Peter Kassig 'saved countless lives' in Syria | Channel 4 News
"I am obviously pretty scared to die but the hardest part is not knowing,
wondering, hoping, and wondering if I should even hope at all. I am
very sad that all this has happened and for what all of you back home
are going through. If I do die, I figure that at least you and I can
seek refuge and comfort in knowing that I went out as a result of trying
to alleviate suffering and helping those in need." - Abdul-Rahman Kassig.
"Kassig was one of many itinerant idealists in Beirut, Syrian and foreign
alike, who were drawn to the uprising: students gave up their classes
to stand in front of tanks, doctors left lucrative practices to treat
patients on the front lines, Western journalists wanted to share the war
with the world. What set Kassig apart from many of them was his intense
drive and restless engagement with his surroundings. While friends
drank beer at bars on Gemmayze Street, Kassig grabbed camping gear and
set out for the mountains. He visited the Palestinian refugee camps that
dot the landscape around Beirut, thinking about ways to bring solar power
and other utilities into those neglected communities. Later, as the war
in Syria encroached on Lebanon’s borders, sending desperate and wounded
civilians into rural communities in the north, Kassig travelled to
Tripoli to volunteer his services at a clinic, suturing wounds and
comforting the dying. (He had received medical training in the Army and
had studied to be an E.M.T. in Indiana.)
Kassig’s compulsion to return to Syria was complex—a combination of
genuine bravery and altruism and his own, more personal impulses. “We
each get one life and that’s it,” he told CNN in the summer of 2012. “We
get one shot at this, and we don’t get any do-overs, and, for me, it
was time to put up or shut up. The way I saw it, I didn’t have a choice.
This is what I was put here to do. I guess I am just a hopeless
romantic, and I am an idealist, and I believe in hopeless causes.”" - Joshua Hersh, "Peter Kassig in Beirut" The New Yorker, October 9, 2014.
Title: Peter Kassig 'saved countless lives' in Syria | Channel 4 News. Date Published: November 16, 2014. Description:
The Wall Street Journal’s Middle East correspondent Maria Abi-Habib tells Cathy Newman that her friend Peter Kassig became a pacifist after training as a US ranger, adding "he spent alot of time helping patch people up."