The Nick Berg Video those who saw it need prayer Children are having nightmares
Articles / In The News
Date: May 26, 2004 - 06:15 AM
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The Nick Berg video has caused nightmares in children and families who saw it. We must pray for them. Will you stand with me and pray for Nick Berg and his family. Was Nick Berg's video a fake.
 | | Is this what you want here in AmericaMy Friends we must pray for the familiesWe must pray for America. Without a major move of God This will happen here |
"The level of violence is devastating. This family, what they’re suffering is devastating," was all Hauser would say.
"This was a cruel and barbaric act, and there is no justification on God’s green earth as to why anybody would do this to another human being," Gerlach said.
"This is an attack upon civilization that cannot be condoned or understood or allowed in the future if human beings are to interact with one another," Gerlach said. "As a result, we need to find who these people are."
The weapons of Christians are not the weapons of the muslims. The bible says the weapons or our warfare are not carnal but are mighty through the pulling down the strongholds. Our weapons are prayer and intercession. Our weapons are love, joy and peace. Our weapons are on our knees. Will you go to war God's way with me.
Gerlach has been helping the Bergs navigate the various agencies of the federal government in an attempt to contact Nick Berg since he disappeared in March.
According to Gerlach, Berg traveled to Iraq alone, seeking contract work from some of the larger companies working in the country. ......
The State Department’s Kelly Shannon said Berg’s company had not done work with the U.S. military. Gerlach could not confirm whether Prometheus secured contracts with any private companies.
Berg’s parents lost contact with him -- for the first time -- after speaking with him on March 24. He had been expected to return home on March 30, but never boarded his flight.
Berg had been detained by Iraqi police in Mosul for 13 days, which caused him to miss his flight home scheduled for March 30. He was released April 6.
Berg’s body was found on a roadside in Baghdad, according to Gerlach, and has since been transported to Kuwait by the U.S. military. It is expected to arrive at Dover Air Force Base in Delaware either today or Thursday.
Who will stand with me and pray for these kids who saw the Nick Berg video. Only God know the damage that has been done.
Posted on Wed, May. 26, 2004
Video of beheading shown to students
By LEE HILL KAVANAUGH The Kansas City Star
“He told them, ‘Are you sure? This is vivid.' ”
Olathe South High School Principal Phil Clark, reading from a report about the incident
Like other parents across the country, Barry Hansel is angry because children have been allowed to watch the uncensored video of Nicholas Berg's killing — in school.
“I'm livid,” said Hansel, who didn't find out until Saturday that his daughter, a junior at Olathe South High School, watched the gruesome video in class two weeks ago. Hansel said an Olathe South official told him Monday that the school had investigated the matter.
A substitute teacher, at the urging of students in one class, showed them the Internet video of the killing in Iraq. Hansel said the administrator told him the substitute made a poor decision and would not be teaching in Olathe again.
But the administrators' words did little to ease Hansel's anger.
“I worry about how this might affect her in the future,” he said. “They didn't do anything to alert the parents about this.”
The Nick Berg video has caused controversy in other schools nationwide. Teachers in Nebraska, California, Arkansas, Alabama, Pennsylvania, Texas, Ohio and North Carolina have been suspended, fired or reprimanded for showing the video to their classes. In addition, two Port-land, Ore., radio talk-show hosts were fired last week after playing the audio portion of the video on the air, then joking about it.
News accounts of the other incidents reported that administrators at those schools had sent memos home to parents or called the parents to explain and apologize.
But that didn't happen in Olathe, and Hansel called the school Monday to complain. He was told that four other parents also had called.
Principal Phil Clark told The Kansas City Star on Tuesday that the classroom viewing occurred two weeks ago in a class of 15 juniors. Clark would not release the teacher's name because it was a personnel issue, nor would he comment on what was done to the teacher.
“A couple of students had relatives in Iraq, and it was in that context of the discussion of world events that the subject of Nick Berg video came up,” Clark said, reading from a report about the incident that an assistant principal had filed.
Clark said the class asked the substitute whether he could find the terrorist video on the Internet. The teacher did. The class then begged him to let them see it for themselves, the teacher said in the report.
In the Nick Berg video, Berg, 26, is seated on the ground with his arms tied behind him. Five hooded gunmen who identify themselves as Islamic militants stand behind him. After speaking Arabic for several minutes, a man in the middle draws a knife and decapitates Berg. As the knife is drawn to Berg's neck there is a scream. After cutting off Berg's head, the men held it up to the camera.
The Nick Berg video is one of the most widely watched items on the Internet since its recent posting, according to Web sources that monitor Internet requests.
Clark said the teacher warned the students about the effects of watching a human being murdered.
“He told them, ‘Are you sure? This is vivid,' ” Clark said, reading from the report. “The teacher later said he wished he would have consulted with another teacher first.”
The teacher “moved the monitor out of view of the class,” and allowed any student who wanted to watch it to do so. Most students watched it, said Clark. A few opted out, including “one student who was excused from the classroom out of earshot of the video.”
“It was a poor situation,” Clark said. But “steps were taken” to ensure this wouldn't happen again.
And that would be a good idea, said Andrea Jett, clinical and program director of Solace House, a center that specializes in helping grieving children.
There is some trust violation there, she said, because parents don't expect their children — even 16-year-olds — to be subjected to viewing that kind of violence in school.
“Watching someone murdered like that — a beheading — they could experience some post-traumatic symptoms later such as nightmares or flashbacks to the classroom where the video was watched,” she said. …“but the aftereffects of this will largely be determined by the adults around them.”
Most adults would be horrified and angry at the video, which is “a very natural response,” she said, “but the situation can be exacerbated by that” reaction.
As parents talk with their children about this or any other horrific news event, they should try to have a calm presence in front of their children and answer their questions as honestly as they can.
Parents should also try to encourage their children “to express their reactions to what they've seen and to help them process it,” she said. “Children need the presence of caring, compassionate adults around them because they don't have the repertoire that adults have.
“Even as adults we don't have the ability to understand such horrific events…
“It's really scary for these children.”
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