
soul and consciousness. I can't close my eyes to it."
When the Gulf War began she campaigned against the Irish
government's decision to allow the U.S. military to use Shannon
Airport. The Bush-Blair summit in Belfast saw her arrested for
smearing red jam on the riot shields of two policemen. Once her
court case is out of the way she plans to return to Iraq. "There is
no such thing as a benign occupation," she says. "It's time to focus
again on what is happening in Baghdad."