Just a question: Why is Jessica Lynch a media darling while Shoshanna Johnson, who was shot in both legs in the same ambush and spent more time as a POW, is not? Why did Jessica get 80% disability, but Shoshanna, who can barely stand, only get 30%?
I can only see one reason: race. Jessica is white and Shoshanna is black. I usually don't buy into the racial bias angle, bt this time it looks pretty clear cut. See below for more.
A Double Standard for Heroes?
By Farai Chideya, AlterNet
November 14, 2003
What do you call a black war hero? A nigger.
In the crudest of senses, this twist on the old joke about black PhDs sums up the political backdrop of Calvin Baker's lyrical novel "Once Two Heroes." Set in the European battlefields of World War II, in black Los Angeles and in the white South, the book ranges masterfully across geography, race and point of view. The novel follows the struggles and glories of two war heroes, one black, one white, and their divergent and fatally convergent life paths. Although it is a period piece, its echoes are very much present day.
Take the case of Shoshanna Johnson.
Johnson is a single mother of a young daughter. She enlisted in the Army in hopes it would help her become a chef. Instead, the Army specialist was deployed to Iraq, shot through both legs and held prisoner for 22 days. (She was captured in the same ambush as Jessica Lynch, but remained in captivity longer.) Her slow and painful recovery was not charted by the media with the same zeal as her friend Lynch. In fact, there was hardly any coverage of her journey at all.
Today Johnson remains partially disabled, unable to stand for long periods (which clearly impacts her desired career), and haunted by flashbacks to her ordeal. But the U.S. Army, so buoyed by the publicity around the Lynch case, has now dealt Johnson and her family a severe blow. While Jessica Lynch is being discharged from the army with an 80-percent disability benefit, Johnson is being discharged on only 30-percent disability. The difference will mean a loss of nearly $700 per month for Johnson and her child.
Reluctantly, the Johnson family began to turn to the media that had spurned them, speaking out about her plight. Her father, Claude Johnson, told reporter Lee Hockstader of the Washington Post that there was a double standard.
"I don't know for sure that it was the Pentagon," he said. "All I know for sure is that the news media paid a lot of attention to Jessica."
The family has enlisted the help of Rev. Jesse Jackson. Although his help is bound to be effective, it is necessary only because of the tiresome dance of race in America, where whites are seen as the default models for society, and black achievements are looked at with puzzlement.
Jessica Lynch's face graces the cover of Time magazine; her interviews and excerpts of her book have been scattered across national television. Now, only because of a small but growing outcry, Shoshanna Johnson may get her due as well.
Nuyorican Poetry Slam winner Kahlil Almustafa has even written a poem about Johnson. It begins:
There are no lack of
affirmative action programs on the front lines
of the U.S. military, there is full equality
in killing and in death
It ends thus:
Yr coming home
has been covert, quiet
sneaking back into the country
beneath media radar. Yr life as a single, Blk mother
will not make any front page news.
Perhaps there is a codicil: Yr life as a single, Blk mother
will not make any frontpage news
until people wake up, and raise hell.
Farai Chideya is the founder of Pop and Politics.
I am appalled by this whole situation!! No, in fact, I'm disgusted.... The government and the media chose to make Jessica a hero. She really didn't do anything to be hailed as a hero. Her gun "jammed", and she was captured. The real heroes are the ones that saved her. Poor Shoshanna, a young, black, single mother, who was actually shot by the Iraqi's (not just wounded from a truck accident), and held as a POW for longer, gets treated like crap, screwed by the government, and basically swept under the rug. Something should be done.
Posted by: Brianna on December 21, 2003 10:43 AMMy intention here is not to take anything away from Jessica Lynch's ordeal, just to point out that other POW's are not receiving the same treatment she is.
Soshanna had more serious injuries and spent longer in captivity than Jessica, and was not the object of a "dramatic" rescue. She also didn't have the Pentagon PR machine pushing her at us, and she doesn't have the fresh-faced "girl-next-door" suburban look that the networks still push as the "ideal" American.
There are a few things you can do to change this:
1. Contact your Congress critter.
2. Contact the President.
3. Contact television and radio news services and demand an explanation for the disparity.
You never know, you might actually get some results.
Posted by: Chris on December 22, 2003 11:33 AMWell, here we are almost a year since Chris' post and what has really changed? Let's see - Abu Ghraib, Bush re-election, rising body counts in Iraq - NOTHING! Nothing is going to change until more good and decent people become active in the political process and actually show up on election day. There are "Shoshannas" all over the place and until we do something about it, only the "Jessicas" will continue to get the attention. God bless all who have and continue to serve.
Posted by: Eric on November 10, 2004 04:22 PM