• Here’s another one of the new portraits that was created on the recent trip to the east coast. This one is of Iraq War veteran Chantelle Bateman. I was lucky enough to spend about 1 week with Chantelle in Pittsburgh, PA during the G20 protests. It was truly great to get to know her and be inspired by her enthusiasm for creating peace and radical change in our world. After Pittsburgh, Chantelle, myself and Jason Hurd (another Iraq war veteran that I have done a portrait of for this series) made a late night drive over to DC in order to get up early and create the portrait below in front of the White House. It was a bit of surreal experience- I had forgotten ( I think because the only time I’m usually any where near the white house is for a protest) that there are always bus loads of tourists mingling around the front gates, getting their photos taken, etc. I had this idea it would just be Chantelle, Jason and I with no distractions. The intimacy of my work hinges upon my ability to connect with those I photograph on an emotional level during the shoot and bus loads of curious tourists makes that slightly more difficult. However, it wasn’t long before Chantelle and I were able to forget that anyone else was around and were able to really connect and focus on what it was we were there to do.

    Here’s Chantelle’s story. I hope it moves you as much as it did me. In peace, Jon O.

    “I enlisted through the Delayed Entry Program during my first month of college in January 2003 and graduated from boot camp in August 2003. A year later I deployed to Al Asad, Iraq w/ Marine Aircraft Group-49 as an Aviation Supply Clerk in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom II August 2004 - March 2005.

    I never saw direct combat, but what I did see still haunts my thoughts. I felt guilty even then; on the nights when I would stand watch with my weapon loaded trying to exude the most menacing posture I could over people who looked like some of my own family. Even our leadership used racial epithets like “haji”. I never talked to anyone from Iraq, I never asked the boy who reminded me of my brother if he had a sister at home. I just stood there with my freedom bullets making sure they didn’t make any false moves while crammed into their crappy tents.

    It’s been said that “war is long stretches of boredom punctuated by moments of shear terror” so I spent most of my deployment hopped on caffeine or adrenaline. When I came home I replaced that rush with whatever I could. I don’t even remember a lot of it. But then I lost a job, I couldn’t stay in school, and the party fund was tapped out. I had to be alone with myself but I didn’t know who I was anymore. I couldn’t handle being alone in my head with a stranger.

    I began to search for answer and long story short I came up with more questions than I did anything else. I joined the Marine Corps because I believed in all of the things I said when I took my oath of enlistment. I believed that despite some mistakes my country’s government genuinely sought to do good things in the world. And I once believed those things without question. Now I question EVERYTHING…and so should you.”
    Chantelle Bateman, Iraq War veteran from Washington DC

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  • 17 Nov 2009 /  GI resistance, Warriors for Peace

    Introducing “Drew Cameron”

    Sorry it’s been a while.  Been a bit overwhelmed as of late.  I’ll be posting several of the new portraits here in the next week or so along with the stories that go with them.  These were all done on a recent two week long trip to the east coast.  The first one was done in Burlington, VT and is of Iraq war veteran Drew Cameron.   Drew served with the U.S Army in Iraq in 2003 as a Field Artillery Soldier.  After returning from Iraq and getting out of the military Drew co-founded an organization called Combat Paper Project, which works with returning veterans to turn their uniforms into hand made paper, which is then used to share stories, emotions, art, etc.  Drew and other members of the Combat Paper Project have been touring nationally and internationally both showing their art and leading workshops for veterans and others who are interested. The poem below was one of Drew’s first projects.  It was originally published in the book “Warrior Writers” which was created by another amazing project called the Warrior Writers Project, which works with returning vets to help them share their stories through art, poetry, essays, etc.  Definitely check them out.

    “You are not my Enemy
    my brother my sister
    but I have done something wrong
    and perhaps I am now yours.
    I went to your home
    I went inside
    soiled your rug and
    bullied your children.

    You are not my enemy
    my father my mother.
    I drove on you
    threw garbage into your window
    burned your garden
    and spit in your water.

    You are not my enemy
    my grandmother my grandfather.
    I built walls between us.
    Rubble made sound
    sand scattered plastic bags all around
    rifles and checkpoints
    bright lights into your eyes.

    No, you are not my enemy
    my partner my friend.
    We were betrayed.

    You are not my enemy
    my child my self.
    Our blood is the same.

    You are not my enemy
    my memories and rage.
    Re-making sense now together.

    You are not my enemy
    you never were.
    You are a part of me
    as I am with you.

    You are not my enemy
    we will stay true.

    You are not my enemy
    we will change this
    with you. ”

    Drew Cameron, Iraq War Veteran, Burlington, VT.

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  • 15 Jul 2009 /  GI resistance, Warriors for Peace
    "It was a lost cause, we went over, we participated in things we probably shouldn’t have participated in, we made choices we’ll have to live with forever and then we get on a plane and come back here and nothing is ever said about it…” Zack Choate, Iraq War veteran, Atlanta, Georgia

    "It was a lost cause, we went over, we participated in things we probably shouldn’t have participated in, we made choices we’ll have to live with forever and then we get on a plane and come back here and nothing is ever said about it…” Zach Choate, Iraq War veteran, Atlanta, Georgia

    Due to an outpouring of support and interest in the “Odysseus Project: Finding Home” art exhibit, of which four pieces from my Warriors for Peace series are a part, the show has been extended till July 25th.   The exhibit highlights work by artists and veteran-artists focusing on issues of war (from WWII till the present) and the experience of veterans returning home.  I have heard great feedback on the exhibit from those that have been able to make it thus far.  More information about all the events and directions to the gallery can be seen on the Odysseus Project website.  The website and the proect itself is dedicted to creating dialogue between veterans and non-veterans regarding the effects of war.  I encourage you to check out the site.

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