http://foundationforpluralism.blogspot.com/2015/09/a-dead-child-world-gone-mad.html
This article calls on us to look into ourselves and our prejudices. When some of us are loaded with hate for others, we lose our humanity and we do not respect the humanness of others.
Aylan Kurdi's image has remained on my mind all day long, a similar image had stuck to me when I was a kid and my neighbor had committed a suicide by going under the train. It reminds us of the magnitude of the refugee problem. I was at CAIR's press conference, and Bob Morrow was one of the individuals that spoke, and he choked looking at the image, it invoked similar images of Vietnam to him. His sentiment was contagious, I deeply felt the same.
I was listening to NPR and they shared the story of a woman who was crossing different borders... with her children. She was laughing and I was thinking about her plight, finally when she was crossing the border, facing the police, she begged the police to save her child, and not her.. how desperate was she for her child's life. She choked and I could not stop crying either.
I sincerely hope and pray that all of us at least keep up with the crises, may it open our hearts and minds. There are a great number of good people in the world, who have taken to the street to do something about the plight of humanity, while there are others who have no empathy for human sufferings.
The author questions the South Asian minds when it comes to refugees. A few among us are so hateful to the others that we do not care about others.
The least we can, each one of us can do is to reflect on the refugee problems all across the world, don't focus on the bad guys, but focus on the plight of the victims
Mike Ghouse
Foundation for Pluralism
A dead child, a world gone mad
Courtesy Rediff.com
Courtesy Rediff.com
Last updated on: September 04, 2015
15:33 IST
If Aylan Kurdi was a Bangladeshi boy
on the border with Assam or West Bengal, would you call him an infiltrator, asks
Mango Indian.
I can't watch those photographs of
3-year-old Aylan Kurdi's body on a Turkish beach. I avoided him, though the
links to his story -- from Syria, drowned with his mother and five-year-old
brother trying to get to Greece -- kept appearing on my screens for about two
days.
But when I picked up the newspaper from
the floor groggy in the morning, those images blew a hole through my heart. Like
the feeling I had when I cut a little bead-encrusted band from my daughter's
wrist when she was two months old. Maybe her biological mother -- as adoptee
parents we don't know her, we cannot by law -- thought it would protect her. It
did, but it could have failed too.
The migrant crisis -- and debate --
raging across Europe is of proportions not seen since World War II. The civil
war in Syria, sparked by years of drought and a dictator who didn't care, and
the Islamic State's brutal and obscene march through an Iraq abandoned by
America, have thrown a migrant wave towards Europe. Aylan's lifeless body might
just push the EU into accepting more refugees.
Meanwhile, we in India have been dehumanised
to the massive movement of dispossessed people within our country. We are used
to children begging at traffic stops, to stories of dead newborns gnawed by
rats.
A leader of the far-right UKIP, the
largest UK party in the European parliament, said Aylan was fed and clothed, and
died because of his parents' greed for the good life in Europe. Or words to that
effect, which echo what we urban 'middle class' Indians often feel about
roadside dwellers: Why did they have to come from wherever they are from? They
wanted the good life in the big city. Why do they have to breed? Isn't
parenthood a privilege meant for those with enough money?
Aylan's family was fleeing the Islamic
State; Turkey, which reportedly treats Syrian refugees badly, would not give
them an exit visa; Canada wouldn't accept them as refugees. An overwhelming
majority of the hundreds of thousands of people risking -- and often losing to
-- death to cross the seas into Italy or Greece, and then onwards wherever they
can get some dignity, are fleeing Syria. Others are from equally war-ravaged
countries: Iraq, Libya, Eritrea, Sudan, even Afghanistan.
Asia is also facing its own migrant crisis.
Thousands of people keep setting sail on the Bay of Bengal, mostly from Myanmar
and Bangladesh, in rickety human smugglers' boats that often sink or get lost.
More than 100,000 such people have tried to get to Thailand, Malaysia and
Indonesia since 2014, and the UN has warned that fresh batches are expected when
the rains get over and the seas calm.
The global migrant crisis is fed by
hunger, driven by oppression, and boosted by lack of a future in large swaths of
this planet. But as a brilliant post that struck out the word 'migrant' from a
BBC news report and replaced it with 'people' -- wherever it occurred in the
report -- explained, ultimately it's a humanitarian issue. It's a global crisis
that will keep playing out in varying scales.
If strife is test of character, humanity
has failed because faced with a global flood the people on dry land have chosen
to close their gates. Throughout history, human beings have risked all to look
for a better future for their children. Few with passports, many without. You
can rationalise it and, of course, enforce it, but a border is a human
construct. Someone drew an imaginary line and called it a country, or state, or
town, or city.
And there's no end to drawing borders,
between India and Bangladesh, between South India and North India, between
Maharashtra and UP, between your gated community wall and that slum beyond.
Germany has said it will accept 800,000
refugees this year. We have people who are frothing
at the mouth about a Muslim takeover of India even though census on census data
shows the Muslim growth rate is declining.
If Aylan were a Bangladeshi boy on the
border with Assam or West Bengal, would you call him an infiltrator?
Demographers point to an exodus of
people from India's villages to the cities, which are bursting at the seams. The
Maharashtra NGO we adopted from told us that many abandoned children are of
'migrants' from villages to the towns, from towns to the cities.
Meanwhile, alarm signals from the
villages -- the reason why millions of people live in subhuman conditions next
to first-world luxuries -- are lost in the neon and chrome of next big dam
India.
We have Kashmiri Pandits, refugees in
their own land. We are now even banning and hounding people who try to highlight
stories from the Mahan depths of our country. And there are no dead Aylans
washing up ashore, only eyes from beyond the car window at the traffic light.
Eyes we have long evolved to ignore.
Mango Indian